27 May 2026
Today is our 37th anniversary.
He had to work and I had to go to graduation.
Which is today's story.
Today was the 22nd graduation I have attended. Yes, I am a 23 year veteran, PERA says I have 23 years in. Which I do--they count the first year I was a sub. Which is why I've only attended 22 graduations.
The first years at Littleton, all three schools graduated on our field and it was always the hottest day of the year. I spent Harp's graudation fixated on watching her in the hundred degree heat, hoping she wouldn't pass out. My first year I foolishly dressed up in an actual dress and flats---I do not do heels--and almost expired from the heat. The senior teachers liked to tell stories about the year it snowed on graduation day, but in my 18 years there, that was a fairy tale. It was always blazing hot.
And no disrespect, but I heard way too many valedictorian speeches praising the popular IB TOK teacher and commenting on the doors opening into the hallways, knocking them in the head as freshmen.
Then DU figured out it could make money off of high schools by allowing them to graduate on their campus. Specifically the Ricks Center. Specifically on the hockey ice. Which they cover, of course. But dude. Why do schools blow good money on ridiculous nonsense like this? Littleton, Aurora AND Denver have all fallen for it. Parking costs money for parents and students. It's nothing but a jingle jangle money maker for a private university that does not appear to need the money.
My final graduation ceremony--which sadly was at DU--with Littleton was the sweetest. One of my theatre kids had also taken my poetry class, and was selected to be The First Graduation Poet. She wrote a lovely poem that included beautifully veiled references to how poorly I'd been treated, and honored me with a reference to my mohawk. I wish I had the poem.
Since then I've only missed one graduation. My first year at Hinkley was 2020...and they did a drive by graduation in their parking lot. I did not attend. The following year they returned to the iceat DU.
I attended Kennedy's last year, even though I'd only been there a few months. I had one senior I felt strongly about representing for. Without her, I never would have believed the program could be rebuilt.
In all of those years, who knows the math, I've never parked in a lot on the DU campus. I have underground and covered parking anxiety, so I always---literally always ---park at the meters by some field. Maybe lacrosse. Who knows. Anyway. It's cheaper than paying $10 to park in an outer lot or underground. And generally, our graduations have been early enough for me to get a spot. We are given parking passes for the outer lots, but every single year I manage to forget or am unable to locate the human with the pass.
This year, there was a sign that said I needed a parking pass for the pull in meters. I parked anyway, but had anxiety. Two nights before Jim asked if I was going to graduation. I've always just gone, it's my job, and I bitch about it but I go. But I looked at him and said flatly "I don't wanna go." I figured the anxiety was continuing so I was probably going to get a ticket. Premonition or depression?
I grabbed my regalia----let's pause here. My "regalia". I never walked at my college graduation. I just don't do pagentry. So my grad robes are robes I procured from storage at Littleton. People would quit and leave their robes behind. So my work wife and I went shopping one year. That was over 20 years ago, but I still have two black robes, one is a master's robe. I also still have masters cowls I did not earn.
At Littleton Amy Oaks--I can say her name---had a PhD and we all needed to know about it. She insisted on regalia so she could wear her silly PhD hat. She also liked having rows of masters hoods representing among faculty, because that's who she is. Looks are everything. I had two hoods I was using---one was pink (music) and one was dark blue (philosophy/poly sci/ethics). I have a light blue one, education, that everybody has so I never use it. They were also liberated from the storage closet. I think I had four of them, but somewhere along the line I gave one to another teacher to wear. It's pagentry. Was I unclear?
It's a costume piece.
And it is not lost on me that the unearned hood I wear is in ethics.
I stopped wearing them when it became clear that's what Oaks liked. It became a badge of honor to sit the with the other lowly "Bachelor Degree Onlies". There was a social studies teacher who joined us, refused to wear his masters hood. I had forgotten about that until just now. He would sit next to me and nod in solidarity.
OK. So I grab my liberated masters robe and master of philosophy/poly sci/ethics hood and feed the meter. It's 6.45 am. Graduation is at eight, seven a.m. arrival.
I really do not want to be here.
And I cannot identify why.
At Littleton kids were not allowed any unapproved regalia. Nothing from your family, we couldn't even give them Thespian cords. Only NHS, IB and their sanctioned stoles. At Kennedy there are stoles worn by kids that were handed down by grandparents, some with grandparents' names. I saw the same at Hinkley and it blew my mind. Native American regalia and sashes they bought elsewhere with flowers and glitter words written in Spanish on their mortar boards. Absolutely glorious. I saw the same when I attended Genoa's college graduation at Ft. Lewis. Such a celebration of cultures and family.
Amy Oak's head would have exploded.
So I sat with the lovely art teacher and chatted on the bleachers of Hamilton gym, our staging area. We chatted about how nice it is to see diverse and family regalia, the corruption throughout all school districts and she called all of her previous principals "Little Trumps" and I realized...yes. YES.
I started to not feel great. Nothing big, just intenstinal. Just enough to be able to signal leaving and not having to stay for graduation.
Yep.
I bailed.
I smiled at my kids, they all saw me. I sat with faculty, admin saw me.
And then I just walked out instead of walking onto the covered ice.
That was it.
Quiet, nobody noticed, nobody cares. Which is perfect. Why should they? It's not about me.
So graduation #22 was incomplete.
I did make it home in time to spend my morning near a bathroom.
And write this.
Scene.
