Student Outlook -- Matt Meredith
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Thousands of teens, myself among them, graduated over the last few
weeks. I graduated on Thursday. The end of my 38-hour day closed a year
of scandal and social drama.
This past school year, relationships were broken off, insults were
traded and gossip slithered across carpets and through air vents like
smoke. Even through graduation night, which should have been a joyous
celebration, tears were shed left and right. Tears of happiness, of
course, but also tears of hurt.
The drama has not been limited to the lives of high school seniors,
though. This year, every time Principal Michael Vossen crossed the street
without looking both ways, it was covered in the newspaper. In fact, the
kind of stories that ran in this year’s papers made a quarter-point drop
in the Dow Jones look the second Great Depression.
This kind of crisis inflation happens every year. I wonder, what makes
human beings so attracted to drama? Kids my age want to feel pain and
suffering, or at least make sure the kid next to them does. Stories about
lewd sexual affairs that shouldn’t have even happened in the first place
shoot through school halls faster than Michael Johnson on steroids.
Whoever wasn’t a part of them wants to hear every tiny, insignificant
little detail from multiple sources. It never ceases to amaze me.
At the expense of sounding like parents at the dinner table, people
are starving in China. But let’s face it, parents at the dinner table who
work all day to put the food on the table and don’t have time to hear
about the latest news from the cheerleading department know what they’re
talking about. People are starving in China, just as people are exploited
in Thailand and killed in Israel. The ozone layer is being depleted,
animals are becoming extinct and the fossil fuels that men die over right
now will be nonexistent in 50 years. There are problems in the world, and
not one of them has to do with prom night.
But people’s attraction to social drama is understandable. The real
problems of the world are so big and far away, it seems impossible to do
anything about them and therefore pointless to care about them.
Insignificant, local problems are manageable. Why worry about whether
or not a Palestinian state will be created when I can worry about whether
or not my friend is mad at me because I blew her off a week ago? We
create the problems and so we can control them. But they can also control
us.
I urge everyone, look at the big picture. Does social drama really
matter? It’s just a waste of time, energy and emotion. Spend energy on
things that are important and solve small problems instead of letting
them get bigger and uglier as time goes on.
I’m going to college next year, where I have to live by myself and
decide what to do with the rest of my life. I don’t have the strength
left to gossip. If I have a problem with one of my friends, I simply talk
to them about it. Most of my friends can’t do this because they think
flatly bringing something up could be painful. Well, sometimes the truth
hurts, but avoiding the truth always hurts more. Take care of your
troubles, extinguish gossip, focus on real problems -- and finish your
dinner. There are people starving in China.
* MATT MEREDITH just graduated from Newport Harbor High School and
writes occasional columns for the Community Forum section.
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