Friday, July 27, 2007

True Confessions of a Public High School Graduate



True Confessions of a Public High School Graduate

So there I was—my very first day in a public school, twelve years old, donning my most fashionable clothing, walking into the gymnasium full of glaring, unfamiliar faces. I was finally in the “real world”. For the previous seven years, I had attended a small Christian school and my soul ached to go to a “real school”. I liked it. But I admit, the first few days shocked me. And they should have. I had heard young people curse before, but not like it was their native language. I had even heard coarse jokes, sexual innuendos, and such; but I had not been aware of a society of children who wallowed in it. To my great detriment, there did come a day when I was no longer shocked. That day would change my life, my character, and my destiny forever.

I attended public high school in the eighties. (I have heard things have gotten even worse.) I boarded a bus around 7:15 a.m. There, as my character was still being molded, I witnessed cruelty, obscenity, and a total disregard for anything moral. When the bus approached Cindy’s house, everyone scurried to share a seat with someone else, even if there were three of four to that seat. There was always an empty seat for Cindy. Cindy was overweight, and poor. Her countenance revealed years of social abandonment and cruel regard. “Don’t sit with me! Sit over there! Oh no, she’s coming over here!” were the typical comments that welcomed Cindy onto the bus every morning.

Two of the “older” kids were usually in the back seat making out. The school bus seats were very high, for safety, (Ha! Save their bodies, destroy their souls!) and so one could do just about anything without being seen by the driver.

At only 8:00 in the morning, I had already witnessed enough wickedness to last a lifetime. Now we were at school. Soon I learned it was really cool to make fun of your teachers and hold a general disdain for any kind of academics. (When the majority of your day is spent with peers, they are naturally the ones for whom you want to “be cool”.) This was a conflict as I had a natural desire to please both peers and teachers. I spent the first few weeks of school crying. The new student has to be “broken in”, so all the girls made fun of me—for anything they could think of. When and if one persevered, this may pass.

Breaks between classes—that is what we looked forward to. You had one of several agendas: If you had a boyfriend/girlfriend, you must flee to him, exchange your fifth love letter of the day, possibly exchange some physical affection, and go back to class starry-eyed. Or if no lover, then you would flock together with your cronies and get the latest gossip. “Fight at 3:30 at the Shell station”…”Kevin and Amy broke up!”…”We made Mrs. Smith cry again today!” These were the gentle things of public school—the “innocence” if you will, of being a teenager—this was “real” life.

Then there were the other conversations exchanged here and there, before school, in the hall, at lunch, at PE, just about anytime. Those things that had shocked me at first. Those things, which having heard them enough times, began to be normal. “So-and-so lost her virginity last night”—she was fourteen. Parties, alcohol, drugs, etc., all very commonplace after awhile. Day after day, year after year, conditioning took place and I was no longer the frog jumping into boiling water.

So, after a year or two, I was one of them. Any reserve I held for sacred things had long dissolved. My Christian upbringing, the principles my parents had tried so diligently to instill had, at the very least, retreated so deeply into the recesses of my character as to appear invisible.

For thirteen years, the effects of this transformation gripped my life. I had once commented to my father, as he tried to make a decision about my going to public school, “You have raised me with a strong foundation…I want to go and share Christ with those kids…I am strong enough”. I was now rebellious, angry, confused, and wallowing in sin.

Today, by the grace and mercy of our Savior, I am a forgiven sinner, seeking after godliness, despite my many failures. So, “it all turned out to be OK in the end, right?” Wrong. The whole point of this article is to emphasize that the consequences of sin cannot be avoided, and they leave an ugly, painful trench in every life—even the life surrendered to God. I admit that my life is on a much smoother course than it could have been, by God’s grace. But did my renewed love for the Lord repair the damage that resulted from years of breaking His law, and being a companion to the wicked? Not a chance. I struggle much, and I know from where my struggle comes. And my heart grieves for the flippancy prevailing among parents this very day, as they turn their children over to Satan’s company to be devoured. I certainly do not blame my parents for my years of rebellion. I do not even blame them for sending me to public school—they didn’t know of an alternative. They did what they thought they had to do.

But now, on the other side of it, I am not ashamed to boldly challenge parents to think about their responsibility for the sanctity of their children. I cannot watch someone driving recklessly toward a cliff and not try my best to stop them! As Christians, we must search the Scriptures for wisdom in raising our children. And we must stop justifying our methods by saying, “Well, it doesn’t say_______anywhere in the Bible!” We must not see how little we can get away with, but rather strive for holiness, pressing toward the mark, seeking to resemble Christ as much as lies in us. I would plead with parents to realize the responsibility of being accountable for the children the Lord has given them. We need to be urgent, determined and devoted to guarding their hearts and minds. Let us commit to raising not mediocre children, bruised and wounded as they enter adulthood, but strong and mighty men and women, a godly generation with a legacy of purity!

(From Hearts For Family blog)

9 comments:

sedaschoolroom said...

Thank you! This is exactly what I needed to hear - today - right now! I am a mother of 2 boys and I have been homeschooling them for 5 years now. I started thinking that maybe I should put them in the public school - more time for me and my disabled daughter. After all I have friends that send their children to P.S. and they also go to our church - they appear ok! I have been praying that the Lord will talk to me to make the right decision. I wanted to make sure that I was teaching my boys for the right reasons - where the reasons from God or was it b/c I wanted our family to be different. But we are different! We are children of the mighty King. My children are his also. Why would I want to give them over to satan for 6.5hrs of their day/5 days a week? Thank you for your article. The Lord guided me to this blog - I needed to read this. My decision is now made up. They will be HOMESCHOOLED! Maria S.(PA)

Christy said...

This is good for all homeschoolers (and those who disagree with their decision) to read. I would like to share it on my blog and link back to you. Would you mind?

And thank you for posting on my blog. I am enjoying reading through yours and am so happy I've had the opportunity to!

Mrs. June Fuentes said...

You are very welcomed to do so!

Many blessings...

Karina said...

Thank you. I needed to read this! I am struggling big Time with homeschooling my stepson who just started 9th grade. He hates me and has no respect for me and I just want to send him to school. I know in my heart that isnt right but I dont know how much more I can take..... Im so tired of repeating myself and him NOT doing what he is suppose to do. My kindergardener loves school and encourges me......

Christin said...

Exactly. I was a public school girl all the way through a State University. ...and during college, I subbed in a public school system. That was almost 10 years ago...and you're right, it HAS gotten worse. and continues to do so.
I didn't want to homeschool for the longest time. AT ALL. But God changed my heart in a matter of a week. And now, I just get more and more assured that it's the right thing to do. This route is not always easy (as I know you know), but their childhood is such a short season for me to just hand them over to someone else for 8 hours a day.

Great post!

atara said...

I could have written this. I'm a public school graduate. My first kiss from a boy was in a 3rd grade classroom. We were alone. CRAZY!

SuzanneDeAZ said...

I have a heavy heart as a mother of one 18 year old and an great aunt to another 18 year old. I homeschooled my daughter from 3rd grade through grade 9. My great niece was homeschool along with my daughter till her mother died in Oct. in her 9th year, her first year of high school.

I homeschooled them along with my nieces younger siblings. I felt God was using me to nuture them in the ways of the Lord. The death of my niece, my great nieces's mother changed everthing. My sister had her granddaughters live with her while her grandson lived with the father and came to my house each day. My sister committed herself to drive the younger ones to my house but after spending 5 hours each day in transport she decided it was much easier to put them in a public school near their house.

Thus mid year I lost all of my nieces to the public school system and was left with only my then 14 year old daughter and my 5 year old great nephew.

The following year in order to keep the children together we decided to put them in a "God and Country" charter school. The school was strict and the children closely supervised. However, my daughter began to like this one boy in her class and we transported him back and forth from the school to church on Wed. night. My husband and I had NO clue that they were skipping out of church the last 45 min. on Wed. night to fornicate.

Upon finding out that I spend a lot of one to one with my daughter, prayed with her to get her back on track with the Lord. She had a "God encounter" that summer so I thought all is well. The next fall, in her junior year of high school she insisted she wanted to work in the evenings as a bagger at the local grocery store. Little did we know she was making friends with the teens in our area who attend public school. She started to act out and before the year ended she was kicked out of the "God and Counry" school for smoking.

She did not last that year with us as she was so rebellious that we had to "let her go" as she refused to give up those friends. She now lives with another family who does not have the rules we have in our home. She did graduate from a small charter school and plans on attending a vocational school in the Fall.

Yes, she is getting her education but she is so far from the Lord. My heart is just broken. She does not allow me to share any thing of the Lord with her. Her second cousin has just one more class left to finish high school and may be attending Jr. College in the Fall. Both girls are just a shadow of who they used to be. I do not even know who they are.

A few weeks ago my daughter and I attended the homeschool high school graduation at the Phx. Civic Plaza, where they graduated from 8th grade 4 years earlier. Many of their friends graduated and I could see the difference between the girls and those who remained in homeschooling. It was not my choice to have stopped homeschooling and I would have done so had my niece lived as we were homeschooling the children together. When she died it all was taken out of my hands.

I pray for the girls and the younger ones for hours every day as I have a broken heart and want them to return to the things of the Lord. If you can please homeschool your children all the way through high school as there is just too much "darkness" out there that even those who you think are strong will be greatly tempted.

I myself have spent all of my grad school and high school in ps but somehow my walk with God was never tempted. My siblings all went the ways of the world but it never had an attraction for me. After high school I attended a 4 year Bible school and then went on to a state university where I lived in a dorm. I lived the same godly life there as if I was in Bible school. I will be 60 in a few days and I can say that the world today is not the world I knew when I was a teen. I really have compassion for those who are struggling with the issues of where to educate their children.

ANNA said...

There are Christian schools and Catholic schools. These are well run and have good supervision. They are a good alternative to public schools. Calling all public schools 'Satan run' is a bit much. I don't think you can blame all of your children's problems on the public schools. YOU as a parent still have the most control. If you don't, then why not?

Mrs. June Fuentes said...

Dear Anna,

This post was not written by me,if you look carefully it was copied and pasted from another blog.

Secondly, I do believe they have taken God out of the public schools, they teach anti-God philosophies and do not allow for prayer. You cannot deny this obvious fact.

The author of this post was sharing their experience, it was not penned by myself and therefore I am not blaming my children's problem on public schools because they do not attend them.

I absolutely realize that I do have control over what my children do so that is exactly the reason why we homeschool.

I would like for people to realize whether they public school or homeschool that there are alternatives out there. This is not a place they will find judgment but,instead, hopefully find answers.

Many blessings...

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