On a warm Californian winter day during my senior year at Amador Valley High School. Unlike many of the other students, I was 18 and officially an adult. The Pleasanton school district had a thoughtful age policy that allowed children born in November and December months to be held back during their kindergarten years so that they would not be the youngest of their class; this of course was to mitigate any bullying.
Being 18 while still attending high school lent some fantastic advantages to those students that were also capable of being responsible and not abusing power. One of which was the capability of excusing yourself from classes in order to go surfing. I was an avid surfer in my younger years, although never talented enough at it to ride the big waves. I topped off at about 6 foot waves and an 8 foot long board.
“Mr. Omar, are you going surfing today”,questioned the lovely receptionist that I was well familiar with at AVHS. She was the mother of one of my school mates and I worked had closely with all of the office staff and administration of the school since i was a part of the student body, wrestling team and the extracurricular clubs that I participated in.
“I’ll be out for personal reasons today but will surely be fine to come in tomorrow,” I replied with my best Ferris Bueller impression that I could muster.
I prepared myself for a healing and holistic day of surfing and was just driving pass the school when abruptly my pager went off. It appeared to be the phone number of one of the other commissioners of the student body with the ominous 911 attached. Since I was right there at my beloved high school, I pulled over and entered the front loop parking area to the school entrance.
“I thought you weren’t coming in today Omar?”, the fair receptionist inquired. “Seems there might be an urgent issue that I have to attend to” I retorted. I asked the receptionist for the location of the other student commissioner and found them at the art building where Ms. Xenickos ran her drawing classes.
At this point in my high school career I had not once taken a class with her. I had primarily focused on ceramic wheel throwing with a the schools tiny little Chinese Master Ceramicist that had powerfully thin arms and spoke very little english. She would instruct by saying things like, “no blup blup” which meant keep your clay even while when rolling it out into coils.
Ms. Xenickos was also a female artist with a tiny frame. The football students towered her and her Greek accent was a starch difference to the valley girl talk of the female students. I entered her class and greeted her. It turned out they had an art emergency and that I was to be the savior.
The school was elected to showcase artwork on the the famous Sports Focus program that was to be broadcasted in two weeks. The student that was to do the artwork had completely fumbled the opportunity and drew a binder paper sized sketch of a little gangster rapper character with a baseball bat.
Ms. Xenickos was furious! She had given the boy plenty of time to design and create something appropriate to reperesent our school, but he had slacked off completely.
Having explained all this to me, and having then excused me from all my classes for the next two weeks, she had me immediately get painting. I created a door sized painting roughly 8 feet tall and 3 feet wide illustrating a Spaniard Conquistador, which was of course our school mascot, but rather than wearing traditional Spanish armor of the early 1500s, he donned armor that resmebled football gear. He was proudly equipped with a sword shaped as a baseball bat, a chain mace that dangled a spiked baseball, tennis ball, and football. He had a proud goatee and an open faced morion.
I had recently garnered new airbrushing techniques so much of the painting I could complete more rapidly than I was previously capable of and I successfully someplted the work before the deadline. The painting was filmed by Sports Focus and broadcasted later that week. I was very proud of that experience and the friendship that I developed with Ms. Xenickos. We would often greet each other in the mornings there after and have a latte together along with conversations of art and life.