Yeah, I found that a lot of those extra-curriculars overlapped. Like, a lot of people in the speech and debate circuit were also music people, so I would see them at All-State, or Solo-Ensemble festival, or Honor choir. And I'd see a lot of them at Student Council convention, too. So I saw a lot of them often, but most of those things were only once a year, whereas the speech and debate tournaments were every couple of weeks throughout the school year. I had a LOT of friends from other schools...way more than I had in my own school. And it was nice, because I spent a lot of weekends with my friends that way, and if I had been at home, I would have been stuck at home doing homework, because I wasn't allowed to date, I wasn't allowed to go out with my friends unless all my homework was done, and I wasn't allowed to go out after dark, unless I was with my brother, or I was at a school activity like play practice or a ball game. So by being in speech and debate, I was at a school activity, I was hanging out with friends, after dark, and having way more fun than I would have had I been home. Speech and debate was pretty much my social life in high school. My classmates didn't want to hang out with me anyway, even if I had been allowed to go out. But the kids in speech and debate LIKED me, and we always had a ton of fun. It was a total lifeline for me. Very strange people, but I fit in there.
No idea if any of the guys were trying to flirt with me. Probably not. I wasn't known for being physically attractive. It was just fun to hang out. Also, a lot of guys in speech and debate who do IEs (more like acting than public speaking) tend to be gay, so they wouldn't have been flirting with me anyway. Not all of them, but definitely quite a few.