ABOUT MEN By
Mike Gordon
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One by one, they stood before their classmates as if it was 12th-grade English all over again.
The assignment: What did you do for the last 30 years?
The venue for everyone there, myself included: Our high school reunion. Hail, hail Kailua High, class of '76.
On the balmy night we graduated long ago, each of us wearing a baby blue cap and gown, we sang "We May Never Pass This Way Again."
Got that one right.
Here we were, trying to recognize each other's faces — and name cards — in the dim light of a banquet room.
Turns out, time is as mean as a 100-watt bulb is bright. We were graying travelers at a way station. Strangers as much as friends.
I'm not much of a reunion person. Inferiority complex, I guess. But when my best friend said he'd be flying in from the Mainland with his family, I knew there would be no escaping the ritual.
Curiosity got the better of me, too. I wanted to see what the years had done to us.
As the reunion day drew closer, I dug out my old yearbook and searched the pages for friends. I mouthed the names of people I had barely seen since graduation with the hopes of remembering them at the reunion.
It was like cramming for an exam.
Did I remember people because of a friendship or because I simply knew of them?
What good was "Friends forever" if I had forgotten someone after only 30 years?
Who were these people?
I was getting worried about the whole thing.
Mrs. G. refused to attend — she went to Kaiser — so I was on my own. She bought me a new shirt and slacks and asked me not to drink too much beer.
At the reunion, faces, waistlines and hair — styles, color and lack thereof — had changed so much, I was lost.
When a woman shouted my name as she put her hands over her mouth, eyes widening in some internalized shock, I concluded that I had changed just as much as everyone else.
Funny, isn't it, how you can feel youthful — mentally locked in time — until you look in the mirror or see a picture of yourself. Or share stories with someone you knew in elementary school.
Still, the evening wasn't all bad.
I shared stories with a friend who could give Dorian Gray a run for his money.
I got to hug a woman I once had a crush on.
And I tried to be nice to the sad kid who always sat alone in the cafeteria at lunch in high school because he was still sitting by himself, a yearbook at his side.
I shook his hand. But I didn't know his name in high school, and I don't know it now.
Even though I did well in 12th-grade English, the life- story assignment was too intimidating for me. As my classmates spoke about what they had accomplished, I retreated to the bar and drank too much beer.
Reach Mike Gordon at mgordon@honoluluadvertiser.com.