Back to school, hither and yon
- Share via
KAREN WIGHT
The summer ends. Sanity returns to the household. Routine is
reinstated -- back to high school for Breck, back to elementary
school for Mary Rose, and for Annie, back to Berkeley.
Last year, her college adventure was filled with excitement
(hers), laced with apprehension (ours). This year, we returned her to
the land of tie-dye a little older, a little wiser and a little more
prepared for life outside the bubble.
A year ago, I took a picture of a store on Telegraph Avenue that
had a sign in the front window: “Explore the Possibilities.” I think
that’s the mantra for every college freshman. It summed up the year
perfectly. The first sign that caught my eye this year read:
“Welcome. Berkeley is a crime watch community. We immediately report
all suspicious activity to our police department.”
Can you hear my laughter? They must have a monstrous police force.
All five of us went on the pilgrimage to take Annie back to school
-- the final summer adventure. Last year, we learned that we could
live without her, but it wasn’t as much fun. The house was cleaner,
the grocery bill ridiculously reduced, and there was less shuffling
of schedules and cars. We weren’t really sure if she could “come
home” again, and we found out that, indeed, she could. She was more
appreciative, patient and considerate. Maybe parenting has a few
payoffs after all.
This year, her Berkeley home will be a sorority house instead of
the dorm. It’s a beautiful colonial-style, three-story building
directly across the street from campus and Memorial Stadium. No need
for co-ed bathrooms, hallelujah. No signs for “sitting stalls” and
“standing stalls” and no buffets filled with bottomless bowls of
tater tots and chicken nuggets. Granted, I’m sure a gaggle of girls
can find enough trouble to get into, but somehow it seems that it
might happen with more civility. Of course, having said that, I’m
sure I will be proven wrong.
Annie dragged us to her favorite food haunts. We went from
room-service breakfast at the Claremont to chili-cheese fries on
dirty picnic benches at lunch. Hmm. Needless to say, if I had taken
my power washer, I would have been very busy.
We went on an excruciating trip to Ikea to find a desk for her
room (the Kappa house may not provide desks, but the closet space is
spectacular) and found every other family of a Berkeley student was
doing the same thing. Ikea was out of all desk chairs (strange but
true), but we found groovy purple chairs at Staples and then went to
Mervyn’s to gleefully buy more clothes hangers.
As we drove around town, we pondered a few of the lawn decorations
around campus. One house had a large red tape circle with a giant
slash mark attached to the hedge. I finally got it: “No Bush.” No
matter which side of the political fence you lean on, you have to
appreciate the originality.
We moved her into her room, assembled furniture, hung clothes and
set up the necessary technology. The important things are in place,
like stacks of CDs and DVDs. Hopefully the desk will be used once or
twice. I’m sure that by this time, the neat and tidy room is littered
with piles of clothes, and the money for books has probably been
spent at the Gap (directly across from campus). On our way out the
Kappa door, I spied a vending machine in the common room. The roll of
quarters I left for laundry will no doubt go toward her ration of
Diet Coke.
It’s back to school, here and there, another year of learning in
and out of the classroom.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.