INGRID THOFT
A few years ago, my best friend from college and I stood on the threshold of a dorm room at our alma mater. We surveyed the scene, and she said what I was thinking: “It’s smaller, right? It wasn’t this small when we were here.” It was, in fact, that small. The good news was that the prison issue sheets were so rough they exfoliated our skin while we slept. When we ventured into the common bathrooms, my friend pulled back the shower curtain on one of the stalls and exclaimed, “Oh. My. Word.!” If you knew my friend, you would know this was the equivalent of blue streak from a sailor.
Coarse sheets and grungy shower stalls aside, I’ve attended all of my college reunions, every five years. My attendance is partly due to my mom who attended the same college and is a firm believer that reunions are must-attend events. Our reunions aren’t wild parties by any stretch of the imagination, but they are an opportunity to revisit college traditions, reconnect with friends, and interact with women who are sharing comparable challenges and experiencing similar milestones. Both my mom and I have found that the relationships we had while at school are just one piece of reunion: It’s the opportunity for new relationships that is an unexpected delight.
Coarse sheets and grungy shower stalls aside, I’ve attended all of my college reunions, every five years. My attendance is partly due to my mom who attended the same college and is a firm believer that reunions are must-attend events. Our reunions aren’t wild parties by any stretch of the imagination, but they are an opportunity to revisit college traditions, reconnect with friends, and interact with women who are sharing comparable challenges and experiencing similar milestones. Both my mom and I have found that the relationships we had while at school are just one piece of reunion: It’s the opportunity for new relationships that is an unexpected delight.
I never miss my annual family reunion, which happens every summer. It’s just the immediate family, and as the grandkids get older, it has become more of a scheduling puzzle, but we try to do it just the same. We squeeze a lot into a short span of time: a badminton tournament, a scavenger hunt, Uncle Doug’s steak tips on the grill, and a sleepover in Nana’s room. And t-shirts! We have a new t-shirt every year, which we wear around town during the scavenger hunt. This prompts questions from strangers like, "Are you part of a sports team?" No, but we're great at badminton!