Today we spent the day in Wageningen where I went to school in 1964. My school building was just blocks from our Bed & Breakfast so we drove past and noticed it was open. It is now a private music school. Roger talked me into going inside and asking to look around. A lot of memories flooded over me. It was a hard year attending that Gymnasium. I was in the first form and the regular students took so many subjects: History, Dutch, English, French, Greek, Biology, Algebra, Geometry, Gymnastics and Art. My school at home required me to bring along my American textbooks and study them, so I did not take all the classes the others students did. I took Algebra, Geometry, Art, Biology, History, Gymnastics and for awhile, English. I dropped English when it became apparent that the teacher spent too much time mocking my American English and I wasn't getting anything out of the class. So I would go up into the turret of the building and study my American texts during those classes.
I was pretty shy, didn't know Dutch yet and the students were not friendly to me. I'm sure it was hard for them to want to befriend someone who was shy and didn't know their language. Our desks were two-seaters and we had the same seat partner for most classes. My partner was a large girl named Jos. She didn't seem to be pleased to be placed next to me instead of a Dutch girl and ignored me most of the time.
At the beginning of the year I rode my bike the 4 kilometers to school from Renkum where we lived. But as the weather got colder and the skies darker in the morning, Dad would drop me off on his way to his office at the University of Wageningen. He would first drop off Marolyn and Janet at their elementary school and then drive to my school. Since their school started a half hour earlier than mine it meant that I had to stand outside for half an hour. So Dad began driving me around the countryside until it was time for me to go to school. We saw such interesting things--barns attached to houses, farmers wearing real wooden shoes out working in their fields, charming little villages. And Dad would give me pep talks while we drove. I'm sure this cut into his work time where he had important projects to do, but I didn't think of it then.

Mom,
ReplyDeleteI am so glad that you documented these memories and shared the pictures. I was in tears by the end of the post because it is so touching to read about what a wonderful father you had and how he helped you through that difficult time. The school and gym buildings are beautiful. I'm sure that, although it was a very hard year, you did a lot of growing up while you were there! Thank you for sharing your neat pictures and memories, mom. I'm so glad you were led to park right across the canal from your dad's office building!
It was only after I returned home from the Netherlands that I began to see that it was a very important experience for me and now I treasure it. It taught me a lot but was so hard for me that I needed my dad to help me through it. Of course, my mom helped me a lot, too, but she was very, very ill that year from her bleeding. I regret how I could have been helpful to her but wasn't because I was too selfishly unhappy about my own problems.
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