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Stories
I Just Wasnβt Prepared For The Realities of Grade 8 Graduation
πππ By Chantal Saville
πππ Photo Β© galinkazhi/Twenty20
Jun 13, 2022
πππ I remember a day way back when my daughter was in Grade 4.
πππ I was waiting for the kids to come out alongside a mom friend, and while we waited we watched the Grade 8 kids getting ready for their graduation.
πππ I remember being surprised that the girls were wearing literal gowns and heels, their hair in elaborate updos and makeup applied with care.
πππ The boys were in suits.
πππ So many pictures and giggles, flashes of tiaras and rhinestones in the afternoon sun.
πππ My friend jokingly said that I should start saving for my daughterβs Grade 8 graduation immediately:
πππ βThereβs a lot more to it these days! Not like when we were in middle school.β I smirked at her quip and that was that.
πππ Turns out, she wasnβt kidding.
πππ Sometimes familyβs experience moments where funds are low. But there are still many ways to keep a kid entertained.
Grade 8 Fit Check
πππ The first hint I got that Grade 8 grad was going to be a big deal was the weekly newsletter from the principal. She has a habit of listing dates of note, going forward, and at the bottom of the list was a simple line: June 28 β Grade 8 grad and boat cruise. Thatβs it. No information, no details.
πππ But then a little further down, there was a link to a service that rents out grad outfits for a small deposit: if you dry clean and return the outfit, you get your deposit back. The very existence of this organization told me I was about to land in a deep pile, and maybe my mom friend had been right after all.
Thinking Back
πππ I pulled hard on the brain box to bring back the memories from my own Grade 8 graduation. I remember a pink cotton dress Mom took me to get at Zellers, ballerina flats in baby blue patent plastic and fussing with press-on nails from the drug store on the afternoon of the big event.
πππ I distinctly recall getting an award and having to make a short speech, on the auditorium stage, in front of all the parents and teachers. I also remember the dance that followed in that same auditorium, which doubled as the cafeteria and always had that faint odour of stale cheese and tuna salad. But that night, it had a disco ball and a sound system that played Cindy Lauperβs greatest hits and the extended version of Stairway to Heaven.
πππ It was a pretty great night.
πππ So, suddenly I started getting a little excited for Nikki to have a similar experience.
πππ When I envisioned her Grade 8 graduation, I pictured something like what I got: cute dress and shoes, a little ceremony and maybe a dance. Nothing too fancy, right?
πππ Wrong.
πππ Can you raise a money-smart child? Hereβs how one mom plans to try.
The Art of the Grad
πππ βMom! Someone added me to the Grade 8 Girls group chat on SnapChat and theyβre asking me when my appointment is for trying on dresses.β
πππ Whatβs this now?
πππ Turns out, there are a couple of chic boutiques in town that set aside dates in March and April for Grade 8 girls to come and find the dress of their dreams.
πππ Now, I know that Zellers is long gone, but a quick peruse of the websites for these stores left me gobsmacked and more than a little worried that my friend had not only not been kidding, but had in fact undersold the issue.
πππ The average price was between $250 and $300. For a dress.
πππ That my kid would likely only ever wear once.
πππ And these were not the pink cotton ensembles of my day, but rather satin and lace, rhinestones and crinolines. These were prom dresses that I could imagine on a 17-year-old, not my 13-year-old!
πππ Anyway, the dress was only the beginning.
πππ Then there were the shoes, bag, hair accessories, makeup, hair appointment and mani-pedi appointment.
πππ All being discussed and dissected in the way that only 13-year-old girls can do: with total abandon and just a hint of judgment.
Itβs All Feeling Like A Lot
πππ I was quickly overwhelmed, looking over my kidβs shoulder to see the selfies from some of her classmates who had already attended their appointments: off the shoulder and strapless gowns, some knee length, some full on ball gown floor length. Most of these looks wouldnβt have been out of place on Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge.
πππ I could see her getting excited, looking at everyone elseβs dress shopping excursions and I wanted her to get swept up into it, but reality stepped in the second before I picked up the phone to book her appointment in the form of my monthly credit card statement.
πππ So we talked about what was realistic for us, and her group chat was helpful in sending along links to several sites that had nice dresses for a lot less money.
πππ As I put it, if we didnβt spend it all on the dress, we had plenty for the rest of her ensemble. Given that she was going through a βI want all the purses I seeβ phase at the time, that was all the incentive it took.
πππ She spent the next few days poring over dresses online, taking screenshots and sharing them with the group chat, asking the girls for their opinions.
πππ Jenn Cox reveals all of the things she registered for as a parent that she didnβt actually need.
The Final Push, With Tears
πππ Finally, she narrowed it down to four. I put an immediate X on one for being more revealing than Iβd feel comfortable seeing a 30-year-old in (think very short slit up the side, skin tight crushed velvet with rhinestones and youβve got the picture). The other three were lovely so the choice was hers.
πππ From her point of view, this was an enormous decision. She agonized over it for two days and finally picked a gorgeous navy blue slim fit satin dress with little flutter cap sleeves. It has lace at the front and in a V down her back, with a cinched waist and a flowy overskirt that is little longer in the back, giving the impression of a train that flew at knee level. It was absolute perfection and it was $75, with free shipping. SOLD!
πππ She also found matching navy wedge heel sandals with rhinestones across the toe piece, which matched her navy handbag with rhinestones on the handles. And I found a perfect satin navy headband with, you guessed it, more rhinestones. A little shawl in a lighter shade of shimmering blue for the evening on the boat cruise and she was set.
πππ She tried everything on when it arrived: it fit like a glove and looked beautiful and elegant. I started to cry. This was my baby! And she was looking very grown up all of a sudden. She has been practising with makeup and manicures for a while now, being a fan of YouTube makeup videos, so she tried out several looks, all of which were very pretty. And I started to cry again. Who was this person? How was she already old enough to go to high school, with the big kids? I wanted to grab her and run screaming to a place where she would remain my wee girl forever.
πππ Since βNever Never Landβ doesnβt actually exist, I dried my tears and booked her hair appointment, wanting her to have as much of this experience as we can squeeze out of it. After all, the last two years have been pretty miserable: no trips, no dances, no typical experiences for middle school. This was a chance for normal and I wanted her to have it all, within reason.
πππ And in a way, Iβm happy about the rigmarole process we went through to get her ready for this occasion. It gave me the chance to really see her in a different way, less as my wee babe and more as the beautiful, funny and charming young lady that she is becoming. When she crosses the stage to get her βdiplomaβ Iβll cry some more, but she said sheβd lend me her waterproof mascara, so I guess Iβm ready too.
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