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The Lighthouse 
October, 2022
Dear RLC alumni,

With two significant alumni events in the month of October, it is very clear to me the shared sense of commitment and appreciation for this school. Connections and relationships run deep at RLC. 
 
On October 15th, 2022, we welcomed alumni of the graduating classes of 2020-2021. With members of the RLC teaching faculty and staff to welcome them with open arms, they were joined by family members and friends as they gathered for a celebration in the RAC and a meal in the dining hall. Gowns, speeches, tributes and even a few brave souls jumping in the lake, created a memorable event in an effort to honor what the pandemic interrupted.  
 
RLC demonstrated that despite external circumstances and forces out of our control, it is in our power to always embrace community and relationships as a safe, inclusive place for our past, present and future students and families. While our alumni and their guests were thrilled with the recent campus improvements, their real motivation for returning to a place that will always feel like home was to share some stories, connecting in person with significant others in their RLC family. 

On October 1, Sarah and Kelly Carrick '86 hosted an alumni reunion at their place in Stouffville. Current and past parents, some RLC staff, a large number of the 80’s alumni along with many other RLC faithful, came together. It was a magical evening as the energy was fantastic. Our goal of raising $25,000 to resurrect our sailing program was greatly exceeded. All in, the evening resulted in $90,000 to ensure our new sail docks will be adorned with new RS Zests, refurbished Lasers, a new Highfield Patrol 460 safety boat and other waterfront amenities. 

 
Rosseau Lake College is on an exciting trajectory. Thank you for your care and engagement. The ultimate goal is to have all of you, when the time is right, to visit your home away from home. Being on campus, walking the land, sharing a meal or perhaps a campfire, is unbeatable. There is something special about the air here, the pines, this majestic lake, that brings memories and shared experiences back into full color.


Sincerely,

Dave Krocker
Head of School 

 
in this issue
  • Sarah Mahon '03 on challenge, life in the military, and why Remembrance Day is important to her and us
  • Photos from recent alumni gatherings 
  • Latest entries from the blog and social feeds. 
RLC alumni spotted in the wild 

Alum, parents, students and staff spanning every era in the school's lifeincluding three heads of schoolgathered for the Turn Back Time 80s Celebration. For a slideshow from the evening, click here.
Graduates from 2020 and 2021 gathered to reflect in person on their time at RLC, followed by a reception and dinner. 
And, if you caught the show last week, you would have seen Andrew Just '13 on Dragon's Den. (Go Andrew!!) He developed a fitness app that tracks movements and counts reps using artificial intelligence. You can watch the pitch by clicking here. 

"What sort of girl joins the military?" 
Ones like Sarah Mahon '03. Which was a surprise even to her.

One morning a few years ago, Sarah Mahon ’03 walked into a reception area at a women’s clinic in Montreal to ask about a photograph that was hanging there. It shows a young woman, hair neatly pulled back and braided beneath a green beret. The woman is in uniform, a red cross insignia on her sleeve beneath the Canadian flag, a red poppy pinned to her lapel. Sarah asked the receptionist if she knew who the photographer was. “Oh, it’s wonderful isn’t it!” she said. “But why do you want to know?” Sarah said, “Because, it’s me.”  
The photo was taken during a Remembrance Day Parade in Montreal. Part of her job as a medic was to provide medical support at parades. When people are standing at attention for long periods of time there is a risk of passing out, especially with the younger cadets. “Your blood pools in your legs,” Sarah says. And that’s why she’s looking off in the distance. It looks like she’s lost in thought, rather than keeping an eye out for people who are about to faint. 

She didn’t know that the photo had been taken, and hanging there on the wall of the women's clinic was the first time she saw it. One of her classmates had tipped her off, having spotted it during a rotation. “Honestly, it’s poster sized!” she says with a chuckle. “It’s huge.” “I’m flattered. But it’s just kind of unnerving to walk in and see this picture of yourself.”
 

"They were two people who made me believe, 'I can do this.'"
But it really is her, shown serving her country as a member of the Canadian Armed Forces. Had you told a younger Sarah that this is one of the places she’d go in life, she never would have believed it. Her father is Art Stone, who joined the RLC community in 1980 and was the senior science teacher and an educator at the school for more than 20 years. In addition to his teaching, he directed the sailing and recreation program and organized the annual triathlon. Sarah grew up just outside of Rosseau and attended elementary school in Humphrey.

When she arrived at RLC in Grade 9, she says that she was a quiet and shy little girl. That changed. By Grade 12 she was leading student council, had a great group of friends, and had met people from around the world and all walks of life. “It just taught me so much more than I had learned in the little village of Rosseau,” she says. “My world had always been really small and closely connected. And to go to another small school, but one with people who came from all around the world, was just so eye opening.”

One of the things she treasures now was the school’s ability to continually show her what she was capable of, to demonstrate all the things that were within her. “There was a teacher there named Angus Murray and he put it perfectly. He said the only way to expand your comfort zone is to take a giant step outside of it. I feel like, every year, Rosseau pushed me further and further outside of my comfort zone. And it just helped me grow in ways that are hard to even imagine.” She took up white-water canoeing in Grade 11, something she admits that she wouldn’t have even entertained in Grades 9 and 10. “Scott Hepworth and Angus Murray both kind of—probably without even trying—just really helped me break out of my shell that little bit more, just by putting me in situations,” in white water and on expeditions. “They were two people who made me believe ‘I can do this.’”


"We might be the challenge you're looking for"
After graduation Sarah enrolled in the biology program at Laurentian. “I was thinking I was moving to the big city of Sudbury,” she says. Her roommate during her first year was in the military. “I thought, ‘oh my gosh, she and I are not going to get along. Because what sort of girl joins the military?!”
Still, she would see her roommate go off and parade, and just being busy with all the things associated with being an active member of the armed forces. “One of the things about Rosseau Lake College is that we were busy from 8:30 in the morning until 5 o’clock. At university I was missing that structure.”

She got to thinking that she needed a challenge, and, as it happens, the Canadian Forces tag line at the time was “We might just be the challenge you’re looking for.” “It sounds so corny!” she says. Both her roommate and another friend who was serving with the forces promoted the idea, saying she’d be great at it. “And I said, ‘are you crazy? That it not something I’m interested in at all.” But, after a closer look, she saw that maybe she was. “And I thought, well, what do I have to lose? Worst case scenario I can always say, ‘oh, no, this was a mistake, I don’t want to do this.’”

She was enlisted at the beginning of her final year of her undergraduate program. She arrived at basic training, she says, “scared out of my mind.” “I was 115 pounds and 5-foot-1 in an infantry unit that was mostly tall and stocky men.” She ended the training, she says, not just the smallest person in a platoon of 60, or one of only six women (she was in fact both of those things) but also as top candidate. She discovered that this, too, was something that she could do. “It was way out of my comfort zone, but it was challenging me in such great ways. I was growing just as much as I had during my years at Rosseau Lake College.”


"Remembrance Day is just such an important day"
The reason I was initially in touch with Sarah is because we’re featuring alumni who have served in the forces around the time of Remembrance Day. During our call, I ask her what Remembrance Day means to her, given that she’s served. She says that “the Remembrance Day Parade was actually the first parade I went to after I enlisted. I had enlisted on November 9th 2006. I wasn’t yet in uniform, and I really didn’t yet know all that much about the military. But I remember that as my first time feeling really patriotic, hearing the Canadian national anthem and it meaning something different than just standing up first thing in the morning at school. 'O Canada' had just been part of the routine. Suddenly I felt that there was more to it.” She continues, “even after releasing from the military, and with all the things that are going on in the world in the last ten years, I just find that Remembrance Day is so important for us to recognize that, for one, the world is not as peaceful as we sometimes like to believe. And the things that happened during those two world wars gave us freedom that we almost take for granted. We just can’t even imagine some of the things that were experienced by our fellow Canadian soldiers and the people in Europe during that time. And similar things are still being experienced by people around the world today.”

“Remembrance Day is an important day to make sure that we don’t forget that we’re so lucky to live in Canada and to have all the rights and freedoms that we do. To recognize that there are people around the world who don’t have democratic rights. Women, who don’t have the rights that they do here in Canada. People who aren’t safe when they step out of their homes every day. We are so, so lucky here to the point of forgetting just how privileged we are as Canadians. And that’s what I fear. If Remembrance Day loses its impact because we forget.”

Sarah released from the military in 2012. These days she’s a full-time nurse and a full-time mom to two busy boys. Now that we’re getting past covid, she’s looking forward to taking a more hands-on role at RLC. She’d like to speak to current students about comfort zones, and accepting challenges, just as Scott Hepworth and Angus Murray had done with her. She’d also like to talk about the experience of serving. “There is a part of me that has some regret that I wasn’t able to go on tour and serve my country in that way. But the military really helped me grow in so many ways and to appreciate so much of what I have.”
Above: White-water canoeing with Claire “CJ” Weenen ‘04; Right: Sarah heading to Grade 12 grad with her father, Art Stone, her mother, Deb, and brother Ian Stone ‘05.
Next week is the first Student for a Day event of the year. Prospective students are able to attend classes, participate in student-led committees, get involved in a whole-school activity, tour the campus, and meet a lot of like-minded learners. If you know someone who needs RLC, they can book a spot by emailing us at
admissions@rosseaulakecollege.com 
From the blog:
From the social feeds:
Grade 12 Biology students were studying autotrophs this week. They identified species on campus, including wintergreen, which they then harvested and brewed into tea.  
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