I thought my relationship with the phrase “Back to School” had ended.
With the youngest child graduating from college the “Back to
School” noise is just that and for the first time in almost 22 years we are
going back to nothing.
No marketing phrase travels as far in the psyche of the
American consumer as “Back to School.”
As a child it means new school supplies, re-setting the
alarm clock, the pull of homework, uncomfortable clothes, and even more
uncomfortable social situations. As you age antipathy rises as you come to
realize it’s all marketing: “It’s not back to school, it’s the end of summer!”
Going off to college shifts the mind again, “Back to School”
means the return to everything good in life: From friends and football to the
disbelief that you only have 3 years, 2 years, 1 year left.
Then you walk off campus for the last time.
That first year out of college the wave of “Back to School”
sales reach out from every media orifice, and you shrink from the shriek of
marketing. Life and work and independence take on new meaning and rather than
feeling left out, you realize you’ve escaped.
It turns out the first day back to school is just a Tuesday
for you and most of the world.
And then they leave for college, and you undergo the familial
earthquake, the push and pull of love, the emptying of the nest. As you
approach the end of their four-year run it’s all about counting down the payments
until that final one clears the bank.
And then it’s over.
Like the seasons of the year our perspectives bloom and fade.
We may have hated the fall when we were kids because it meant the end of
summer, but we learned to love it later in life when it meant cooler weather.
Summer turned from the most important season of the year into a hot mess.
Winter, beloved for those magical snow days turns into a season to avoid slipping
on the ice.
And so it shifts again, but the noise still comes. No one
told the marketers that I’m no longer their target. It now acts as a madeleine
calling me back. I am transported to late August days, early mornings, the
smell of pencil shavings, the spring in the seats of the yellow school bus, small
chairs in small classrooms.
There is no back to school for this family. But it still
calls me back.