12 Things I Wish I'd Been Taught...
05:24
With results days looming and the inevitable back to school
countdown commencing, it seems somewhat topical to consider learning. Anyone
who knows me well (or has delved into my blog), will know I hold academia
firmly in my heart, as well as, and perhaps more so, than my head. Education is
power above and beyond anything else, and I really do believe that. Education
is opportunity and chance and hope – the greatest source of all three. However,
it’s only as I’ve gotten older (yee olde and wise fellow that I now am…at the
tender age of 22), that I’ve realised there are some gaping holes in my
knowledge. Some of these holes configure in the shape of “real life conundrums
and the trials and tribulations of being an Adult with a capital A”, whilst
others expose rather cavernous craters in my so-called “general knowledge”. It
is, however, the more generic, “how to live with yourself” holes that appear to
be the deepest. If everything we know has, at some point, been taught to us (or
perhaps self-taught, but that is often by example) what about the things people
just assume we already know…the things we’re preconditioned to do: the things
we’re never taught? Here are just a handful of things I wish I'd been taught...
1. Firstly, and not particularly indicative of the kind of
life I want to lead but I’m all about the knowledge accumulation: I wish I’d
been taught to play Monopoly. My parents are not board game people. This is a sad
fact I have come to accept after many a Christmas Day groan in response to my
“shall we play a game?!” (it was solidified the year my mum gave me a “pocket
book of Christmas games for one”. That said, I have successfully played
children’s Monopoly (don’t want anyone thinking I have missed out on a hugeeeee
chunk of development). I have, actually, attempted to play adult Monopoly (I’ve
even had a go at Star Wars Monopoly). It’s just, I feel I was somewhat
“cheated” on the rule front, and, as my Monopoly playing was often both sporadic
and sprung upon me, I never really learnt said dos and don’ts for myself.
2. Perhaps one of my learning slip-ups comes down to the
fact I wanted to learn well and I wanted to learn the best. I wanted to learn
right, so I stuck to what I was taught like an annoying piece of fluff. When my
parents taught me the word “sorry,” I expelled it with Tourette like frequency
and with minimal brainwork: I was always sorry. So, I wish I’d been taught how
NOT to apologise. I wish I’d been taught that I’m not always the one who needs
to apologise. I wish I’d been taught that I did not have to stick so closely to
the word “sorry,” that my very presence became an apology. I wish I’d been
taught that sometimes, just sometimes, I deserve an apology.
3. As much as I greatly value my maths and chemistry lessons
of days gone by, I wish I’d been taught the value of art and hobbies that
weren’t academic. I wish I had not been squashed solely into essays and
equations. I wish I’d been taught that I could do physics AND drama (I actually
did, but doing so was questioned and one of those two was frowned upon
considerably more than the other – it seemed that I could calculate
acceleration, only if I avoided the scripts that favoured words to numbers and
characters whose hands held me back. I met no greater force than the resistance
of others).
4. I wish I’d been taught to travel. Admittedly, in fleeting
conversations, I was told that my town was small and there was a whole world
beyond the school fence, but I wish it had seemed more real. I wish I was
taught that travelling is doable. I wish I hadn’t been taught that travelling
was “too expensive,” or “not going to get me a job that earns money". I wish I’d
been taught to look into ways to make travelling cheaper…ways to find “safe”
jobs abroad. I wish I hadn’t been taught that as a girl, "travelling was too
dangerous". I wish I’d been taught that, as an 18, 19, 22 year old, jobs would
still be there when I came back.
5. Sometimes I really question my ability to adult. I am not
a very good adult. I do not like phone calls – making or receiving. And I
really, really do not like banks. I wish I’d been taught about banks and ISAs
and interest and tax and VAT and arrrghhh. I wish I’d had a little bit more
guidance in adulting. I wish I knew why a current account was better than X and
Y, and why I should go to one bank and not another. I wish I knew how to be more adulting-savvy.
6. Self-love and self-care. I'm not sure to what extent this can be taught, but the older I get, the more important it seems to be. At the end of the day, we're all we have. Perhaps, learning to be enough for ourselves is both the greatest gift and the greatest lesson we'll ever receive.
7. As far as trains are concerned, you stop being a child at
16. What’s that I hear you cry? Oh yes, I know almost all other things consider
you a child until you turn 18 and are then, indeed, “an adult”, but no. As far
as the train companies are concerned, once you hit the age of 16 you quite
clearly magically earn money and take up more space and thus, must pay for an
adult fare. This, my friends, is the harsh reality of growing up.
8. Life is scary, but you will be okay. There’s a lot of
doom and gloom out there. I’m a pretty fearful/anxious person (hello, my own
mobile ringing is often paralysing). Sometimes, I really wish someone could
have taught me to believe, or at least rationalise, that 99.8% of the time: It.
Will. Be. Okay. And of course, fearful little me would have piped straight back
with, “but what about that 0.2%”, to which, I wish I’d just been taught: 0.2%
is actually a very small percentage. To live in fear is actually much more
terrifying.
9. I wish I’d been taught that some people will actively dislike
you for no reason at all. I wish I’d been taught that this is okay: you will
not be with these people forever. I wish I’d been taught not to waste too much
time trying to make these people like you.
10. I wish I’d been taught how to use a sewing machine. Just imagine all the bunting I'd have made by now; it would seem I've been denied a bunting world and this is just tragic...
11. In a world where some people are very loud and very
extroverted, I wish I’d been taught, at a younger age, that being an introvert
is not a “bad thing”. That said, I wish I’d been taught that just because I am
perhaps somewhat quieter, I too am allowed to talk. I wish I’d been taught that
I am not here solely to listen.
12. Moles and badgers are not the same size. This, right
here, is a classic example of assumed knowledge…I clearly missed out on being
taught that moles are, in fact, quite small.
1 comments
Brilliant post! Learning the importance of self love and non-academic hobbies are both so important (as are the different sizes of woodland creatures). It just goes to show how much academia lets us down. x
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