The Trinity Grammarian - October 2021

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From the Principal It was timely that some of the Olympic Games took place while so many in the Trinity Grammar School community were in a 14-day quarantine period. What a worthy distraction it proved for many as we swiftly fell into the four (or five!) year rhythm of becoming instant experts in relatively obscure sports. Whereas I have not ridden a BMX since around the time Nicole Kidman popularised them, I found myself still prepared to cast the same sort of ‘knowledgeable’ opinion regarding the performances on offer as I have been guilty of applying to diving or European handball in previous Olympic Games. A distraction from the challenge of a graver form of lockdown from those we have had before was welcome. While an odd, less festive version of the Olympics played out in Japan, as a school community we struggled with the suggestion of the flagging engagement of students,

the challenge for staff to manage their own realities while striving to deliver a Trinity education, the compromised working lives (and income for many) of families and the very real concern for those among us who contracted COVID and became ill. Ten students, ten staff and at least eight ‘household contacts’ were infected and had various experiences of illness, including hospitalisation for a few towards the end of our ‘cluster’s’ active cases. All are now well. As I write this we are still in the ‘lighter’ form of lockdown and uncertain of the future, again, for our students. This year’s Year 12 was, of course, last year’s Year 11. They have spent a good deal of time in an alternate version of schooling and societal norms. They have been asked to thrive in an environment in which their adult mentors and family are not soundly firm footed. It makes their ongoing achievements all the

more impressive, because they have thrived in many ways. Undoubtedly, it has been a struggle. Adolescent psychologist Andrew Fuller, when writing to young people recently said in an understated way, ‘It is unlikely that you will look back at 2021 as the best year of your life.’ Despite the apparent grimness, there has been a vivid pragmatism in the face of the loss of keenly sought-after events – sport at our highest level, concerts, the Formal, Strictly Ballroom (the musical) and so on. It seems to me that, while some are coping better than others and the concerns are real, they have been able to face into the wind and cope when others around them have struggled when worrying for them. Fuller stressed that ‘life won’t always feel like this.’ He reminded them that a century ago, the Spanish influenza virus devastated the world and then was controlled. The same occurred

It was great to catch up with our Year 11 students, including Oscar Brown, Aden Wilmshurst and David Dodson

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