Behind the bio


I had someone ask me the other day about my bio. Specifically this part: She attended university at sixteen, not because she was a child prodigy or anything, but because of a mix up in international school systems early in life.
So here’s how that happened.
When I was three, I moved from Australia to Papua New Guinea because of my dad’s job. He worked for a bank. This is the first move that I actually remember, mostly because I got to go on a plane. Also, I had a passport. I was going to share that photo here, but then I couldn't find the passport. Also, from memory, I'm wearing overalls and a scowl. 


We’d moved from Queensland, where I was partway through kindy, to New Guinea, which operated under a different schooling system, and there was no kindy. After six months of my wandering the neighbourhood wearing nothing but underpants and a banana leaf on my head to keep off the rain, with my trusty canine companion Oplika Spot by my side (we called him Spot, but his owners called him Oplika, so we compromised) my mum decided I couldn’t be trusted to my own devices and enrolled me in school.
I turned four on my first day of Prep. My mum figured that Prep was the equivalent of Queensland Preschool, so it didn’t matter that I was a bit younger than the other kids. Having a late January birthday meant I was always going to be either the youngest in the class or, if she kept me back, the oldest, and did I mention she really wanted me off the streets?
Except it turns out that Prep was not like Preschool at all, at least not once we moved back to Australia. In fact, because I’d done Prep, I’d effectively done what would be considered Grade 1 in Queensland and had effectively skipped a year. This may explain, to this day, why I can't hold a pencil properly. I also still can't colour between the lines. 
“We don’t want to keep her back, she’ll get bored,” the teachers said, their teacher-senses tingling and warning them that bored + me would be difficult to manage. Which it was, until high school when I discovered truantism, but that’s another story.
“If she’s too immature, we’ll keep her back a year further down the track.”
I was still eleven when I started high school, still under threat of being kept back because of my age. It took until I was fifteen for them to stop threatening it. Because at fifteen everyone hits the Immaturity Plateau and doesn’t climb any higher for years. At least my friends didn’t. Some of us still haven’t. Hi, guys!
So there I was, first day of university, sixteen years old. And that’s where the age difference really became apparent because I was surrounded by kids who could vote, kids who could drive, and, most importantly, kids who could drink.
Luckily my older sister got me a fake ID to get me through until my 18th birthday. 
You guys, don’t tell our mum. 
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Published on December 28, 2012 01:13
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message 1: by Emma Sea (new)

Emma Sea You are all kinds of awesome, Lisa. Your sister too:)


message 2: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Henry Emma wrote: "You are all kinds of awesome, Lisa. Your sister too:)"

Lol, thanks Emma!


message 3: by Ayanna (new)

Ayanna My high school AP Psych teacher was in college at 16, too, but what happened with her is that she started school a year early, then skipped a year sometime in elementary school.


message 4: by Isa (new)

Isa K. This is an awesome story omg :D


message 5: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Henry Ayanna wrote: "My high school AP Psych teacher was in college at 16, too, but what happened with her is that she started school a year early, then skipped a year sometime in elementary school."

I definitely fluked it...no way was I clever enough! But it sucked being 16 at uni. Until my sister came through.


message 6: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Henry Isa wrote: "This is an awesome story omg :D"

Thanks, Isa! I sometimes wish I could go back to that judgement-free period of my life when you can sit in the street in your underpants with a banana leaf on your head, digging in the mud with a stick, and nobody called the police. Happy times!


message 7: by Emma Sea (last edited Dec 28, 2012 05:45PM) (new)

Emma Sea Lisa wrote: "when you can sit in the street in your underpants . . . "

Otherwise called a Kiwi National Icon




Experiment BL626 @Emma
LMAO!


message 9: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Henry Emma wrote: "Lisa wrote: "when you can sit in the street in your underpants . . . "

Otherwise called a Kiwi National Icon

"


That's awesome!


message 10: by J.A. (new)

J.A. Rock LOL, I love the dog name compromise. And the banana leaf on the head.

My sister and I used to roam around in our underpants as well. But this was in a Midwest suburb.


message 11: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Henry J.A. wrote: "LOL, I love the dog name compromise. And the banana leaf on the head.

My sister and I used to roam around in our underpants as well. But this was in a Midwest suburb."


Underpants roaming was great fun... Those were the days! And the banana leaf was practical, encironmentally friendly, and dare I say fashionable? Nothing says classy like a jaunty banana leaf.


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