While driving into work one morning several weeks ago, Washougal High School principal Sheree Gomez-Clark began to think about the speech she’d be delivering at the school’s upcoming graduation ceremony. She wondered how she could possibly sum up the character and grit of the class of 2022 and its accomplishments in a few sentences, and how she could say something to inspire a group of people that had inspired her for the past four years.
But at that moment, in a flash of serendipity, a voice wafted through her car speakers, filling Gomez-Clark’s ears with a musical message that provided her with the encouragement she needed: “Stand tall. It gets a little better. I see the wall that we can break down together. Stand strong. It gets a little better now.”
“Stand Tall,” a 2008 song by The Dirty Heads, a California reggae-rock band, provided her with the words that she had been seeking.
“Those lyrics stuck with me,” Clark said during Washougal High School’s 108th commencement ceremony, held Saturday, June 11, at Fishback Stadium. “You have stood tall and stood your ground for what you believe in. You didn’t let anything or anyone stop you from your accomplishments and goals. There wasn’t a wall that you couldn’t break down together. You have faced barriers and loss, and you stood tall in those moments. But you didn’t stand tall in isolation. You stood together stronger, and more beautiful through it. I knew that those words, that song, captured you.”
Washougal’s class of 2022, made up of 224 seniors, walked out of the stadium on Saturday with not only diplomas, but the knowledge that they overcame a significant amount of obstacles — many of them related to the COVID-19 pandemic — during their high-school years.