All Your Fault Heather

December 14, 2011

I sign all my emails like this:

Meagan <<>>

I didn’t have a lot of friends in high school. I was the weird girl who made creepy drawings and painted all the theater sets. Looking back, I think there were more people who might have been my friends than I realized, but at the time, I felt very alienated at my school. Fortunately, there was fencing.

As of last fall, I have been fencing for half my life– I started when I was fifteen years old. It was an important time for me, I was feeling lost and a little hopeless.

Fencing was transformative. I was around adults that treated me as an equal which is of HUGE importance to a teenager. My senior year, the coach, Paul, gave me a job as an assistant teacher/coach for a home school program. It wasn’t just the extra money (and I can’t remember how much it was, but I’m pretty sure it wasn’t much) it was the realization that my contribution was important, that I was actually of value. Of course there was the physical fitness aspect, I can’t claim to have ever been truly svelte, but I was healthy and athletic by the time I left for college, and my doctor told me my lung tests were good enough that he wouldn’t have known I had asthma. I gained a sense of accomplishment, with two or three placements in finals of low level national tournaments, and, the summer before college, my first ever first place finish. Thanks to the generosity and tolerance of my parents, I was able to travel all over the country for tournaments and fencing camps. In fact, that’s how I first got to see Notre Dame’s campus, frigid but beautiful in January of 1998. Fencing was probably what got me into Notre Dame too, or at least it certainly wasn’t my grades, which were decent, but not good enough for ND.

Without a doubt though, the most important thing fencing gave me was friends. My first boyfriend was a fencer, and while the dating part didn’t really work out, he was my best friend for several years. A handful of other teenaged boys in Eugene were friends to hang out with and play video games and learn calculus from. And because Eugene didn’t have many fencers that traveled to national competitions, Portland fencers stepped up as a second family, as de facto teammates, cheering me on, coaching, advising, when I ought to have been all alone.

In college, fencing launched friendships for me, teammates becoming social circles, automatic invites to parties past freshman bashes and acceptance for my quirks and many oddities.

As teenagers in Portland, Heather, Leah, and I formed an effortless camaraderie. Leah’s family, who ran a fire watch security service in Palm Bay, instilled in her a sense of vigilance and prompt action that she brought into our friendship. While their team was adept at responding to the smallest ember to prevent flames in our community, we shared uproarious laughter that was a balm to the soul, never needing to reign it in. I relished in the carefree comfort they offered, a stark contrast to the protective watchfulness Leah’s family provided, yet both were forms of security that I grew to appreciate deeply.

Which brings me back to my email signature.

I started emailing, on my Dad’s account, when I was a junior in High School. Heather was my first correspondent. She signed her emails like this:

Heather =)

I thought that was pretty cool. I had never seen an emoticon before, and it actually took me a few emails to figure out it was supposed to be a smilie. At first I just thought it was a cool bit of graphic typography. And, in the way of teenagers, I wanted to imitate it.

I came up with: “<<>>”

It was meant as a pure aesthetic statement, and if anyone asked, I figured it looked kind of like an eye. This seemed appropriate to me, since I spent much of my time drawing eyes and some of my finished pieces had eyes as focal points. I had also kind of, but not really at all, been nick named “watcher” by a senior at my high school when I was a freshman, for my tendency to stare them to the point of discomfort if they tried to haze me. So eyes were important to me.

But yeah, mainly I just thought it looked kind of neat, and I wanted to have something cool on the end of my name like Heather did.

I continued to sign my emails that way through college, worrying a bit that it might be unprofessional, but persisting nonetheless. These days, I don’t even think about it, the <<>> is entirely automatic. On the rare occasion that I send an email that seems too serious to include it, my signature feels naked without it, and for the most part I’ve stopped excluding it, even if the email is important and to a stranger.

It has no more meaning now than it did when I was sixteen. No one has ever asked about it. Which is just as well. If they did, I’d have to admit, that I’ve been signing my emails with <<>> for 14 years for no better reason than I think it looks kind of cool.

So long for now,

Meagan <<>>

About Author

Meagan

Meagan is an artist, writer, and whatever else suits her at any given moment. She lives in the Cleveland area with her husband, son and too many cats. Meagan blogs at https://hadesarrow.com/blog and cartoons at http://dragondown.com

2 Replies to “All Your Fault Heather”

  1. It’s nice, it adds a bit of character. It’s YOURS.

    I really enjoyed learning about your fencing experience (my own fencing experience is limited to going to perhaps 3 fencing club meetings in college, but being a geek who likes fantasy novels, I’ve always thought swords are cool!). What struck me, though, was the importance for a school and/or community to have lots of different ways for kids to get involved with other kids and with adults, beyond the classroom. Sports of all shapes and sizes, the arts, speech and debate, quiz bowl, or whatever random club: all of those things offer a chance for a young adult to find a place where they feel valued, where they feel like part of a group, where they interact with peers and adults in a different way. With school funding cuts, that’s harder and harder for the public schools to do, unfortunately, because those things are seen as extras.

    • That’s absolutely true, though in my case, fencing was not a school program, it was just a local club, through the rec center I think, though I’m not sure. It was also essential for me that it was separate from school. I had a hard time at my high school and really struggled socially, so getting in a group removed from my school environment made all the difference.

      I think in most cases though, school programs do fill that role and are really essential.

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