Your four years of stay high school has taught you the two sides
of humility in partnership with respect.
As a freshie student by that time, adaptation was the hardest thing
you’ve to handle. You have had to listen well to the rules and regulations so
you won’t be reprimanded. Now, there goes obedience, especially to your
teachers who seemed to see you like sheep without a shepherd, and thought that
they were good enough to accept the preordained task. Conform to everything
they ask you to do and surely you’ll pass to be a sophie.
Moving on, you’re on your second year in high school and of
course you’ve gained profounder intellect and a teenager like you started
somehow screeching for your rights, knowing that students have this thing
called Magna Carta. Though you didn’t quite well understand the contents of
that thing, for you even haven’t read a page of it, others say that it defends
your being human and student, so you gradually learned how to furtively disobey
some, yes, some of those do’s and
don’ts, thinking that it’s just for the meantime.
And as you became a junior student, all I could say was “what happened to you?” Complacently,
you answered back - It wasn't until quite
late in life that I discovered how easy it is to say "I don't
know!" So that’s it, you’re acting dumb. Wow, isn’t that great?
You’re proving that no one could ever stop you, could ever let you do things
you do not somewhat like. Still, there’s that big difference between innocent
and acting-innocent-turned-into-ignorant. You considered this year of your high
school life as the most memorable one. The
hell I care was the thing you repeatedly say.