FAREWELL COLUMN: Looking Forward
  • May 23, 2022

Camille Storch
CO-EDITOR IN CHIEF

When I first stepped foot into Andover High School my first day of freshman year, I had a rush of emotions hit me like a wave. I felt scared, nervous, and confused, apprehensive about being able to make new friends, settle into a new environment, and enjoy my four years. I had a feeling in the back of my mind that the time would fly by extremely quickly, yet in the moment, just the first quarter of freshman year alone felt daunting. 

Throughout freshman year, I made more friends than I thought was possible, and joined different clubs and extracurricular activities, where I met even more people, including both students and teachers. I also was hit with a blunt reality of time management, and the inevitable struggle for balance between school and social life, a balance that probably will never be equal.

Sophomore year, I began to hit my stride, settling into a comfortable rhythm between running cross country after school, staying on top of my classwork, continuing to make progress taking piano lessons, and hanging out with friends. I was able to get involved in more clubs, including Mock Trial, which became a favorite part of my weekly routine. In addition, I found myself dealing with a knee injury from running and learned how to deal with the obstacles and annoyances of being unable to do something I love. 

COURTESY PHOTO / Camille Storch
Storch celebrates her senior night for cross country alongside fellow senior captains

March of sophomore year, I, along with the rest of the world, was faced with a new obstacle, greater than any obstacle I had ever faced; being in quarantine at home. With COVID and the first couple of months of at-home learning, I was able to adapt to a new way of taking in information and simply living. Being online for school had its benefits, but I also struggled with staying on top of my work if no one was there to enforce it. I got to see friends over Zoom, but that was nothing compared to hanging out with friends in real life. During these spring months stuck at my desk, the only motivator for me to keep going with school was the anticipation of summer. Even though the country was still very much shut down, I couldn’t wait for free time to just be outside, take bike rides and walks with friends, and go to the beach. 

Junior year, I began to start looking at schools to check out prospective colleges and locations I either liked or didn’t like. At the same time, many of my friends who were seniors were making their college decisions, which piqued my curiosity in the entire process. I began to spend a lot more time with these friends, trying to make the most of our time together before they graduated. With school being hybrid, I only got to see half of my school, which meant only seeing half of my friends when I was in the building. Lunch time is normally a time when I can sit and talk with everyone, not just the kids in my exact lunch block class, but instead, I was only in the Dunn Gym, eating my lunch at a desk six feet away from the next, during the same two blocks each week. As I entered the summer post junior year, I was swept up with working at my family’s bakery, working on my college essay, and trying to wrap my head around entering my last year of high school. 

Now, as I complete my senior year, I am grateful for all of the opportunities and fun experiences that have been provided to me as a result of being part of the Andover High community. I have worked hard this past year, but I finally feel that my hard work and effort has paid off, and I am looking forward to the future. I know it sounds cliche, but our high school years truly do fly by in a blink of an eye, and as Ferris Bueller once said, “Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.” When I look back after four years of high school, the memories, experiences, learning curves, and growth makes it a time worthwhile.

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FAREWELL COLUMN: Moving Too Fast
  • May 23, 2022

Shravya Sathi
CO-EDITOR IN CHIEF

When the current seniors started their time at AHS on August 29, 2018, the four years to come — 1,367 days, 32,808 hours, 1,968,480 minutes, 118,108,800 seconds — felt like they would last an eternity. However, by May of 2022, it felt like it went by way too fast. 

Coming into AHS from middle school was like going to college. An overwhelming amount of exploration came with this step. I could join any clubs, had an option on what classes I wanted to take, could pick any sport to try out for, and make a bunch of new friends. On top of just living through that, it was the time for a lot of firsts. First time going to a high school sports game (before Triple EEE hit Andover), first time staying after school, first high school dance, first party, and it seemed like a dream. It was the preview season for the next three years.

Sophomore year only got better. While freshman year came with trying new things, sophomore year gave me my first real taste of freedom: my driving permit. Additionally, with everyone turning 16, the fun continued, as sweet-sixteen invitations were traveling around the school. However, that stopped when the news of COVID started being carried around instead. Then, came the fire alarms for a whole week. By the time we finished making bets on who the culprit was, the announcement was delivered: School is canceled for the next two weeks due to COVID. At first it was exciting, the endless facetimes, family walks, disinfecting groceries, and sitting behind the computer with the cameras off because for some reason it was uncomfortable to turn them on. And before you knew it, school was officially over.

STAFF PHOTO / Shravya Sathi
Seniors walk down the path at graduation after getting their diplomas

By the time we returned to junior year, whether you picked hybrid or online, it was an unexpected situation. We never thought we would have to wipe our desks at the end of class with cleaning spray, eat six feet away from friends in the Dunn Gym, have classes under large tents, have assigned seats for the whole year, and hope for no “close contact” emails from the school nurse. However, a little bit of normalcy continued in our lives when it was time to get our licenses (unless you got caught in the North Andover Auto School scandal). With this freedom, however, came the realization that we need a job in order to pay for gas, and soon enough we were all working our first jobs. 

Senior year thus far has been a mixture of all the previous years: exploration of freshman year, freedom of sophomore year, and responsibility of junior year. The college process at the beginning of the year was a type of stress I would not wish on my greatest enemy. However, the time between submitting college applications and decisions coming out hardly exists— it goes by so fast. Then, it’s April and it’s time for all the senior events. By the time the AHS Grads Instagram starts rolling with commitments, it really hits that this is goodbye. Soon enough, prom will be over, and it will be senior events week, graduation, senior safari, and our last goodbyes. By May 27, 2022, we’d have gone through our last high school sports game, last time walking through the school doors, last high school dance, last party, and the dream is over.

In the end, it truly goes by faster than you think. The same kids that you went to elementary school with, drew on shaving cream covered desks with, made Valentine’s Day cards with, are all going to be spread apart across the state, country, continent, and some, even the world. Take a moment to enjoy where you are and take it all in because it will be over before you know it. 

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