What do you say to the graduating class of 2021?
Really? There鈥檚 no other group of high schoolers out there who can relate to enduring a full school year of pandemic restrictions, at home learning, and an extremely minimised cap-and-gown ceremony.
The class of 2020, as difficult as those first few months were, really only experienced the tip of the iceberg.
This year鈥檚 grads have endured an entire school year 鈥 and then some 鈥 having to wear masks, staying away from friends, learning outside the classroom, and juggling fear and worriment about the safety of loved ones with the extra-uncertain future their lives have been confronted with.
Young people 鈥 Generation Z 鈥 are constantly being berated in the media about their technology use and ripped apart by pundits for their thoughts and beliefs on, well, just about any topic, from musical tastes to the slang they use.
I don鈥檛 have kids, so maybe I鈥檓 out of the loop. But I can tell you, there鈥檇 be no way we鈥檇 obey restrictions as they have. Mask-less bush parties and class walkouts would have been abundant.
Teens on their home stretch of primary school have been more than respectful 鈥 even though so much enjoyment and freedom has been taken from them.
True, there have been many obstacles for youth to climb over in the past century.
The Second World War scooped up many brave young men 鈥 some who were still far from graduating 鈥 and flung them across the globe to fight. Thousands did not get to have a future.
Students learned the duck and cover method in case there was ever a nuclear bomb that threatened to annihilate humanity. Hiding under a wooden desk apparently provided shelter from the apocalypse.
There have been graduates entering the workforce during recessions, drafts, terrorist attacks, and countless other global strife. Actually, come to think of it, there has hardly been, if any, peaceful, perfect moments to leave school and begin adulthood.
READ MORE:
But the comforts provided by 21-century living are negated by the issues that have made the future more uncertain for youngsters more than ever.
School shootings have been on a steady rise in the past two decades 鈥 putting staff and students on a fearful edge.
We hear scientists saying we have already hit a point of no return when it comes to climate change; the plant may be inhabitable sooner than we think.
Post Secondary costs have skyrocketed to bank account breaking levels.
If you do manage to take out school loans or cover the tab with scholarships 鈥 there鈥檚 no guarantee for work. In fact, just about the only guarantee is that you won鈥檛 be working in the field you want if you enroll.
Forget about owning a home.
Our own country is now grappling with the shedding image of our do-gooder 鈥渟orry鈥 shtick; it may have been a false illusion all along while our past 鈥 and present 鈥 is a whole lot darker than we ever thought.
Through a global pandemic as a cherry on top, and you鈥檝e got a recipe for grim times. Even the most cheerful can鈥檛 hold out much hope, can they?
All of these things were happening when I graduated, but they were nowhere near the forefront. School shootings and global warming were barely an afterthought that was occasionally mentioned. We even had the swine flu that year, but a quick, unquestioned vaccine jab solved everything with a few weeks.
I鈥檓 supposed to write phrases like 鈥渋f you put your mind to it, you can achieve anything鈥 or 鈥渇ollow your heart鈥 and 鈥渃hange the world.鈥
There is no way to predict too terribly much. Life can and will change in a simple snap and throw everything into disarray.
I will say, don鈥檛 stop dreaming. Don鈥檛 stop trying. And don鈥檛 think that what the future holds for you is all pandemics, violence, and debt.
And for heaven鈥檚 sake, class of 2021, don鈥檛 ever let any adult accuse you of having an easier time than they did when they were in school.
Despite what they have told you, they did not have to walk barefoot, both ways, uphill, in the snow, to school.
Just imagine the looks you鈥檒l get when you tell children you weren鈥檛 allowed to go to school, wore masks, and came dangerously short to running out of toilet paper.
Have a story tip? Email: newsroom@aldergrovestar.com
Like us on and follow us on .