Keeper of The Fruit Loops

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Tales of A Fifth Grade Nothing

June 15, 2015

While on a recent trip to the beach,  I observed Fruit Loop #2 happily playing with her best friend.  They spent an entire day building sand castles, jumping waves and doing all the things you do with your bestie when you are nine years old.  They told secrets, they giggled, they wore their bathing suits without worrying about cellulite.

As I watched them, I wondered how much longer it would be until either of them had to deal with a Mean Girl.  Obviously, Fruit Loop #2 has had days where she’s come home because someone has hurt her feelings but we are still in that sweet spot where she mostly gets along with all the little ladies in the Third Grade.

I wondered how long it would be until she met her version of Sharen.

Sharen was the girl who made my life miserable in Fifth Grade.  I’ve taken a page out of my friend Steph’s recent post on her blog, When Crazy Meets Exhaustion, and “disguised” my tormentor’s name by rearranging a few letters but, frankly, thirty years later, I’m not super interested in protecting Sharen’s feelings.

Because Sharen stomped all over mine.   And I’m still bitter.

When I was ten, I had just moved to a new school and was trying very hard to make new friends.  If I can be frank, that’s NOT easy task when you have glasses, braces, a bad case of acne and your Yankee parents have recently moved you to the heart of The Lone Star State.  Wearing headgear at sleepovers does not scream “I’m the cool girl”, trust me, so the first few months were brutal in my new school.  And, moving to a part of the country where the Holy Trinity of football, cheerleading and designer labels reigned supreme was more culture shock than my ten year old self could handle.  I didn’t have the right clothes, my accent was wrong and no one wanted to hear that my family rooted for the Patriots.

But, a few months after settling into my classroom, Sharen befriended me and I was grateful.

Sharen became a fixture in our home in those first few months.  She and I would hang out in my bedroom, reading Teen Beat magazines and listening to Debbie Gibson.  We’d drool over our shared love of Kirk Cameron and we’d have long discussions about which New Kid On The Block was cutest (Jonathan, duh.  That’s the only correct answer here).  We’d giggle, tell secrets and we’d go to the community pool together, nary a worry about cellulite on our minds.  We wore jelly bracelets, coordinated our popped collar neon outfits and I talked to her for hours on the hot pink Princess phone my parents had installed in my bedroom (a phone in my room more than made up for the headgear on the Cool Scale).

Sharen was my Fifth Grade bestie.

Or so I thought.

I walked into school one morning to find that the entire classroom was buzzing about Sharen’s Big Slumber Party Bash.  Sharon’s party was going to be the social event of the year.  She was inviting all the girls in the class for a fun night of sleeping bags, snacks and, gasp, movies on her parents’  brand new VCR.  Sharen was proudly handing out invitations as little girls clambered for her attention.  I couldn’t wait to get mine.  A VCR!  So fancy!

As I sidled up to Sharen, expectantly waiting for my invite, she looked me over and smirked.  I realize now that she was relishing in the painful blow she was about to deliver.  She slowly and very deliberately turned her head away from me and announced to the group that I was, in fact, invited, but only because her mother MADE her invite me.  She told all of those ten year olds that she begged her mother to let her exclude me but that she just couldn’t get around having me attend.

And then she told the girls, “But don’t worry, we’ll have fun even if SHE’S there….”.  And the little snot minions all laughed together conspiratorially.

I was crushed.  Devastated.  I slowly turned my acned face down and silently begged the hot tears stinging at the corners of my eyes to stay put until I could procure the bathroom pass from my teacher.

I managed to make it through the day but when I got home, those tears fell and they didn’t stop.  I cried into my mother’s arms and wailed at the injustice of it all.  I had gotten my first dose of Mean Girl Treatment and my heart was broken.

My mother, on the other hand, was angry.  It was like watching Bruce Banner morph into The Incredible Hulk:  her fury boiled over and though she didn’t turn into a hulking, green super hero, her eyes took on a wild look and when she told me to get into the car RIGHT NOW, I knew better than to resist.  After stopping to pick out a present for Sharen, she drove me right over to my tormentor’s house and marched me up to the front door.  When Sharen answered the door with her bewildered mother behind her, my mother explained in very measured tones that I was unable to attend Sharen’s bash and we just wanted to drop off a present.  When Sharen’s mother asked why I couldn’t attend, my mother said the words that still ring in my ears like a battle cry:  “She can’t stay because she has better things to do than play with your daughter”.  She then spun on her heels, clomped her Candies sandals down the sidewalk to the car and drove me home like a bat out of hell.

It was the greatest thing my mother has ever done for me.

And so, thirty years later, as I watch Fruit Loop #2 play with her friends and listen closely for signs that she’s met her Sharen, I know that I am ready to go to battle for her when the time comes because I learned from the best superhero on the planet.  I know that I will channel my inner Bruce Banner and show her that Mean Girls don’t win.  Ever.

I just wish I looked more like Wonder Woman….

thehulk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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7 Responses

  1. I also had a Sharen. However, I had a group of them that tormented me. My parents were divorced and we lived with my dad, who traveled a lot. I just internalized it. NOW though.. I get to ignore them when they attempt to friend me on FB. And I can say I’ve done more than them in the 20 years since high school (traveled the world.. they are still drooling over high school boys in the same town). I do turn into the Hulk for my child.. He fought back against a kid who attacked him and some other boys (he was the only one who fought back!) and got suspended, but I was proud! I took him for ice cream 🙂

  2. My mother was too much the “keeping up appearances” type to ever go all Hulk on my behalf. I’m sure there were times she wanted to, but was too worried about what the neighbors would think of her ragged purple pants.

  3. Your mom is/was a boss! My mother ended up doing battle with my fifth grade teacher who insisted I had developmental issues but when tested as he requested was already at a college level with a near genius IQ. He couldn’t stand the fact I questioned him. Oh, the irony when we fast forward 25 yrs and I became his son’s case manager (bc he did have intellectual disabilities and received services). I hope my daughter doesn’t have the dreaded “Sharen” encounter but if she does, boy howdy I’ll be thinking of your mom and mine as I go all Hulk like. I know kids have to deal with things on their own but they also need to have someone in their corner.

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