I'm surprised. In that small town you're well aware of, I graduated kindergarten.
Little white robes, mortarboard, the works.
You were cheated, coach. 
I noticed that cultural difference when I moved up over here, on the eastern foothills of the Sandhills; they have "receptions" and "open houses" for students who've graduated from
high school.
WTF?
Out in the heart of the Sandhills, that would've been considered an unpardonable pretension; nobody did anything "special" for mere high school graduates other than sending a greetings-card, sometimes with a check in it. That was it, and that's still generally it.
I mean, it's not like graduation from high school is anything remarkable; one's
supposed to graduate from high school; it's routinely expected as one of those things one must do, like wiping one's ass after sitting on the commode.
Even graduation from college--whoop-de-do. One went to college, and so it's expected that one graduate, nothing extraordinary about it.
About the most a college graduate could expect was being taken out to McDonald's by the parents and other older members of the family.
Seriously. Why are people making big deals out of trivial accomplishments?