Leave the Regrets Behind

by Randy Wang It’s difficult to not experience some form of regret. Nobody is perfect. It could be an easily avoidable mistake or a missed opportunity you wish you had taken. I’m no different. After COVID-19 and the year of virtual learning, I returned to school as a very quiet person. I was unable to bring myself to join clubs … Read More

Looking Back and Moving Forward

by Gael Rebu Looking back on my last four years that I spent in high school I find myself having mixed feelings about my experience. These years have taught me so much about who I am and the kind of person I want to continue to be. I’ve learned how to manage a lot of work and the stress that … Read More

Take Care of Yourself

by Connor Pugh I spent much of my time in high school going through the painstaking process of trial and error. Many times I signed up for a class or joined a club or some other extracurricular with a genuine interest, only to come out the other side beaten and battered. A particularly eye-opening experience for me was when I … Read More

Taking a Leap of Faith

by Noah Bair Entering high school, I had planned out exactly which classes I would take and which years I would take them. After two years of taking classes that I essentially chose as a 13 year old, I decided I wanted a change. Instead of taking AP Spanish, a class that I would have dreaded every day, I switched … Read More

Live the Larry David Way

by Ben Schoenberg In honor of Curb Your Enthusiasm ending its 25-year run on television, I decided to end my four years at Sherwood High School. After watching all twelve seasons in two months I learned that it is important to live life with a raw authenticity and unwillingness to change the core of who you are. Ideally, try not … Read More

Let Yourself Miss a Couple in a Row

by Thomas Fenner Throughout most of high school, I was terrified of failure. I spent far too much time in high school caring about how my peers viewed me. It took me finding the right group of friends, finding my place on the basketball team, and building relationships with coaches, teachers, and classmates to realize that the people who care … Read More

How Little I’ve Learned

by Liam Trump I remember when I was in middle school and I was first introduced to the idea that all of the work I would be doing during my time in school would be contributing to a final grade, a letter that would represent the weeks of hard work I would put into each semester. The idea of getting … Read More

Freshman Year Coincidence Pays Off

by Dylan Sondike Looking back, my aspirations in middle school were immature and unrealistic. The pressure of finding extracurricular activities that I might enjoy was a battle. At the time, I had no idea what clubs to try. The only lead I had was to join the school newspaper. It wasn’t because I enjoyed writing then or being part of … Read More

April 26th, My Turtles

by Katie Gough ’23 Right now, I am typing this into my notes app while I’m sitting on a concrete ledge next to a small pond in the park near my house. I couldn’t tell you how many books I’ve finished, decisions I’ve made, songs I heard for the first time- all sitting right here by myself on this ledge … Read More

Unleashing My Real Self to the World

by Gaby Caballero ’23 If there’s one word I would use to describe myself it would be “sporadic.” I’ve always been in inner turmoil, debating on whether or not I should say this or do that. I’ve done my best to manage this feeling of volatility but it’s tiresome. There have been many moments where the mismanagement of my big … Read More