
Grew up in suburban Philadelphia and graduated from an all girls catholic high school. The girls from the "most popular clique" live pretty boring lives. Most stuck around local, married guys from the area and didn't fare as well as their parents did (even the "wealthier" ones). The wealthier ones are simply subsidized by their parents here & there but they are fairly middle class. The ones who really hit it out of the park were the late bloomers and ones who had friends but weren't necessarily popular. One girl who nobody really paid attention to is now beautiful, a business owner and married to someone extremely successful who has a private jet. |
Went to UPenn, did computer science, loved to read new author books, took a tech job, worked remotely from Hawaii, got laid off, traveled round Asia, self-radicalized and killed a proxy person. |
Stalking and laughing at someone's poor luck reflects very badly on you. |
I was popular. We are all successful, or very successful. Doctors (one is CMO for an entire hospital group like MedStar), business women, psychologist with thriving private practice, journalist, etc. Some have divorced, some have kids, generally everyone is, thank god, healthy. We were not mean. We were also worried about what everyone thought. I think high school is hard, and hindsight is 20/20. I have loved attending reunions, and keep up with folks that I was friends and not friends with online. I went to a huge, suburban, public HS. |
According to Facebook, they're all obese with kids nearly in college. Some are grandparents. I'm 46 and my oldest is 12, for reference. And most of them still hang out together, and their kids go to the same schools.
Although there's one who moved to a different part of the state and is a basic suburban mom who posts thirst trap photos of herself and her teenage daughter. |
Iām right here. What do you want to know?š |