• commentary
  • MONDAY OCTOBER 13 2008 6:00 AM

Where Have All The Prom Queens Gone?

Hi, I’m Mur. I’m a geek. While I have embraced this geekdom for the past fifteen or so years, it was terrible to go through high school when my girlfriends didn’t share my passion for They Might Be Giants or Star Wars, and none of the boys wanted anything to do with me.

Well, romantically, that is. I had several friends who thought I was -– say it with me -– one of the guys. I ran for student government; I lost to a girl named Valerie. My Bloom County–inspired campaign signs were defaced and torn down. Forget running for homecoming queen; that’s just ridiculous. No one would even consider geeky little me for such a lofty position.

I was ignored; the smart one who kept her head down and worked backstage in the theater department. The one who wanted to be a writer.

Of course, in college I made friends who understood me, cared about me, and didn’t seem to think that I needed heels and pretty hair to fit in. And now that I’m an adult, more or less, I’m geeky, confident, and don’t give a damn about those who made high school a depressing place.

So. How many of you have the same story? Many, I bet. There were several of us geeks in high school, several who saw those four years as long, arduous tests intended to cause so much trauma to us in order to prepare us for the rest of our lives. But as I make friends, many of whom tell me of their geeky status in high school, one question stands out to me.

What happened to all the popular kids?

Seriously. Where did they all go? There are several explanations, I suppose. They could all be right in front of me, just not wanting to say so, uncomfortably hiding under the radar in the same way that kids whose parents paid for their college educations did when friends swapped student loan or work study stories. If you have no “high school was hell” stories, then you’re not terribly interesting in many social circles. Especially if your stories revolve around, “I made high school hell for others.”

Another option would be that they went into careers that exist outside of my world. I hang out with a lot of artists, writers, and computer engineers. I suppose most of those jobs are done by classically geeky people. I always assumed that the popular kids went off to get jobs as investment bankers or spouses of investment bankers. I don’t know any investment bankers. This does not bother me.

But my favorite option is the Lost Island of the Prom Queens. I was chatting with my arch-nemesis Matt Wallace the other day, and I said that I wondered if the popular people just stopped once they left high school; that they had reached the pinnacle of their lives. He said they were all shipped, in their prom dresses and rented tuxes, to the Lost Island of the Prom Queens. This of course upsets the boys, as the island is named for their dates, not them. And broken tiaras lie in dusty corners like discarded bones.

(Incidentally, Matt was also a geek in high school, a journalism geek who had a menacing frame and left at age sixteen to become a pro wrestler. Now he writes horror. Think I’m kidding?)

I do remember a book from the 90’s where the main protagonist was a woman who had been the prom queen in high school, the most popular girl ever, whose life did stop at eighteen. She led a life of aimless depression because her court had been disbanded and she didn’t know what to do with herself. That made the most sense to me; for most of us, life began when we escaped high school. For the popular kids, everything changed. They likely went somewhere that forced them to start from scratch. Maybe they pledged the Greek lifestyle (I know very little about that, as I didn’t pledge) –– you do meet people who were in frats and sororities –– but no one ever talks about their prom queen heyday.

I’d love to end this column with a report on my ten year high school reunion, on how I went back, confident and happy, and saw for my own eyes what happened to Jessica, Beth, Joleta, Teddy, Craig, and David. The beautiful ones, the popular ones. Those for whom high school served as their own personal golden eating trough, what are they doing? I’d love to tell that story, but, well… I wasn’t invited to the ten year reunion.

Remember what I said about being ignored?

I still haven’t gotten past high school angst. I’m thirty-five, confident, happily married, and actually doing what I wanted to do since I was twelve. And yet I still get shaken and return to the same horrific awkwardness and shyness that I felt back in the day (like the time I desperately tried to get David to notice me). I sometimes wonder if I would be better off if I found out where they were now, what they were doing. Then I realize I’m a lot happier thinking of them on the Lost Island of the Prom Queens.

Yup. Thirty-five, confident, and petty. That’s me.


Mur Lafferty is an author and podcaster who recently released her first novel, Playing For Keeps. She Speaks Geek every month on SuicideGirls.com. Click HERE for more of Mur's musings.

 

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next

Comments
Thistle

Thistle

SUICIDEGIRL

California, USA

OCT 14, 2008 09:51 PM

Most of the popular kids from my hometown are still there.

The popular kids from the rich towns near mine are all doing rich kid shit like starting businesses and working in finance.

I wasn't treated uniformly poorly by the popular kids, so I don't resent them.

RileyStClair

RileyStClair

Los Angeles, CA
September 2006

OCT 14, 2008 11:04 PM

i just assume they all end up in business school, but i'm sort of hoping they run a ferry back from the island of lost prom queens for my ten-year reunion. which is coming up a whole lot faster than i'd like to pretend. i admit, approximately 78% of the reason i'm even contemplating attending can be attributed to the expectation of schadenfreude.

sometimes popular kids friend request me on facebook now. i accept them because hey if they have the internets on that island it can't be so terrible, right? they never give me any details about what life there is like, but it does involve an awful lot of marriages and communications degrees. regrettably bad highlights are still all the rage, but maybe that's only because i went to high school in texas.

miserabelle

miserabelle

United Kingdom
April 2007

OCT 15, 2008 03:16 AM

Facebook has solved this burning question for me - I always wondered where they'd all gone, and it seems that they do still exist although a lot of them have settled down now and had/are having children. Other than that they seem to be receptionists, travel agents, teachers who go to cheap bars at night looking cheap and drinking cheap spirits.

I never run into them. xx

RudieCantFail

RudieCantFail

Baton Rouge, LA
January 2006

OCT 15, 2008 04:07 AM

So pretty much everyone on SG went to high school in Shermer, Illinois too, huh?

Weatherpunk

Weatherpunk

Japan
June 2008

OCT 15, 2008 04:55 AM

I've been contacted by a handful of people I knew "in passing" our freshmen year, and then quickly moved out of orbit with once they were no longer 9th graders and therefore, had some sort of social sway at school.

Didn't really hate them then, but I was a bit resentful that they seemed to be having fun with a go-go party lifestyle while I was hauling my 16 tons every day. Then I kind of hit a wall over the summer of junior year, and as a senior I came into my own dorky hierarchy & had a blast.

These days, I hear from them occasionally on Facebook, but we don't make plans to grab a beer when I seldomly come home to visit (I'm military, so I go home MAYBE once every 2 years.) I'd love to give it a shot though, and see if some people have actually grown a bit since then or see if first impressions really do set the bar.

Besides, I have a busy life myself that I wouldn't trade for anything. I took my lumps, but it has been worth it. I'm not bitter, I'm BETTER! wink

NewSpectre

NewSpectre

Baltimore, MD
March 2005

OCT 15, 2008 06:21 AM

A lot of the guys also became cops, firefighters, and soldiers.

Suri

Suri

SUICIDEGIRL

Pennsylvania, USA

OCT 15, 2008 07:54 AM

JuliusChurch said:

Suri said:

mightymur said:


If you have no "high school was hell" stories, then you're not terribly interesting in many social circles. Especially if your stories revolve around, "I made high school hell for others."



i was a popular kid (a Heather)

*a cheerleader
*honor roll
*mean as a snake
*kind of a slut

and i am so ashamed of it that i avoid high school conversations like the plague.



it's OK, Suri; I still like you. smile



oh good

Perdita

Perdita

SUICIDEGIRL

I'm lost

OCT 15, 2008 05:32 PM

Suri said:

JuliusChurch said:

Suri said:

mightymur said:


If you have no "high school was hell" stories, then you're not terribly interesting in many social circles. Especially if your stories revolve around, "I made high school hell for others."



i was a popular kid (a Heather)

*a cheerleader
*honor roll
*mean as a snake
*kind of a slut

and i am so ashamed of it that i avoid high school conversations like the plague.



it's OK, Suri; I still like you. smile



oh good



I was mean as a snake too but that's about it. It still bothers me. I'd like to think people can grow and change. At any rate I still like you too. smile

gutterpunk4u

gutterpunk4u

Pewaukee, WI
May 2004

OCT 17, 2008 01:12 PM

i wonder about this sometimes too, and i think that most people think they were geeks in high school. Everyone is insecure, although granted not everyone got picked on. in the boiler cooker social scene that is high school, the pressure is on everyone to be the same, and obviously everybody falls short of that standard. So my money is on the theory, that most people, even people who everyone else thought were cool, actually thought they were much less.

Kleio

Kleio

Winona, MN
January 2006

OCT 17, 2008 01:28 PM

I browsed through the Facebook profiles of my graduating class, and most of the names were totally unfamiliar to me. I guess I was one of those geeks that was lucky enough to get ignored rather than picked on, and it appears that I was able to return the favor pretty thoroughly.

Suri

Suri

SUICIDEGIRL

Pennsylvania, USA

OCT 18, 2008 03:00 PM

Perdita said:

Suri said:

JuliusChurch said:

Suri said:

mightymur said:


If you have no "high school was hell" stories, then you're not terribly interesting in many social circles. Especially if your stories revolve around, "I made high school hell for others."



i was a popular kid (a Heather)

*a cheerleader
*honor roll
*mean as a snake
*kind of a slut

and i am so ashamed of it that i avoid high school conversations like the plague.



it's OK, Suri; I still like you. smile



oh good



I was mean as a snake too but that's about it. It still bothers me. I'd like to think people can grow and change. At any rate I still like you too. smile



i'm glad to be liked

i like you!!

Cigarette

Cigarette

Cleveland, OH
April 2004

OCT 18, 2008 06:45 PM

And some of the geeks get married right out of high school and go into the military. And not the ones you expected. *shrug* I was a geek and I'm a 25 year old undergrad with no prospects.

fountainofdreams

fountainofdreams

Batavia, IL
January 2005

OCT 19, 2008 07:06 PM

Cigarette said:
And some of the geeks get married right out of high school and go into the military. And not the ones you expected. *shrug* I was a geek and I'm a 25 year old undergrad with no prospects.



Yea, I'm kinda feelin' that right now. I'd say something bad about those "popular" kids, but I'd be willing to bet that they probably have more to talk about in life than I do right now, so...

Of course, I also was the only wrestler in my senior year that made Honor roll, and I tended to get along with the "popular" people, so I don't really have any horror stories. More Junior High ones.

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next