“On our way to a school presentation, Shelly and I talked
about her high school days, and she told me she had never attended a class
reunion,” Carolyn Ferber, Community Education Coordinator, explains. When they figured
out 2014 marked her 25th reunion, Shelly decided she wanted to make
sure she went this year. They called her alma mater, Hancock County High School,
asking if they knew of any plans for a reunion. The school suggested they check
the local paper. Shelly put her family on alert to watch for reunion notices.
A few weeks later, Carolyn received an email from Michelle Gregory,
a teacher at North Hancock Elementary School in Hawesville, and participant in
the No R Word program. Gregory also happened
to be Shelly’s classmate. “We couldn’t believe it! She asked me to pass along to Shelly info about
their class reunion on May 24.” Shelly made arrangements
with her staff for her to go.
“I had the best time!” Shelly shares. “I remembered faces,
but not everyone’s names. Everyone came over to talk to me. Many had seen me in
the newspaper or heard about my work with Wendell Foster.” Michelle agreed the
reunion was good for Shelly, but thought it was even better for their
classmates. “It was good for our classmates to see Shelly, because they saw her
in a different light, as a real person. Any walls created in people’s mind
about Shelly’s disability disappeared when she started cutting up with them,
laughing, and sharing what all she’d been doing for twenty-five years.”
Reconnecting with high school friends was important to Shelly. “They were very
accepting of me during high school. Some even helped me get to and from
classes. Now we stay connected on Facebook. If it was not for my work with the No R Word campaign, I might not have had
the opportunity to reconnect with my high school friends. Just another way Wendell
Foster continues to open up a whole new world for me.”
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