The Class Reunion


Every ten years, as summertime nears,
An announcement arrives in the mail,
“A reunion is planned; it’ll really be grand,
Make plans to attend without fail.”

I’ll never forget, the first time we met,
We tried so hard to impress,
We drove fancy cars, smoked big cigars,
And wore out our most elegant dress.

It was quite an affair; the whole class was there,
It was held at a fancy hotel,
We wined and we dined, and acted refined,
And everyone thought it was swell.

The men all conversed about who had been first,
To achieve great fortune and fame,
Meanwhile, their spouses described their fine houses,
And how beautiful their children became.

The homecoming queen, who once had been lean,
Now weighed in at one-ninety six,
The jocks that were there had lost all their hair,
And the cheerleaders no longer do kicks.

No one had heard about the class nerd,
Who’d guided a spacecraft to the moon,
Or poor little Jane, who’d always been plain,
She married a shipping tycoon.

The boy we’d decreed “Most Apt to Succeed”
Was serving ten years in the pen,
While the one voted “Least” now was a priest,
Just shows you can be wrong now and then.

They awarded a prize to one of the guys,
Who seemed to have aged the least,
Another was given to the grad that had driven
The farthest to attend the feast.

They took a class picture, a curious mixture
Of beehives, crew cuts and wide ties,
Tall, short, or skinny, the style was the mini,
You never saw so many thighs.

At our next get-together, no one cared whether
They impress their classmates or not,
The mood was informal, a whole lot more normal,
By this time we’d all gone to pot.

It was held out-of-doors, at the lake shores,
We ate hamburgers, coleslaw, and beans,
The most of us laid around in the shade
In our comfortable T-shirts and jeans.

By the fortieth year, it was abundantly clear,
We are definitely over the hill,
Those who weren’t dead had to crawl out of bed,
And be home in time for their pill.

And now I can’t wait, they’ve set the date,
Our Fiftieth is coming, I’m told,
It should be a ball, they’ve rented a hall
At Shady Rest Home for the Old.

Repairs have been made on my hearing aid,
My pacemaker’s been turned up on high,
My wheelchair is oiled, and my teeth have been boiled;
And I’ve bought a new wig and glass eye.

I’m feeling quite hearty, and I’m ready to party;
I’m gonna dance ‘til the dawn’s early light,
It’ll be lots of fun; I just hope that there’s one
Other person who can make it tonight!

(author unknown)

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