Friday, September 25, 2009

We Remember, Class of '94 Memorial Service (2009)

On Friday, May 22nd, 2009, after our Groove is in the Heart Yoga class, members of the class of '94 gathered in a clearing by the pond on the other side of the crew house. We were joined by the parents of Laura Swymer-Clancy '94, who brought four daughters to Smith and have lost two of them far too early.

This is what I read:
"In Memoriam"

Four years ago, I attended the wedding of a dear Smith friend in Mystic, CT. Despite some of us not having seen each other in several years, and despite the many different paths our lives have taken, the Smithies at the wedding embraced one another with jubilation, appreciation, and great affection. We were as familiar to one another then as we were on the last day we sat down together for Sunday Brunch in Cushing House more than a decade earlier.

During the outdoor reception at the Mystic Seaport, I stepped away from the dance floor for a moment and I watched my friends dancing as the sun set into the water behind them. The sky was filled with brilliant swaths of color, the last vestiges of day embraced by the first dark arms of night. In that moment between the bright shining day and the deep velvet night, there was a pause for celebration, a great joining together of colors, a hello and a goodbye all in one. The sky, like the bride and the groom, and my glorious friends dancing beneath it, was gaining something and losing something both.

I wanted to be in that moment forever, but since that was impossible, I reached for a pen so I could write down what I saw.

A few days later, I found the note I’d written on a napkin crumpled at the bottom of my purse. And all it said was this: “Describing my love for these women is like trying to draw the sun with nothing but a crayon.”

Even eleven years after moving away from our shared Smith home, words failed to capture the light that dances between us when we come together in any room. Our happiness in one another’s company is almost impossible to describe (particularly if there is music and a meal involved). This, I believe, is the Smith Experience.


We are here today, exactly 15 years after we graduated, to honor that unique connection, the inimitable togetherness that a Smith education affords, and to mark the loss of seven of our classmates:

  • Kimberly Tyler, who passed away 2/11/1991.

  • Linda Miller, who passed away 10/15/1995.

  • Judith Grubbs, who passed away 11/20/2000.

  • Carol Boyer, who passed away 4/17/2001.

  • Laura Swymer-Clancy, who passed away 10/21/2001.

  • Deirdre Flaherty, who passed away 8/12/2004.

  • Jennifer DelVecchio Gustafson, who passed away 8/1/2007.

[At this point, I was overcome with emotion. I gestured for the Reverend Alyssa May ('94) to join me, and she was kind enough--and composed enough--to help me invite the group to offer a moment of silence to these women we have lost. During this time, I also offered loving thoughts in memory of Robert Nylen, my beloved teacher, who was a guest lecturer at Smith during the 1990s and who passed away in December 2008 after a long, gutsy battle with cancer, and in memory of the spouses and loved ones of classmates and other Smithies who we have lost.]



After our moment of silence, Lesley Reidy, who was very close with both Laura and Jen, read a poem (Snow Geese by Mary Oliver) and shared some of her memories. She also described some of the ways in which she still actively feels the sweet presence of her good friends in her days, and the ways in which she shares that love and warmth with her children.

Laura's mother, who brought along photos of her daughters, also read a moving poem. And both of Laura's parents shared their appreciation at being able to experience our remembrance of their wonderful daughter.

Other friends and classmates shared their grief at losing friends and their gratitude for having known them.

We then performed our offering:

Earlier today, I came to this clearing, I said a blessing, and planted seven lilies-of-the-valley, one for each member of our class who has passed away. Lily-of-the-valley is also known as Ladder to Heaven and Our Lady’s Tears. It is said to have magical properties and is used to improve the memory and the mind. When placed in a room, these flowers are supposed to cheer the heart and lift the spirits of anyone present.

It is my hope that these lilies-of-the-valley will grow and thrive in this clearing. So that we can return year after year to this quiet spot and witness their bloom and remember how we were when we were young here and what a special thing we have become a part of.I have filled this watering can with water from Paradise Pond. I invite you now to join me in offering a drink to these lilies we have planted, in recognition of the life that this water gives, and as a symbol of our connection to Smith and t o Smithies, whether they can be here today in body or only in spirit.

As those gathered came up one by one, to offer water to our lilies, I read our benediction:

In this moment between the bright shining day and the deep velvet night, let us pause for celebration, a hello and a goodbye all in one. Even fifteen years after moving away from our shared Smith home, words fail to capture the light that dances between us when we come together. Our happiness in one another’s company is almost impossible to describe (particularly if there is music and a meal involved). This, I suppose, is the Smith Experience.


After the benediction, I thanked everyone for coming. There were hugs and tears and, I think a great deal of joy at our connection--followed up, most appropriately, by music and a meal at our class dinner.

Labels: , , , , ,

Monday, June 1, 2009

Groove is in the Heart Yoga at Reunion




One of the highlights for me at reunion was the Groove is in the Heart yoga class that took place on Friday afternoon. The space (Studio Helix in Thornes) was lovely and everyone who came seemed really happy afterward. Throughout the weekend, attendees could be heard--half-serious, half-joking--asking one another if they were opening their hearts (while thrusting out their chests...I mean hearts. :-)



The yoga class was something I had envisioned and begun planning more than a year before reunion and it was beautiful to finally have it come to be. There were total beginners and people committed enough to yoga to bring their own mats!


Amy Reed '05 was our teacher and she took us through a delicious and challenging class themed around our grooving hearts. Thank you to Amy, to Kirse for helping plan it, and to everyone who came. Perhaps it can become a regular reunion event. (And anyone willling to pay money for pictures of Kirse's bottom, I have *lots* from the yoga class. Drop me a note and we'll talk. ;-)

Later, skaters! Namaste.

Labels: , , , , ,

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Come One, Come All: Reunion is Nearly Here


This e-mail went out today to 413 members of the Class of 1994. If you didn't receive it, visit the AASC Web site to update your e-mail address.

My dearest classmates,

Reunion is fast approaching and I know how busy you all are, so I’ll just wish you a happy spring and then cut right to the chase.

Happy spring!

The chase

Reunion takes place May 21-May 24, 2009. If you haven’t registered yet, it’s not too late! Register online here: http://alumnae.smith.edu/reunion2009/. Find out who else has registered here: http://alumnae.smith.edu/reunion2009/attending.php.

Special events

Reunion is jam-packed with activities. In addition to the college’s schedule of events, we have some very special things planned, as well.

Friday, 2:30-4:00. “Groove is in the Heart” Anusara-inspired yoga class with Amy Reed ’05. Free to members of the Class of 1994 and their guests. More details here.

Friday, 4:45-5:15. “In Memoriam,” an open-air memorial service for the seven members of our class who have passed away since we arrived on campus in 1990. For more information, including the names of those who will be remembered, visit the blog.

Friday, 5:30-6:30 pm. Reunion Class Social Hour/Dinner/Family Fun Night. Mwangi Center, Davis/Davis Ballroom. We’ve designed our Friday night dinner event to provide a forum where Smithies can meet each others’ families and/or significant others, who are so much a part of our friends’ lives. There will be games and music, and the simple yet delicious barbecue fare aims to please all! Event will be outdoors, weather permitting. We apologize for the extremely expensive menu; we tried very hard to lower it, but the college sets the prices and they say it was the best they could do. Some relief is available for those bringing children: kids ages four to ten are $10; those under four are free). More details here.

Saturday, 1:30-2:30. Class Meeting. Everyone is encouraged to swing by the Class Headquarters (in Comstock House) to enjoy tea and conversation, and to elect our new slate of class officers. If you wish to stand for office, please be sure to arrive by 1:30. The election will commence at 1:45. Learn more at the blog.

Saturday, 5:30-6:30 pm. Reunion Class Social Hour/Dinner Campus Center, Wilson Atrium, Campus Center Carroll Room. Featuring a slide show set to music from our college years.

Take a load off

We’re still in need of volunteers to staff class headquarters. If you’ve got an hour and can help out (pretty, please!), drop Kirse a note at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. Sign up with a friend and you can kick back and relax at headquarters, and meet and greet your classmates as they arrive.

For more details about what to bring, child care, meals, etc., visit the class blog at www.graychase.com/Smith94.htm. To stay up-to-date, check the blog often and/or follow me on Twitter @graychase.

As always, if you have questions, drop me a line any time.

Hope to see you on campus soon.

Warmest wishes,

Naomi

Naomi Graychase
Alumnae Class President, 1994
Graychase@gmail.com

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Class Meeting, Elect New Officers


At the class meeting, we'll elect our new slate of officers. Thus far, we only have one person who has said she'd like to hold office next term--Bert Ritvo would like to stay on as Treasurer. If you would like to hold an Executive Committee office, please drop me a note. If the spirit moves you during reunion, you may also just show up ready to run at the meeting on Saturday.

For more details on the duties of each class officer, go here and read the Class Officers Handbook (in .pdf).

1:30-2:30 pm, Saturday, May 23rd, Class Meeting. Everyone is encouraged to swing by the Class Headquarters (in Comstock House) to enjoy tea and conversation, and to elect our new slate of class officers. If you wish to stand for office, please be sure to arrive by 1:30. The election will commence at 1:45.

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Virtual Yard Sale

I'm clearing out some of my books, DVDs, and CDs. If any Smithies are interested in these, I can bring them to you at reunion. Or ship, of course. Buy through Half.com or check inventory there and e-mail me directly. Happy to accept alternate offers.

Here's the link to my Half.com store: http://shops.half.ebay.com/graychase_W0QQ

Cheers!

Labels: ,

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Big Love from the Class of 1994 (and Reunion News)


My dearest classmates,

Last Valentine's Day, we announced our reunion theme,"Groove is in the Heart." One year later, we're just three months away from our 15th reunion!

Here's the latest:

When
Reunion is May 21-24 (the weekend after commencement). You should be getting reunion materials soon. The early bird deadline--which saves you a few bucks and helps us in our planning--is at the end of March (I think). Check your materials for specifics and sign up early!

Where
Our class headquarters are in the Quad, Comstock living room. Kaci Bishop is our Headquarters Chair. More details about locations for class activities can be found here. (The nearest airport is Bradley International (BDL) in Hartford.)

Who
We keep a running list of classmates who have let us know they plan to attend. The most recent additions are Virginia M. Albert-Glanstaetten and Magda Hernandez Bunning. Kirse Granat May, our Class VP and Reunion Chair, and Amy O'Neal, our Reunion Co-Chair, and the rest of the Reunion Committee can be reached at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. If you want to sign up to help, drop them a note.

What
Information about meals, class fees, the class meeting (where we elect new officers), etc. can be found here. You can also use the search box at the top of the blog to search for more topics, such as child care.

We're hosting a wonderful "Groove is in the Heart" anusara yoga class taught by a Smith alum that is free and open to all levels. There will also be a very special event, hosted by the Alumnae Association, the LGBTQ Alumnae Alliance, and the Class of 1989, to honor Cynthia Wade ('89), who won an Oscar for her documentary Freeheld. There will be a screening and a reception on Saturday afternoon. Details to come at the blog.

Lesley H. Reidy and I are also organizing a memorial service for the members of our class who have passed away. We'll post details at the blog, once we have them.

And, we're still looking for digital images (scanned photos) for the Saturday night slideshow. Send them to smithreunion1994@gmail.com.

Why
Because we love you. :-)

If you have questions or suggestions, drop a note to Kirse at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. Please spread the word by forwarding this e-mail along to classmates or letting them know about our blog and our Facebook group, where nearly 100 classmates have connected so far, including Amy Smith, Shawna Matilla, and Stefanie Plaumann.

Groovy hearts and sweet Valentine's wishes,

Naomi

Naomi Graychase, Alumnae Class President
Class of 1994
graychase@gmail.com

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Class of 1994 Newsletter


[A version of this newsletter went out on December 15th via e-mail to all members of our class with current e-mail addresses registered with the AASC. If you didn't get it, please let the AASC know and/or update your contact info at the AASC.] (Pictured: Naomi Graychase and Susan Bullivant of Baldwin House, New Year's Eve, 1994.)

My dearest classmates,

During Thanksgiving dinner this year, my cousin Georgia, who is a first-year at Bates, told me her best friend from high school is attending Smith this year. "Oh! She must be awesome!" I blurted out, really loudly and with an almost maniacal level of enthusiasm. (I can't help it! Smithies ARE awesome.) The conversation at the table came to a halt, almost everyone looked at me and laughed, and then my mom said, sort of sarcastically, "She's not kidding."

So, I said--of course--to everyone, "No! I'm not kidding!" And, to my cousin, I said, "She's awesome, right?" And my cousin gave a big grin, nodded emphatically, and said, "Totally!"

See? Smithies ARE awesome. Totally. Including you.

Spread the love
Have you been dying to spread some of your awesomeness around? Now's the time. The reunion committee is still looking for help AND if you would like to hold a class office, now's the time to speak up! We also need a Nominating Chair to find a slate of officers for the next five-year term. There are details here.

Speaking of the reunion committee, they are:
  • Kirse Granat May (Reunion Chair/Class VP)
  • Amy O'Neal (Reunion Co-Chair/Friday Dinner Chair)
  • Kaci Bishop (Headquarters Chair)
  • Mary Ann Hardy (Parade Chair)
  • Nicole Wilson James (Saturday Dinner Chair)
  • Elizabeth Foley (Program Chair)
If you'd like to pitch in, drop Kirse a note at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. We also still need house reps for Albright, Cutter/Ziskind, Emerson, Hopkins, Hubbard, Lawrence, Parsons, and Wilder.

Save the date
Our theme this year is "Groove Is in the Heart," and the dates are May 21st-24th, 2009. You should have already gotten a save-the-date postcard in the mail from the AASC. If not, pop on over to the AASC Web site and update your contact info so you won't miss the next mailing (http://alumnae.smith.edu/). Special events include a Groove is in the Heart anusara yoga class taught by a Smith alum.

Send us your photos
One Groove Is in the Heart event will feature fun with old photos--and, let's face it, slide shows are NEVER as much fun if you're not in them. Don't be shy--s
end as many as you like (jpegs preferred) to smithreunion1994@gmail.com, as well as your song ideas from the early 1990s. For more easy ways to get involved, click here.


On the fence?
You can find a list of the people planning to attend reunion here. Still not sure it's worth the trip? Check out Kirse's Top Ten Reasons to Attend our 15th Reunion. Here's a hint: #9 The Alumnae Parade - how many times do you get to be in a parade? I dare you not to get misty.

Find us online
In an effort to conserve resources, both environmental and financial, we'll be limiting the amount of paper mail we send you. The best place to get up-to-date information about reunion is right here at our class blog (http://www.graychase.com/Smith94.htm). We're also on Facebook. We're up to 58 members in our Facebook group, including Roxanna Domenech, Stephanie Shimada-Brand, Michelle Jackson, Aviva Meyer Grasso, and Zoe Kafatou Bunnell. Come find us!

Most importantly, if you have friends who may not have updated their contact info with the Alumnae Association, please forward this e-mail on to them or point them to our blog or Facebook page. We want to make sure we reach as many classmates as we can!

As always, if you have questions about the class or reunion activities, drop us a line at smithreunion1994@gmail.com.

Yours in Smithie awesomeness,

Naomi

Naomi Graychase
Alumnae Class President, 1994

www.graychase.com
graychase@gmail.com

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

The Diploma Circle

My friend Amy (Wellesley, '94) attended commencement on Sunday. It was her first Smith commencement and she was there in her capacity as a reporter. Newsweek is profiling one member of the Smith class of 2008 because she and her sister spent their middle school and high school years in foster care, but this year, are both graduating from college. Amy was there recording the event for the story.

Yesterday, she and I got to talking about our shared experience as Smith/Wellesley alumnae, about the "Smith experience," and how we get all goosebumpy and tingly when we see the older classes parade in on Ivy Day or witness special traditions, such as the diploma circle.

We also talked about the frequently felt feeling of failure that comes with believing we have never quite lived up to the expectation of greatness that comes with a Smith or Wellesley degree. One struggles to feel that one isn't a total loser if one hasn't cured cancer, or published a best seller, or made a lot of money. Now a Wellesley alumna is running for President for crying out loud! Talk about raising the bar. :-)

After the talk, I sent Amy the link to the letter I sent to our class on the 13th anniversary of our commencement, addressing some of these feelings. I'm sharing her response with you all because I love so much her articulation of the meaning of the diploma circle.

Here's what she said after reading my letter:

>>This piece is brilliant and beautiful. And, I love the diploma circle’s role in it. It was something I first heard about on Saturday night and knew I wanted to record. While I was there with my mic in everyone’s way, new graduates grumbled about the chaos. Someone said, ‘why can’t they just organize this’ while others complained the circle wasn’t being widened enough or that people with diplomas in hand weren’t leaving. There was much consternation and little celebration, though moments after receiving someone else’s diploma during the ceremony, the student I was recording actually said, “I love that we get someone else’s diploma.”

I was wondering about the value and meaning of the circle, beyond tying legions of Smith alumnae to each other in one final act of tradition. I came up with this: in the chaos that is graduation weekend, there is little stopping—stopping the noise, the energy, the flow of all things. In that circle, the actual act of graduating is prolonged, for some more than for others, and no one has the power to change the time it takes to find her diploma. There’s something lovely in that. And, of course, it’s yet another part of The Smith Experience that is impossible to translate."

We won't be reuning on commencement weekend this time, so we can't witness the Diploma Circle this time around, but I think that the return to campus and the tradition of reunion is another very special part of the Smith Experience, another link in the chain that connects us. I hope you'll join us.

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Today's E-mail

Today, we sent out a broadcast e-mail with a quick, but important survey about reunion. If you didn't get it, this means the college does not have your current address--or that your spam filter nabbed it.

To learn how to update your contact info with the college, click here and here.

To read the text of the May Day e-mail we sent out today, click here.

Labels: ,

May Day--and Mayday! (Class of '94 Reunion News)


My Dearest Classmates:

Today marks the end of the dreary winter half of the year and means it (finally) really is spring in the northern hemisphere. Hoorah!

It also means we are soon going to be less than one-year away from our 15-year reunion. Since May Day has traditionally been an occasion for celebration--and mayday is a call for help--our VP (who's last name is also May!) has chosen this day to ask you for help in planning our reunion celebration.

To help us find out what you want from reunion--and who is willing to volunteer--we have prepared a short online survey for you to take. You can find the free survey at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=VWfGeg4F9xrmUMJmhgiU1Q_3d_3d.

There are eight questions, two of them are multiple choice, and we expect it should take somewhere between two and five minutes to complete, depending on how much you have to say. (Why put it off? Click on the link now and let us know what you want.)

As always, you can keep up-to-date on reunion planning by visiting our class blog at http://www.graychase.com/Smith94.htm or by e-mailing your reunion co-chairs, Kirse and Amy, at smithreunion1994@gmail.com. We are keeping a running list at the blog of who's planning to come, so drop us a note once you've decided so we can add you to the list.

With warm wishes for spring and many thanks for your help,

Naomi
"Groove is in the Heart"

Naomi Graychase
Alumnae Class President, 1994
graychase@gmail.com

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Big, Heartfelt News from the Class of 1994

My Dearest Classmates,

In the fall of 1990, as we arrived at Smith College to pour our hearts into new friendships, new experiences, and new studies, a distinctive dance party single was climbing the charts. We heard its joyful beat on the radio, at parties, and in our headphones throughout that first year on campus—and throughout our entire time at Smith. It even contained a line about a "supper dish wish," which, as most Smithies can attest, was a defining quality of our years at Smith. ("Please don't let it be stir fry tempeh" was mine.)

The Reunion Committee and I have chosen Valentine's Day to announce—with happy hearts—that our theme for Reunion 2009 is…"Groove is in the Heart!"

With events like a "no-talent show," and other fun things in the works, we promise it will be Deee-Lite-ful! (And yes, we're going to dance…and have some fun.)

I'm also pleased to announce that, as of last September, we have a new Vice President and Reunion Co-Chair. Our party planning is now in the hands of Kirse (Granat) May (VP) and Amy O'Neal (Reunion Co-Chair)—who, I can personally attest, have lots of groove in their hearts. Please join me in thanking Vigie Ramos Rios and Andrea Jones Moore for all of their hard work, and in enthusiastically welcoming Kirse and Amy to the team. "No I couldn't ask for another!"

To see our gorgeous reunion logo (designed by Kirse's talented and generous husband), catch up on the latest class news, or learn how you can volunteer at reunion (yes, please!), visit our new Web site at http://www.graychase.com/Smith94.htm.

In the spring, we'll be asking you to respond to an online survey about what you'd like to see and do at reunion. In the meantime, if you have ideas to share or questions to ask about reunion, you can reach Kirse and Amy at smithreunion1994@gmail.com.

If you haven't updated your mailing address with the AASC (http://alumnae.smith.edu/), please take a minute to do so—that way you won't miss out on our class newsletter or any of the reunion-related material the college will soon begin to send you. Please feel free to forward this e-mail to your friends, as well, since not everyone has updated their e-mail addresses with the AASC, and we want everyone to know what's happening!

And, most importantly, mark your calendars for our 15th Reunion: May
21-24, 2009.

Before I sign off, I'd like to offer a quick congratulations to two Executive Committee members who celebrated the births of their first children since last I wrote you: Tamzin has a baby girl; and Amy O'Neal has a baby boy, each of whom are de-lovely and delicious.

Happy Valentine's Day!

With love from Northampton,

Naomi Graychase, on behalf of the Reunion Committee
Alumnae Class President, 1994
graychase@gmail.com

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Happy Anniversary

My Dearest Classmates,

On this day, thirteen years ago, we stood in the blazing sun in black robes and white dresses (or pants suits) and sweated our knockers off while we waited to receive the hard-won diplomas of people who were not us. Then, when all the speeches were over and all the names had been called, we marched, dazedly, onto the grass in front of King and Scales, formed a spiraling circle, and passed our diplomas until we came up with our own.

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. The next day remains in the Top Ten All-Time Worst Days Ever for me. I hope it does for you, as well. That would mean that you still love and miss one another, and also that your life hasn't really been that bad since you stopped singing gaudeamus igitur twice a year and eating Fisherperson's Platter.

Spring has been cold and slow to come fully into herself this season in Northampton. Ivy Day was chilly and rainy. But nevertheless, last weekend, the town was swarmed with women in white, with name tags and tote bags, and the wistful, determined expressions of people who have returned to a place that will always be familiar and yet somehow never be the same, people who have journeyed through time (and airports) to invite their past to meet their future...people who are trying to find a way to squeeze in one more trip to Herrell's before they catch their shuttle back to Bradley.

I hope that these thirteen years have treated you well; that what you learned at Smith, whether it was to remain open-minded when encountering the unfamiliar--such as grapes paired with brown sugar and sour cream for dessert--or to speak up and think hard about what you believe in, has stayed with you and helped you through every victory and every loss.

We never read in the pages of the Alumnae Quarterly about the other kinds of successes in our lives, the brave and beautiful ways we get ourselves through the bankruptcies, miscarriages, divorces, lay-offs, betrayals, illnesses, and the other ugly struggles that come to all of us eventually. I think that's sort of a shame. I consider these things to be the true successes in life; the moments when we rise up amidst adversity and make brave choices and fight our way through. That's the stuff I really wish we were sharing--not that promotions and vacations and babies aren't fantastic; I love hearing about them. But I'd also love to know more about the creative, enlightened ways that each of you has managed to navigate what has been difficult in your lives. How you got sober or recovered when your business failed or found the courage to drop out of medical school and disappoint your parents or leave your spouse or care for your sick mother or whatever it is that you've done bravely these last thirteen years.

Since we don't currently have a forum for exchanging those stories and ideas, I want to take a moment here, on the 22nd of May, 2007, to pause and to acknowledge that for every one of us who has earned her PhD or published six books or married a dreamboat or landed her dream job or bought her dream home or given birth to brilliant children, there are a lot more of us who got a little lost along the way; who made difficult choices between career and family; who quietly left marriages that weren't working or jobs that weren't right; who lost children, or couldn't have them, or had children who were sick. Some of us fled our homes when Hurricane Katrina hit, some of us fled for other reasons, and some of us are still searching for something that really feels like home. Some of us are sick and some of us are nursing spouses or children or parents who are fighting illnesses they may not defeat. And the courage, intelligence, compassion, and strength that these things take are worth applauding.

I hope that all of you are thriving and happy and healthy, but for those of you who aren't--don't let the Quarterly (or anything else) fool you. You are not alone. Whether you are plagued by ambivalence or something easier to diagnose, there is someone among us who is struggling like you.

In the diploma circle it took more time for some of us to find what we had earned than it did for others. If you are feeling lost, I hope you will hang in there, stay on your feet and keep passing to the right (as it were), and yours will come eventually. And if you are one of the ones that have already found the metaphorical diploma with your name on it, I hope you are whooping with delight and throwing your cap up in the air tonight.

Happy Anniversary.
xxoo
Naomi
--
Naomi Graychase
Alumnae Class President, 1994
PO Box 787, Northampton, MA 01061
www.graychase.com
413.527.7806 (v)
928.752.4900 (f)

Labels: , ,