I did the math--54 days until 40.
But that's not what made me feel old.
On Saturday, I took my 12-year-old son to to the university for the Scout merit badge Pow-Wow. It happens to be my alma mater. And from the moment I set foot on campus, I felt 22 again.
(I loved college. Loathed junior high, tolerated most of high school, liked my senior year of high school . . . but I loved college.)
My first jolt came in the Humanities Building. I hadn't been inside it for years. From the outside, most of it looks exactly the same (they did put an addition on one end.) So I was unprepared for the inside . . .
Presumably the walls are still in the same places, and there were still staircases that had a vague familiarity, but otherwise--zip. Zero.
I once knew that building inside out. I could point out the copy center and the various classrooms where I took Shakespeare and Linguistics and Romantic Poetry and Victorian Women's Lit and Mystery Novels. I knew the spot in the halls I preferred to sit and read between classes. I even remember where I was sitting, three months pregnant with my first and waiting to do an oral presentation on Florence Nightingale, when I heard my first labor and delivery horror stories.
Still, it wasn't all bad. It looks a lot nicer. There are benches against the walls so students don't have to sit on the floors. It was absolutely empty on Saturday morning. And I had an iPod to listen to and a notebook to write in. I coped.
But my pride had taken a crack in its foundation. What is the saying about pride and falls?
Mine was about to fall.
I spent an hour in the bookstore, which was much less changed, wandering up and down the aisles browsing like I last did, oh, fifteen or twenty years ago. I was feeling fairly secure about my appearance. I know I look younger than my age. With my new jeans (BodyBugg still working--down 15 pounds) and black ankle boots and slim-fit long-sleeved t-shirt, I thought I could pass for a grad student.
Then a man in a scout uniform asked, "You're here with your son for the Pow-Wow too?"
Ack. My prideful foundation trembled. But that's okay, I told myself, he's one of us--a father who has lots of experience picking out other parents.
I chose several books and waited to pay. The cashier asked the young man in front of me for his student ID. He gave it and received his discount.
Me? I was smugly happy to pay full price as long as I got to say breezily, "Thank you so much, but I'm no longer a student."
She didn't even ask.
Bam! There I was, in the ruins of my pride, facing the fact that I can no longer pass for a student--even of the graduate variety.
Do you suppose being in Maui for my birthday will make the pain less?