Commencement is bittersweet
Deirdre Newman
High school seniors are hit with a barrage of questions in the last
few months of school.
Where are you going to college? What do you want to do for your
career? Who do you want to be?
These are the questions Estancia High School graduation speaker
Brieanne Aronson, 18, tackled during her graduation speech Thursday
at the Pacific Amphitheatre on the Orange County Fairgrounds.
“There’s a lot of emphasis on the future in the past few months,”
Aronson said. “At first, it was overwhelming. I wanted to throw back
at them, ‘Did you know what you wanted to be before your first day of
college?’ ‘Are you still doing that now?’”
Aronson urged her peers not to fixate so much on a particular
career but on a concept that exhilarates them and that will
ultimately lead them to their destiny.
Aronson was one of seven speakers who had inspiring words for the
class of 2004 -- a class that has logged more than 12,000 hours of
community service and boasts six valedictorian scholars, Principal
Tom Antal said.
Before the ceremony, Antal summed up the graduating class.
“To me, this class is marked by humanity -- they’re genuinely nice
people,” Antal said.
Speaker Arwyn Knott urged her fellow seniors not to neglect their
altruistic side.
“It’s only giving that makes you what you are,” she said.
Many of the graduating class said they had bittersweet feelings
about leaving high school.
“I’m excited; I’m ready for it,” said Melissa Willey, 18. “It was
a lot of work, but worth it. It was fun too -- meeting new people,
being with your friends, always feeling comfort at school.”
Matt Stevenson, 18, said it would be weird to no longer have the
structure of being in school.
“Everything you’re raised with -- going to school five days a week
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. -- it’s all gone,” he said.
Farrell Roth, 18, said she learned as much about life from her
teachers and friends as she did inside the classroom. She is planning
on joining the Air Force and studying meteorology.
Many of the students said they will miss their favorite teacher,
Tom Moody, who taught government and is retiring this month.
“He made government really interesting,” said Britney Tyner, 18.
“I learned a lot.”
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