Vitamin C, “Friends Forever”: Friends Forever really captures the bittersweet flavor of life. It’s not just a song about graduation. It is a song about how life moves and changes and won’t stop for anything. It’s a song about saying goodbye. It’s a song about letting go, and it’s a song about holding on. Moving sucks. The first time that I had to move (and was old enough to be aware of moving) was when I had to leave Alabama to come to Nebraska. I was in second grade and heart-broken. Everything I knew was in Alabama, and I didn’t want to leave. My second grade teacher, Mrs. Davis, was a slightly plump, African-American woman with a heart of gold. My last day of school, she dedicated entirely to saying goodbye to me. We watched “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No-Good, Very Bad Day” in place of science and in honor of the day. Everyone in the class created good-bye letters and cards for me instead of writing class. But the thing that most stands out in my memory was, when I came back into the classroom after delivering a note to the office for Mrs. Davis. She had gotten all of my classmates to stand in a group together while I was gone. And when I opened the door, they all burst into rhyme, reciting from our class’s favorite book, “I’ll love you forever, I’ll like you for always. As long as I’m living, my friend you’ll be.” It was a great happy day in my little life, but at the end of it, my parents picked me up and I looked at RSS for the last time, never to see it or its inhabitants again. Change is hard. I had to go through a similar ordeal when I moved from Elkhorn to Valley in sixth grade and then again when I moved back to Elkhorn in seventh grade. All through high school I had to learn to say goodbye to friends who were older than me, as they graduated. Each year it got harder, until finally, it was my turn. But like the song says, those times and those places never really die. Even Alabama lives in my memories. And although most of my “friends” back then probably don’t remember me, and I know I don’t remember all of them, there are some who will “still be friends forever,” even if our paths never cross again.