Earlier this year, Washougal High School Principal Sheree Clark asked Ethan Mills, the school’s Associated Student Body president, to deliver some “inspiring life advice” to his fellow seniors at the school’s graduation ceremony. Recognizing the challenge in front of him Mills laced his reply with a hint of good-natured sarcasm.
“Absolutely,” he told Clark. “Life advice is easy to give, especially at 18.”
Nevertheless, Mills wrote a speech that resonated with maturity and wisdom. During the ceremony, held under gray but mostly dry skies on Saturday, June 12, at Fishback Stadium, he asked his fellow graduates to embrace something he said they’ve learned well over the past year: “Life sucks — but only sometimes.”
“Yeah, you heard me right,” Mills said. “Tonight, tomorrow, the next day, the day after that, you will still be on top of the world, but by the time (next) year rolls around you will have faced challenges that make you sit down and go, ‘Life sure does suck.’”
“But you shall always remember, ‘Life sucks, but only sometimes.’ You will stand up, you will take those challenges head on, face them and defeat them. Because guess what? You are all resilient people. I mean, take a look around you — we graduated during a pandemic. We are literally history. I know we’ve all had moments this year when we’ve ’embraced the suck’ and kept on pushing to make it here to this moment together.”
Valedictorians Lauren Bennett, Amara Farah, McKenna Jackson, Meryl Keeler, and Daria Walker and salutatorian Mariah Moran also spoke about the pandemic-related challenges the class of 2021 faced during their senior year.
“We have had to learn, change and adapt to our surroundings in ways that we never have before,” said Jackson, who intends to pursue a biology degree and a career as a pediatric surgeon. “And through it all, we have displayed confidence, poise and resilience in overcoming all of our obstacles. All of us have had to fight our own individual battles, but as we are all seated here today, I could say we were victorious. Despite all of our challenges, we made it.”
The challenges “have only demonstrated the strength and resilience this class possesses,” according to Walker.
“Today I am wearing paper cranes on my tassel. In Japanese culture, paper cranes represent luck, peace and recovery,” said Walker, who will attend Western Washington University in Bellingham and study environmental science. “I think we can all agree that, after this year — a year when we faced a global pandemic and fought against long-standing social injustice — we are all in need of healing and peace.”
“Since freshman year, this school has been molding and shaping us into the people we are today, just as my family has been folding those squares of paper into cranes for generations,” Walker said. “We have been enriching our lives with unique experiences that will leave permanent marks on ourselves forever, for better or for worse. Either way, they have prepared us for the future that we’re so abruptly about to walk into.”
Clark implored the 258 graduates to remember the community that “rallied for you when the world changed” in 2020 and “worked to provide you with opportunities we didn’t think you’d have.”
“There was a lot that this pandemic took from us, and from you,” Clark told the graduating seniors. “You have heard ‘no’ countless times. But what it didn’t take was our sense of community, our family, your hope and your determination. Right now, in this moment, my hope is no matter where you go or what you do, you take this sense of community — no, this sense of Washougal community — and share it and empower others with it and look after one another and build bridges, not barriers.”
Clark also highlighted the school’s “small but mighty” first graduating class of Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID) students, Clark College graduates, athletes and Cascadia Technical Academy participants, as well as the seniors who entered the workforce in the past year to help provide for their families.
Clark, assistant principals Mark Castle and Gary McGarvie, and counselor Christina Mackey-Greene presented the school’s”Bootstrap” award to Mark Simpson and Briahna Ruth (overcoming adversity), “Citizenship” award to Farah (community service) and “Black and Orange” award to Mills (school spirit).