Robin--I can't tell you what to do, but I can tell you the value of "life long school friends," both from my own experience, and watching my son. I still have a friend from elementary/middle/high school that I see monthly (lunch at Ponak's!). She was a God-send at my recent wedding (Thanks, Lu!), she was there almost every day when I had bi-lateral knee replacements (and brought me new work out clothes and athletic shoes for physical therapy!)and she is someone I can talk to, e-mail, and share a laugh or concern with at almost any time. Lucy is a treasure that is irreplaceable, and now, all of these years later, I realize that to the depth of my soul.
In our school district (USD 500, KCKS)they made a concerted effort when my son was in school there, to make sure that the whole elementary school's 5th grade class moved to the same middle school, and the middle school students then, when the time came, all moved to the same high school. Even though my son graduated in 2005 and left for the military 60 days later, I still remember how happy he was when, one holiday he was home on leave, and he saw one of his classmates that he had attend school with from elementary all the way through graduation. He was so excited that he called me from his cell phone, saying "Mom, Mom, I just saw Carolyn from school!!!" He was so thrilled. He still delights in seeing his "lifelong friends" (you can have them at age 22!)whenever he comes home.
I have a quote that hangs in my office from a book by Bob
Greene entitled "And You Know You Should Be Glad"; this book tells the story of the life of a group of "lifelong friends, as they rally around one of the friends who is dying of cancer. The quote includes the following "The friends who mean everything to us--the friends without whom our lives would be empty--are our most enduring models of grace and good fortune. When we lose them--and we all do; we will--we realize, then and forever, that our lives have been filled to over-briming with the grand, invisibe gifts they have given us. We know that our time on earth would have had paltry meaning had not, one fine day, our lives connected for the first time with the lives of people who would turn out to be our most treasured friends."
The only thing I would wish for your children is that when they are in their 50's that they also have shared in the wonderful experience of "lifelong friends." JAHC