Many people moan about their fear and loathing of high school reunions.
I’m not one of them.
I love reunions. I love seeing how people turn out. I love recognising the young girl within a woman. I love seeing how most of us are just the same as we were, just older, wiser, wearier and most often happier.
I love laughing about bad perms, blue eyeshadow, our 80s harem pants, the times we were busted eating chocolate cake in the out-of-bounds area and the detention we suffered as penance. I love the feeling that we are shared survivors of a period of bad fashion, a patchy education, puberty and life.
Then I went back to a reunion of my first high school - and I was snubbed big time.
I'd left that school in Year 10 because I was naughty. I'd been told it would be good if I turned over a new leaf, somewhere far, far away and while I didn't really want to leave my friends, especially my best friend, I saw the sense in it.
I wanted to emerge from my older sister's long shadow and grow up. So I moved to the only private school that would take me. My parents hoped their two-year investment would help me get my act together.
My best friend at my public school didn't want me to leave. She accused me of being a "snob". I vowed to her I wouldn't become one. In fact, the moment I got to that private ladies college I started swearing like a trooper and speaking with the most heavy Oztralyan accent I could, just to show her I wasn't a snob and to tell my parents while I would try and study, I'd never be a 'lady'.
But, from what I remember, after I left, my friend from the old school didn't want to hang out anymore. And I made new friends, loved my new school and moved on. She and my old mates became memories, part of my past and part of me.