Student Outlook -- Lauren Loeb
Sirens blared and the voices of medics echoed through the streets.
I watched as one of my friends was carried off on a stretcher -- her
face bruised so badly it was hard to even recognize her.
My other friend was being read his rights and handcuffed, being put
into a police car.
Two other students that I had had in one of my classes lay lifeless on
the pavement -- one wrapped in a body bag, the other airlifted to the
hospital.
A scene you only imagine in your worst nightmares, a tragedy that
could never happen to you or your friends, right? Wrong.
What started out as the Every 15 Minutes program, put on by a senior
to motivate kids not to drink and drive, turned out to be a life-altering
experience, which touched many of our students’ lives.
From the simulated crash to reading my friends’ tombstones, which
surrounded Corona del Mar High School’s quad, I had to keep reminding
myself that this wasn’t real. That after this was over I could call my
friends and tell them how much they meant to me, and say the things I
never thought of saying until now.
In reality though, this would have been it, I wouldn’t have had the
chance to say my last goodbyes or call them up just to say hi. You don’t
realize the effect of losing someone you care about until it hits you in
the face, and then you are never the same.
As part of the program, the following day, after not seeing the people
involved for 24 hours, the juniors and seniors piled into our gym and
listened to their friends give emotional speeches about their experiences
and watched a video on the events that take place when a drunk driving
accident occurs.
Although we all knew that what we had seen was not actually real, you
could tell from looking around the room that each student was touched by
what they were hearing in some way or another, and they all realized that
such a careless act could lead to an enormous, life-altering consequence.
Each and every day passes you by in a flash, and we should truly stop
and think about the decisions we choose to make before doing so.
Because unlike the simulation we experienced, there is no going back
in time. This is it, our only life to live. So make the right choices and
know that we are not invincible and a tragedy similar to this one can
happen to anyone of us.
* LAUREN LOEB is a Corona del Mar High School junior whose columns
will appear occasionally in the Community Forum section.
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