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Caught in My Own Web

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  • #84330
    S. W.
    Participant

    Hello every kind soul reading this.

    I never thought I’d come to ask other people for help on a personal matter. I’ve always relied on my myself and my gut feelings. It has never led my astray. But now I’m in a position where I feel stuck, stuck in my own web, and I can’t move. I find that I need another perspective, perhaps someone with a little more wisdom or different understanding, who can lean back, and clearly see the whole image, instead of the entangled parts I only see.

    For you to be able to understand my situation I would like to tell you a part of my story. It’s long, but deep thanks to everyone looking and reading.

    I’ve just turned 22 years of age and recently started my last year of what is, to some extent, equivalent to High School. I’m a late bloomer, I know, and I’ve long accepted that. Due to my past, when I finished Secondary School I wasn’t personally ready to go straight to High School like my peers. Instead, I needed time to develop myself. This brought me on a three year journey where I went to boarding schools, Folk High Schools and traveled. It was a personal necessity, and I’ll never regret one moment. When I finally was ready to begin at High school I sought out a certain school with a creative profile and good reputation. It was a prestige school, but I found that its concepts and academic standards suited me, and it was very close to where I lived. I could see myself happy there, in contrary to many other schools in the area. It was my highest hope to attend that school. My little dream.

    Where I’m from there is legally no age limitation to whether a student can be accepted into High School. Yet, people beyond the average age when applying, which is around 16-17 years, normally don’t apply. However, there have been many cases of slightly older students applying and attending High School, it’s just not typical. Who gets accepted by the school is based on the distance from your home to the school. The students closest to the school has the highest right to attend. I applied to this certain school, at the age of 19, and was immediately rejected by the vice principal of the school because I didn’t “fit the school’s image”. – In other words; They deemed me too old.

    Because of legal unfairness I went to the school and proclaimed my right to have a fair chance like any other applicant. After being yelled at by the vice principal for not obeying and leaving, I demanded to speak to the principal and called the ministry of education, and in the end I was successful. I could apply like any other applicant, and I got in. I was overjoyed and thankful. However, my defiance didn’t fall in good hands with vice principal, and he made sure I knew I wasn’t welcome at the school. He was the one “pulling the strings” and seemed to be running the school and more in control than the principle herself. Through the first year, he would take me aside, call me to his office and indirectly belittle me, threatening to throw me out the minute he had the chance. Something he knew would make me very distressed and sad. I was shocked that a man in his position could and would act like this, instead of talking to me in a more respectful manner.

    The second year my family and I had to move three times over a period of six months. In the end my family moved quite far away from the school, so I decided to move out by myself in close proximity to the school so I could continue attending it. I found, moved, repaired, painted and set up my apartment. I was hard setting up and making a living by myself while attending a demanding school. This combined led to me being absent from quite a few classes. Enough as an official right to throw me out due to truancy after a written warning. However, I know students at the school with more absence who’s been allowed to stay.

    Just before I had to attend my final exam of the second year I was called up by the vice principal and told that I was being thrown out, and that he absolutely didn’t care about what I had to say, or whatever my reasons or situation might be. I was hurt, shocked and sad, and my mind started spinning. I couldn’t concentrate at my exam, I couldn’t articulate anything to the examinators. I completely flopped my exam. An exam in a subject I’ve done very well in the entire year and knew my stuff inside out. It was quite heartbreaking for me.

    Afterwards, when I’d collected myself, I went to talk to the vice principal. I told him that he couldn’t rightfully throw me out since he hadn’t given me a written warning beforehand. And with that, I got my written warning and was allowed to stay. However, with a threatening condition; the slightest reason, the slightest absence on my behalf, and I was out.

    Being self sufficient and managing my own household with the duties, chores and work that naturally comes with it, I know chances are I’ll be missing some classes or assignments, just to make ends meet. It takes up too much time in correlation to the high demanding schoolwork and performance. I spent almost every free hour I have on either housework or homework. I feel like I’m working very hard everyday, doing my very best, just to make ends meet and surviving. – And it seems not to be enough.

    Though being a sensitive person, I can be very strong and enduring when needed be. But I can feel it’s slowly gnawing at me. I can feel that I’m hurting. And it goes out on myself and my grades, and thereby future opportunities and my overall wellbeing.

    I want this to work so intensely. But I can’t ignore the warning signals, the disrespectful treatment and unhealthy atmosphere. I feel like I’m very qualified for staying and that I have the capacity to finish, however the circumstances and situation have made it difficult. I feel like, should I press on through, I will not have listened to my own warnings signals, and instead have allowed myself to keep on going in an environment which mistreats me. Should I leave the school, I feel like I’m backing out, quitting, and all my hard work, all my fighting have been in vain. Like I lost the fight.
    Yet, I know the most consequential loss I could attain would be losing my self in it all.

    I feel like I’m caught in a web I helped create myself, and I’m too entangled to see things clearly and know where to tread. I need fresh eyes, open hearts and sincere words.
    I’ll read every response carefully and with an open and thankful heart.

    S.

    • This topic was modified 9 years, 2 months ago by S. W..
    #84357
    Inky
    Participant

    Oh my Dear S.W.!

    It stinks because you WANT to like the school, and the V.P. is the turd in the punch bowl!! You know if you were two to five years younger it would be a non-issue!!

    What you could do:

    Write an editorial or letter to the editor of the local paper praising the open-mindedness of the school and how they welcomed you, an older student, with open arms. That you know you are “irregular” but in the pursuit of an amazing education, every teenager should go to this school! Even better if you can get a reporter to interview you and write a local interest piece on it. Even better, interview HIM!

    THEN the V.P. wouldn’t DARE mistreat you!! You will have outfoxed him! Everyone in the community will know your name, and the school, and him.

    You win, the school wins from the great endorsement and he “loses” because then he can’t kick you out without losing face.

    That is how I, as a fellow adult, would handle him.

    Inky

    #84360
    Inky
    Participant

    Other Ideas: Become great friends with the Principal. Know who the Big Donors are and mention them in conversation. Ask if you could help them with fund raising.

    He is punishing you for being a young adult daring to go to high school. Well, he wouldn’t treat a fellow adult like that ~ remind him that you are one!

    Friend his mother on FaceBook. I’m not kidding!! Make connections with his connections. Go on the town’s FaceBook Group Page and join, mentioning the school. EVERYONE IN TOWN WILL ASSOCIATE YOU WITH THE SCHOOL!! Be uplifting, supportive and a friend to everyone on the Page!! Then if he does the unthinkable you can say “kicked out” with a sad emoticon and hell will rain down on him. Don’t worry. It won’t happen! 😉

    Forget your housework. Get takeout and let the dust bunnies breed. Go to all your classes. Do all the work and hand it all in early. Start a program in the school. Run for student council. Be in the school play. Dominate in Varsity. Be a favorite of the favorite teachers.

    Have someone get a reporter at that local paper to interview YOU as Student of the Year!!

    Go Get ‘Em!!!

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 2 months ago by Inky.
    #84393
    Inky
    Participant

    Can I just add: The VP is a BULLY and bullies bully only because they THINK they can get away with it! But once you are made VISIBLE and a REPRESENTATIVVE, of sorts, for the school, then his darkness can’t live in the light!! Of course you have to do your part, like have a maddening habit of showing up for all your classes so he can’t kick you out, but you know what I mean!!

    #84396
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hello there! You are very, very strong. Dealing with such a person seems extremely difficult and you are managing so well. You are an inspiration. However, since the Vice President is making your life at your school miserable, you should bring it up to the principle and let him/her know what’s how the Vice President is treating you. He is acting immature and us a disgrace. A person should be entitled to an education regardless of their age. If things get worse after you speak to the president, it might be best to consider leaving. Staying in an environment like this can weigh down on you. I know that this is a prestigious school, but there are others. Quitting sometimes is the best option. You need to be happy. At the end of the day, if your not happy, then there needs to be a change. I believe that leaving would be the best option, because you deserve happiness, not this verbal abuse.

    #84399
    Anonymous
    Guest

    * Dear pikachumew2: it is amazing to me that the post above written by you, was written by a 17 year old. The language, expression, insight seems like that of a much older person. In fact many older people do not read as mature as you.

    You wrote: “I believe that leaving would be the best option, because you deserve happiness, not this verbal abuse.”

    Remember this belief of yours when you decide what to do in your life situation!

    anita

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