If there had been a sorting hat at my high school it would have asked two questions: Have you seen all six Star Wars films and have you ever been pashed.

Who wants to brainstorm uni majors!!!

Depending on which question got a “yes”, the wearer would be ushered to the geeks or the cool crowd. If they had a firm understanding of what a sorting hat actually was, they’d go direct to the geeks.

I was quick work for the hat. I’d seen every Star Wars film five times and wore a Darth Maul t-shirt to the opening of The Phantom Menace. Thankfully no need for the second question.

I took my place among the geeks. At the school formal we stood around the edges with sweaty palms while the jocks rubbed fake tan against each other on the dance floor. As soon as the party ended the geeks went home while the cool kids went to a warehouse to spill Jim Beam and vomit on their hired cravats.

But my geekiest moment came when the notorious Schoolies Week fired up after exams. As the jocks headed north for some extra curricular Phys Ed, I refused to go. With sex, drugs and underage-anything further from my agenda than a Scotsman from a charity auction, I stayed in Melbourne by myself and had my own Schoolies involving quiet reflection.

It rocked, by the way.

Seven years later I don’t regret it and with each passing Schoolies Week I find another headline to vindicate my younger Gazman-wearing self.

Last year a youth died when he fell from a balcony in Brisbane. Around the same time a young BMX rider was killed after he decided to ride from a hotel balcony into a pool on the Gold Coast and it didn’t work. A third young male died in Bali when he was electrocuted on a Schoolies trip.

Two years ago a couple of schoolies even came back self-proclaimed newlyweds after holding a beach ceremony just a day after meeting.

Sexual assaults, stomach pumps, drug hallucinations, unintended loss of virginity and too much noise are also common on Schoolies.

But not your son or daughter, right? You’ll be worried sick while they’re up there and you’ll pray they’ll be safe in the surf and in their $30-a-night bedroom, but you’ll retain faith you’ve raised them well enough not to do anything stupid. And it’s a rite of passage after all.

So let’s suppose your child is different to the pack and won’t do anything stupid like drink four beers at once through a hose. Let’s suppose they won’t buy pills from a South American named Juan with a tattoo of Wally. If they’re so not into that, why would they go?

The fact is your teenager is not going to Schoolies to behave. That’s why the official Schoolies home page has a big picture of three young men in their undergarments getting squashed on a bed by six galivanting girls.

Some quick maths reveals that’s two girls for every boy. That bed doesn’t look like the home of innocent romance and discussions about which uni course to take. It looks like your kid is going to try and have sex on that bed, or somebody is going to try and have sex with your kid.

Maybe it’ll be a 28-year-old toolie or a South American named Juan with a tattoo of Wally.

If, after 12 years of schooling they still want to get numb on pills and booze in a seaside town packed with hundreds of drunks and overtime cops, maybe your child’s education didn’t work.

And if you’re worried about your teenager going to Schoolies, you probably should be. Have a serious talk. They might regret staying home, but you might regret letting them go, even more.

Comments on this post will close at 8pm AEST.

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16 comments

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    • amy says:

      01:19pm | 17/09/12

      its nice feeling all smug over in the geek crowd

      unfortunatly I never went to schoolies due to….shall we say freind issues…its ok though,  I soon realised I didnt even enjoy that kind of thing anyway

    • andrew says:

      01:23pm | 17/09/12

      we’ll be honeymooning up at the gold coast when schoolies starts, hopefully they can distract attention away from our own drunken antics!

    • Alfie says:

      01:35pm | 17/09/12

      Hope they sober up before they front up to Centrelink.

    • Rose says:

      01:46pm | 17/09/12

      I think you’ll find that the huge majority of genuine schoolies have completed Year 12 and will go on to have successful and productive lives. For crying out loud they’re just letting their hair down after achieving a rather significant milestone in their lives.

    • Tubesteak says:

      01:40pm | 17/09/12

      When I was in high school there were only 3 Star Wars films. The internet did not exist so we did not know there was one on the way. I didn’t really get into Star Wars until after high school. I’d seen it but it was just another movie. The brilliance of it did not dawn on me until later.

      Even though I would have been classified as a geek rather than a jock, you still sound like a wet blanket to me. I crashed my car on the way to schoolies. Whilst up there one of us ended up in hospital because he cut his leg trying to get through a door which was being held shut by another one of us.

      We had a great time drinking and beaching. We all survived. The memories will last a lifetime. No point going into panic mode over what might happen and it isn’t a marker for how intelligent someone is if they want to go and have fun after 13 (you need to include Kindergarten) years of hell.

    • StuieG says:

      01:41pm | 17/09/12

      So… many…stereotypes. I especially like the fake tan bit, I never remember even the jockiest jock being orange but why let the truth get in the way of a good story. 

      Yes we drank alcohol at our schoolies, but we drank fairly regularly anyway. Yes one or 2 of the girls in our group of friends ended up having sex, but there was a lot more that didn’t.

      I’m sure there are places and groups of friends that do just completely write themselves off and get up to no good but I think it’s going a bit far to tar them all with the same brush.

      And before you say I’m a typical Jock, I’am in fact an IT geek but who also happens to be what some people would call a Jock as well.

    • Rose says:

      01:43pm | 17/09/12

      Wow, just wow!!! You realize that the majority of schoolies head away for the festivities and come home safe and sound. They are probably safer at schoolies than they would be if they headed into town on a Saturday night. There are plenty of police, plenty of volunteers and, they have, if they are like my kids, a good bunch of mates looking out for each other.
      While your decision to not go to schoolies should be respected, so should the decision of kids that go be respected. If they get up to any thing illegal, let them face the consequences, if they drink too much, again, there are consequences. If they take drugs there, chances are they would’ve taken drugs if they’d stayed home.
      Do you really need to demonize thousands of kids in order to make you feel better about not going?

    • willie says:

      01:52pm | 17/09/12

      Yes they will probably get drunk, have sex and take drugs but pull your head out and realise it won’t be for the first time. That’s right your darling little child is no choir boy.

      If you want your kid to be safe at leavers give them real advice. “don’t drink too much” or “drugs are bad” is not advice.

    • Greg says:

      01:56pm | 17/09/12

      I was in between both crowds and we all went to schoolies i’‘m clearly still alive and last I checked all my friends are as well.

      It’s really not that hard to not die and last I checked 18 is old enough to make your own decisions regarding who you have sex with.

      Sensationalist articles like this one are everything that is wrong with the media, you could only come up with 2 legitimate deaths on schoolies (the one in Bali was an accident and could of happened to anyone so to even mention it in this context is in poor taste), how many more kids die in car accidents or not on schoolies.

      The fact that you could only come up with 2 deaths in how ever many years is almost like saying end of season footy trips should be banned because one person died…..

    • Baloo says:

      02:22pm | 17/09/12

      “No fun allowed” - Mitchell Toy

    • Black Dynamite says:

      02:22pm | 17/09/12

      I thought geeks were meant to be smart? This article suggests otherwise but I’d probably be bitter too if my only option was “self reflection” when the overwhelming majority of people I knew were having fun with their friends.

      BD

    • Inky says:

      03:10pm | 17/09/12

      Sigh.

    • George says:

      04:53pm | 17/09/12

      I think the amount of easy girls is overstated. Unless you’re not fussy. I got a bit but no sex. I guess it’s not appealing for a woman to be doing it when there’s a drunk bogan or some nerd in the other bed only a metre away.

    • James says:

      06:16pm | 17/09/12

      wow. where to start. I also graduated 7 years ago and am far from a jock. Went to schoolies as did the majority of my graduating grade. Had fun, did some stupid things and came home safe just like all of my friends. Great memories. 

      So many steriotypes in this post it’s almost insulting. Seems like you went to a highschool from a bad US teen movie.

    • Geek says:

      06:37pm | 17/09/12

      I was a geek and I went to schoolies with all my geek friends. I don’t think any “jocks” even went to schoolies in my grade.

    • Rossco says:

      07:25pm | 17/09/12

      generalisation much in this article? There’s obviously alcohol being used at these events so it must automatically have a biased media style campaign aginst it…

 

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