On several occasions recently the situation has arisen where I
have been made to feel a bit out of my depth (not intentionally by anyone,
except myself). And it all boils down to the fact that I am not an
academic, I am a 'could have been'.
I left secondary school with my place at
college firmly set and aspirations of university after that but during the
summer holidays I found a job, nothing grand, it was an office junior position
and it paid money...all ideas of college and university were thrown out of the
window in exchange for the folding green stuff.
To be fair what followed was a fabulously
interesting career which included Chelsea Flower show stints, long stays in
Park Lane hotels, visits to loads of posh and expensive London restaurants and
even a visit to Stringfellows (entertainment for customers honestly...).
And culminated in me becoming the Personal Assistant to the Chief
Executive Officer of an international consumer electronics company, a position
I have held now for the past 24 years, not too shabby for a 'could have been'.
Do I regret the decision I made at the
tender age of 16? No...Because every decision I have made in my life
whether it seemed good or bad at the time has led me to where I am now and I
would not wish to be anywhere else.
But...it does lead me occasionally to feel
a little bit like the 'Learn the ABC' book misfiled on a shelf full of
Shakespeare's work. And it shouldn't.
I left school with a handful of 'O' levels
and a bunch of typing certificates, I can read, I can write and I can hold an
intelligent conversation (occasionally).
I am well read, in fact I read a lot;
Pratchett (of course), light hearted and funny sci fi books, vampire and witch
lit, right through to the classics such as Conan Doyle, Lewis Carroll and
Dickens.
Three years ago I was propelled into the
world of book writing and since then have been lucky enough to have had a heap
load of books published, but they are what I call 'talkative' text, I write as
if I am speaking to you sitting around a kitchen table with a cuppa. They
are not academic by any means and actually I wouldn't want them to be, I don't
want people to have to read my books alongside a dictionary to decipher the big
words.
But does that mean I couldn't write an
intellectual and 'grown up' article? In the past I have shied away from
any such idea believing that I wouldn't be able to. I might not have
letters after my name or a bunch of 'A' levels (I do have my cycling
proficiency certificate...) but do you know what? I reckon I could.
I think we spend an awful lot of time as
human beings telling ourselves that we can't do something or that we wouldn't
match up to others or meet certain standards but I think we are doing ourselves
a great injustice.
No, I am not an academic in this 'trouser leg of reality' but I like to think out there in another space
time continuum there is another me that went to college and university and is
now a high powered business woman with an billion pound empire or a Professor
of archaeology somewhere on an incredibly exciting dig...but she isn't me and I
bet she hasn't achieved anywhere near the amount of amazing things I have in my
own 'leg' of reality...
Never underestimate yourself and what you
can achieve if you put your mind to it.
Now pass me the dictionary, I need to
write a dissertation...
Well said! I "Dis" myself too as a Pagan leader of a small community, because I have not been initiated by any one path or school, I do not hold any degree in metaphysics. I have a degree in social work and worked that field for 15 yrs. For a while that was not enough in my eyes. Then someone helped me see the real me. I have a life time of being raised magically, of psychic experiences and encounters with spirits and prolific astral traveling to draw from and teach from. It used to matter to me they were not a specific path, no more. I have freed myself from doubt by seeing the real me. Today I teach, I lead public ritual, and do public speaking engagements and psychic fairs. To accept the real me and let go of the doubts and fears has been liberating indeed! I do not even let the fact that my writing is horrible (according to my friends), stop me! Thank you for speaking up and encouraging others!
ReplyDeleteIt's got to be said, having more qualifications is no proof of a) being able to communicate with people b)having anything worthwhile to say. You do have something to say, lots to say, and can say it in ways that lots of people can engage with. Some academic folk are awesome, but there's plenty have their heads stuck up their arses as well :-) With academic writing, its so often not enough to have a degree, you need a degree, or higher in the exact subject to stand a chance of decoding the language. I was greatly cheered a few weeks back when Brendan Myers pointed out that using words like 'ontological' just makes academics look like twats. The language of academia can so often be about excluding, not informing. Hope there's something useful in that muddle.
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