Post Falls High School students open time capsule
DEVIN WEEKS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 months, 4 weeks AGO
Devin Weeks is a third-generation North Idaho resident. She holds an associate degree in journalism from North Idaho College and a bachelor's in communication arts from Lewis-Clark State College Coeur d'Alene. Devin embarked on her journalism career at the Coeur d'Alene Press in 2013. She worked weekends for several years, covering a wide variety of events and issues throughout Kootenai County. Devin now mainly covers K-12 education and the city of Post Falls. She enjoys delivering daily chuckles through the Ghastly Groaner and loves highlighting local people in the Fast Five segment that runs in CoeurVoice. Devin lives in Post Falls with her husband and their three eccentric and very needy cats. | April 26, 2024 1:09 AM
POST FALLS — If you could read a letter from your past self, what do you think it would say?
“My past self wants to be a vet, or a millionaire. I spelled both wrong," Post Falls High School senior Hailey Lindsey said, smiling after reading a letter she wrote to her future self when she was in fifth grade.
"I wanted to remember my teachers," Hailey said. "I am such a teachers’ pet, I love my teachers. I wanted to remember Miss Carpenter. That was my fifth grade teacher.”
Greensferry Elementary School opened in 2016. The first fifth graders to walk the halls of that new elementary school are now high school seniors, many of them at Post Falls High. In the spring of 2017, they conducted a "Letter to Myself" project and tucked words of elementary school wisdom into a time capsule, to be read by their future selves as their 12th grade year came to a close.
That moment came Thursday morning, filling the minds of soon-to-be high school graduates with funny, awkward and fond memories of who they were seven years ago.
Greensferry Elementary Principal Kathy Baker and a few of her team members who all knew these kids when they were fifth graders met with them in the Post Falls High School office to deliver the letters, accompanied by copies of their fifth grade class photos.
“I definitely look a lot different from what I looked like back then,” Jackson Kiehn said.
Pointing to his fifth grade self, wearing glasses and an Under Armour brand hoodie, Jackson said it was a strange sensation to see and read words from his past self.
“I wear contacts instead of glasses now,” he said. "I was kind of average height back then."
Brooklyn Mendonca said her letter was filled with questions. Yes, she still likes mint ice cream. Yes, she still likes monkeys. No, she doesn't have a husband or kids yet.
“I don't’ know why I wrote that,” she said with a giggle.
“I feel like I should have given myself more advice instead of just asking questions,” she said. “Advice would have been a lot better, but it still made me laugh. It made my day.”
Alexis DePalma and Jessica Haller gasped and laughed as they read their letters.
"I realize I was a little boy obsessed in fifth grade,” Alexis said. “I’ve changed a lot. I’ve changed my career path completely. I was wanting to be in the military, in the Navy, but that’s not what I’m doing. I’m going into cosmetology.”
“I just think it’s funny that I wrote I felt like a teenager, because I’m almost 18 now and I still feel like a kid, like I don’t want to grow up,” Jessica said.
Several letters asked questions to which their past selves would never hear the answers, but some gave more realistic, if not humorous, advice to their future selves, such as, "Don't go to jail" and "Note: Don't get pregnant at 18."
“Different year, same mentality,” Aidan Shamion said. “Literally everything I said in there, I did. I said I wanted to join the Army and graduate from an academy. I signed two days ago, not West Point but ROTC.
“It’s nuts,” he said. “It’s crazy.”
Noah Wells said his letter was not even close to describing the way things actually turned out.
“So much has changed in the past few years,” he said. “I’m all, ‘Are you still friends with this person?’ Um, no. ‘Are you still pursuing this for a career?’ No."
Baker said she enjoyed seeing the students reminisce about their school experiences, as many of them have been in the same classes through the years.
“We as elementary staff, we don’t get to see this end of it, it’s such a reward to see them as such successful young adults," she said.
The time capsule was located after a past Greensferry student who moved to Texas contacted the school asking about it, Baker said.
"She had been on a student committee for that purpose," she said.
Greensferry staff members are hoping to connect with other first-year fifth graders whose sealed letters are waiting for them at the school. Baker said it would be amazing to connect those students with their letters. Former Greensferry Elementary students who participated in the project and have not yet received their letters are encouraged to call the school at 208-773-0999 or email kathy.baker@sd273.
“This was great," Hailey said. "I love they do stuff like this, because I totally forgot about it."
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