1988 – All About the Hair

by on August 14, 2008
in Uncategorized

Because my 20-year class reunion – the one I’m not going to – is this weekend, it’s time to wrap up this nostaligic trip down eighties lane. I promised a picture and today I deliver. Now, if you actually went to my high school, you may notice that there is no picture of me in the 1988 yearbook. In fact, this is actually my sophomore class picture. I had no senior pictures taken. I didn’t get to pose next to a tree or prop my foot on a ladder with splattered paint in the background. However, when I remember high school, it is this photo that sums it all up for me.
I especially like that the whole frame of the picture cannot contain my hair. That is what a serious Aqua Net habit will do for you. If you look closely, you’ll notice the earrings, which are the size of a Texas belt buckle.
And just to prove that I really was a senior, and that my hair maintained this level of largeness, I’m providing a bonus shot – the senior prom portrait. Note the unsteady posture and the squinty eyes. This too encapsulates my high school experience. Thank you, Andre Pink Champagne. And thanks BH for taking that mess to prom!

PS – Let’s not forget to pat Lela on the back for not only scanning these photos from her scrapbook, but also cropping and posting them. No easy task for the girl who can’t figure out how to load an iPod.

Class of ’88: News You Never Noticed

by on July 17, 2008
in Uncategorized

Just in case you missed current events your senior year, here’s what happened in the months leading up to graduation:

1/8 – Dow Jones falls over 140 points, or 6.85%, to close at 1,911.31. Ouch. I didn’t even know what the Dow Jones was in high school.

3/16 – Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North and Vice Admiral John Poindexter are indicted on charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States ala the Iran-Contra Affair. This is the plan where we traded guns for people. Good plan.

3/26 – Jesses Jackson defeats Michael Dukakis in the Michigan Democratic caucuses to become the temporary front-runner for the party’s nomination, later to be defeated by George H. W. Bush. The Democrats have come a long way.

4/12 – Sonny Bono is elected Mayor of Palm Springs, CA. Arnold Schwarzeneggar dreams of greatness.

5/16 – A report by U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop reports the addictive properties of nicotine rival heroin and cocaine. Did anyone tell the Smoke Hole?

What do you remember that was going on in the world beyond the halls of high school?

Class of ’88 – I Secretly Wanted to Wear the Little Skirt

by on July 3, 2008
in Uncategorized

Firecracker firecracker boom boom boom, the boys got the muscles, the teachers got the brains, and the girls got the sexy legs- woo, we won the game!

Welcome Class of ’88 (and friends). I’ve heard from a few of you that you’re enjoying this little trip down our virtual memory lane. Feel free to say hi in the comments! Everyone wants to know what you’re up to! Feel free to share a secret. Or two.

My secret wish? It’s not pretty, but it’s true.

Before we moved to the ‘Ham, I’d tried out for, and been placed on the flag and rifle team at Ferndale High School. I would have wielded a wooden faux gun on my shoulders. I would have swung a flag with purpose. But we moved (again).

At the beginning of Freshman year at Sehome I thought for sure I’d be a cheerleader eventually. When school started I learned that cheerleader-hood was closer than I’d imagined. You had to be a senior to be a cheerleader, but there was a pipeline system. You had to join the Pep Club. How fun did that sound?

I walked perkily into that first meeting where the smell of tempera paint hit me. Various not-so-popular girls kneeled on the white linoleum tile painting on wide swaths of colored butcher paper. Go Mariners! Beat the BHS Raiders! Ruck the Faiders! Unfortunately I was way too cool for this. I soon gave up the fantasy of being a cheerleader to those girls who were willing to serve their time.

Then for a fleeting moment junior year, it seemed there was another chance to be a cheerleader. Apparently I wasn’t the only cool girl to forego the pep club route. No one wanted to be a cheerleader. Tryouts were coming up and there was some doubt as to whether our class would even be able to staff a full squad. We were that cool. School spirit lagged under the influence of Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Ferris Buehler’s Day Off, Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club. It was just not cool anymore to be mainstream, to be a cheerleader.

A friend and I joked that we ought to try out, because we would – of course – make it. It would have been SO easy to beat some of those pep squad girls with their pageant hair and mitchy-matchy barrettes. It would have been such a lark, a joke. Except for that little moment, maybe a day, maybe a week, that I entertained the thought. You can bet the minute I would have gotten my hands on that cute little polyester skirt there would have been no turning back. While working the pep squad was decidedly uncool, wearing the outfit, having all eyes on me as I walked down the hall on game days would have been intoxicating.

In the public version of this little fantasy, my friend and I would deny the honor upon receiving it, perhaps an awful snub scene in a school assembly. As if we’d have had the guts. As you can guess, we didn’t try out. Who really wants to stand outside in the cold on Friday nights and pretend you’re interested in a game you know nothing about anyway? And how could I have thought I could represent the school when I was barely making to class?

No, the cheerleader route was not for me. But it might have been fun. Every once in a while I still cue up Toni Basil and work my inner pom squad. It’s enough. Now, if only I had the skirt…

Class of ’88: So What’ve You Been Up To?

by on June 19, 2008
in Uncategorized

There is only one person from high school I have stayed in touch with. And even her, not so much. But lately, yes we have become good friends again. As for the rest of them… how did that happen? We all moved away, moved back, got new friends, jobs, loves, kids, etc.

In preparation for the reunion I started Googling like mad to find my old friends. Even as I write this my creaky mind is hopping back to 3rd grade, to 4th and 5th and I’m realizing there are actually quite a few people I’d love to see.

But then there’s the whole catching up thing. How do you cram two decades worth of Christmas letters (oh yes, I am that girl) into a quick catch-me-up? I would dread it. It would be like the several times we’ve moved (or thought we were) when I walked around for two months telling my story of where, when, and why, only to be followed by more of the same in my new location.

One more joy of the virtual reunion – bulk updating. Here goes:

1988 – enrolled in Whatcom Community College
1989 – mandatory rite-of-passage unhealthy relationship
1990 – partied my face off
1991 – got robbed working as a teller at BNB
1992 – met my husband
1993 – moved to Texas
1994 – got married
1995 – lived on Queen Anne in Seattle, good times
1996 – studied my face off, got a job at a top accounting firm
1997 – graduated Magna Cum Laude from UW
1998 – had my son (I was too pregnant to travel to the 10-year)
1999 – quit my job and joined a playgroup
2000 – had my daughter, moved back to Texas
2001 – killed scorpions, centipedes, and tarantulas in my house
2002 – joined the thrilling world of tax accounting
2003 – watched a lot of Oprah, started writing
2004 – moved to it’s-not-as-bad-as-it-sounds Arkansas
2005 – had my writing published for the first time
2006 – left the thrilling world of tax accounting
2007 – started this blog
2008 – skipped out on high school reunion

And you? Watcha been doing?

1988 High School Reunion: The Movies

by on June 12, 2008
in Uncategorized

Welcome back class of ’88! Last week we looked at the music. What would we be without our movies. Here are [some of] the flicks of the mid-to-late eighties that colored my world.

Flashdanceposter Flashdance
I cannot tell you how fast I whipped out the scissors are turned perfectly normal sweatshirts into dancer chic. I won’t lie, the leg warmers had been in my wardrobe for some time already, and had been phased out by Freshman year, but those cut-up shirts – I still do that. And I’m here to tell you, it’s back!

I always had a thing for the male lead (and the restaurant scene – now that was an education… ) Looking back at the promo photos now, it strikes me that my husband bears a strong resemblance! Lucky me.

And then there was the bra trick. Great move.

 

Princepurplerain Purple Rain
Okay, so this movie was nothing to rave about, but it made the list for the soundtrack alone. That first year of high school all you heard anywhere was When Doves Cry and Let’s Go Crazy. But did you know that I Would Die 4 U is about Jesus? Prince, that crazy Christian! Wait, was he still called Prince back then? Who cares. The music of Purple Rain likely was playing your first morning of high school. Do you remember?

 

Valley_girl_poster Valley Girl
I’ve already written about Valley Girl. By the time I was in high school it was mostly about Nicholas Cage. It still is. This was the first movie I remember where the nice girl goes for the Bad Boy. That’s not so bad is it? On film anyway… And then there was the alternative music. Loyalty lines at our school were loosely drawn around the Jocks vs. the Wavers. Where do you think I landed?

 

389px-Fast_Times_at_Ridgemont_High_400 Fast Times At Ridgemont High
This one came out in 1982, but the multiple viewings during the high school years definitely merit it a place here. This movie served as almost a manual of how to behave in high school, right? And who didn’t want to work at the mall? I wanted more than anything to work retail. Wow, what a dream. And to think it actually came true… Again, lucky me. It’s possible that this film’s portrayal of cheerleaders as overly pathetic perk hounds single handedly changed a generation of teenaged girls’ aspirations. No?

So anyway… Were you Judge Reinhold or Sean Penn? Phoebe Cates or Jennifer Jason Leigh?

 

The_Breakfast_Club The Breakfast Club
This movie is widely known as the definitive work of the American teen film genre. It’s got it all: love, rebellion, class struggle, and Brat Pack staples Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, and Anthony Michael Hall. Who knew detention could be so enlightening? And then there’s that lip gloss trick. I dare you to find anyone who graduated high school in 1988 who didn’t see this film – at the theatre!

 

Okay, five will have to do for now. Please add your own in the comments!

Welcome Class of ’88 – Virtual Reunion Tour

by on June 5, 2008
in Uncategorized

I promised you a surprise! And here it is. I thought long and about whether or not to travel the thousands of miles to my twenty year high school reunion. I weighed the pros and cons, sketched out a budget, and consulted Classmates.com to see who I might see in August. In the end I decided that curiosity alone was not a strong enough motivator for me to make the trip.

The rub is that I’d gotten myself kinda psyched for all that 80s nostalgia and trips into Fondmemoryland with old friends. So I started thinking that I probably wasn’t the only one who wanted to enjoy a reunion without all the baggage and travel costs. Hence, the virtual reunion. Whether or not we went to high school together – or even lived in the same state – I’m willing to bet that those of us who graduated in 1988 have one or two things in common.

All summer I’ll be trying to recreate the 20-year-reunion experience here on After the Bubbly. But I need your help! I hope you’ll join in the fun and participate in the comments. And let me know what you’d like to see. (And yes, at some point, I’ll bust out the Big Hair Photo. Just don’t show anyone else!)

Even if you’re not from Sehome or the ‘Ham, you’re welcome here. Casual dress. RSVP unnecessary.

1988 in Music – Which Style Were You?

by on June 4, 2008
in Uncategorized

Here’s a little mood music for a surprise I’ve been scheming up. Scroll through the lists and make sure to let us know where you fit!

A: On Every Radio:

1. Faith, George Michael
2. Need You Tonight, INXS
3. Got My Mind Set On You, George Harrison
4. Never Gonna Give You Up, Rick Astley
5. Sweet Child O’ Mine, Guns N’ Roses
6. So Emotional, Whitney Houston
7. Heaven Is A Place On Earth, Belinda Carlisle
8. Could’ve Been, Tiffany
9. Hands To Heaven, Breathe
10. Roll With It, Steve Winwood
B: Only for the sexy people:
1. Peek-a-Boo, Siouxsie and the Banshees
2. Desire, U2
3. Beds are Burning, Midnight Oil
4. What’s On Your Mind?, Information Society
5. A Little Respect, Erasure
6. Suedehead, Morrissey
7. Route 66, Depeche Mode
8. Where Did I Go Wrong?, UB40
9. What I Am, Edie Brickell and the New Bohemians
10. Chains of Love, Erasure

C: Don’t Pretend You Didn’t Listen:
1. Straight Up, Paula Abdul
2. Get Outta My Dreams, Get Into My Car, Billy Ocean
3. Girl You Know It’s True, Milli Vanilli
4. Don’t Worry Be Happy, Bobby McFerrin
5. My Perogative, Bobby Brown
6. Sign Your Name, Terrence Trent D’Arby
7. You Got It (The Right Stuff), New Kids on the Block
8. One More Try, George Michael
9. Dirty Diana, Michael Jackson
10. Buffalo Stance, Neneh Cherry

The flashbacks are killing me! If these tunes bring back any memories for you, let us know! And don’t forget to check back tomorrow to find out what this is all about!