But when I looked in my junior high yearbook, I wasn't in the group picture. Why I don't remember. Maybe I was at a math competition that day. Something else that would've conflicted with the taking of the group picture. Not only I wasn't in the picture, my name wasn't listed either. That was an unfortunate oversight somewhere along the line. Mr. Hannah, our junior high choir teacher, surely would've included my name in the listing.
"Dad, you weren't in men's glee; you're not in the picture," our youngest Bryce.
"Yes, I was," I protested. Why wasn't I in there? I thought.
"You're not in there, Dad," our oldest Beatrice said.
"C'mon, Dad," my wife Amy said.
"I thought you were an athlete, a brain, and in student government," Bryce said. "You were a nerd, Dad. Except when you were in detention. That was cool."
That's a story our kids love: the fact that when I was student body president, I received lunch detention for too many first period tardies. One of the other kids in detention has said to me, "Dude, aren't you the president?"
Yes. Yes, I was. The kids always laugh at that.
I continued to defend myself about being in men's glee. Then I had an idea -- I had a cassette recording from men's glee in junior high that Mr. Hannah had recorded and made for all of us and our families.
"I have proof," I said. "Listen to this."
I pushed play on the only working cassette player we have. Young teenage boys' voices sang an old standard like Erie Canal.
I stopped the tape. "See?" I said. "I was in men's glee."
The kids laughed. "How do we know you were one of them?"
Sigh. They weren't wrong. I really was in men's glee. No, really.
Today both our teens are in high school choir and love it -- and we love watching them sing! Bryce has been in choir since middle school and this is Beatrice's first year. Since last fall, they've been excited about their spring trip to a music festival in Anaheim, CA. And so have we.
Because Disneyland.
Don't get me wrong -- we really enjoy hearing all the kids sing. They are amazing. But c'mon, it's Disneyland. We've been taking our kids to Disneyland since they were three and five years old. So, we volunteered to be chaperones. Over 50 kids in total and 8 chaperones between two high schools.
It was wonderful listening to all the high school choirs sing throughout the festival day, especially our two high schools (and especially our kids' choir). There were over 30 choirs from multiple states that participated. Brilliant song choices and inspired singing. These music directors are doing amazing things with these kids who sounded more like professional adult singers than teens.
As a parent, it's been quite the bumpy joy ride living it all over again through our teens' experiences -- and all the kids on the choir festival trip. Their boisterous energy, anxieties, friendships, camaraderie, teasing, occasional indiscriminate F-bombs, and Gen Z slang flooded the bus on our way to the Anaheim music festival. Our high school choirs performed admirably and won all gold awards.
Amy and I and all the chaperones powered through with the kids, eating dinner with our hands at Medieval Times, cheering for all the choirs at the awards ceremony (with Mickey, Minnie, Merlin, and friends), finishing off the 10+ mile hike throughout Disney until it closed, and staying up until midnight each night doing room checks. We were all exhausted but elated on the bus ride home.
"Are you 'locked in', Dad?" Bryce said to me when we left, leveraging some Gen Z slang.
"It's 'fire', dude," I answered. It means something is really good, impressive, or exciting. That always makes our kids smile.
Because it's all "fire", dude. And that always makes us smile.