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Denise K's avatar

What an interesting read this post was. And it made me smile several times. Your ability to criticize yourself and your motivations is always nice, and we should all do so more often.

One line stuck with me:

“Suppose you put aside, or entirely gave up, ideas of success and failure, and only proceeded experimentally, following your interest and excitement? What if you retired what Rousseau calls ‘the frenzy to achieve distinction’?”

I’m immediately reminded of a teaching job I took a few years back, but wasn’t enthusiastic about. I needed the work though. It was split between high school (vocational high school) and community college students who would go on to work in nursing homes and as social workers. I quickly decided that, since I would find a better situation for the next school year, it was the perfect time to test out any educational stuff I had always wanted to do, or just please myself. The worst they could do was fire me.

That year, my ESL students decorated gingerbread houses, while speaking English. We had many, many English speaking potluck lunches. We did karaoke to David Bowie songs. Everyone’s test results , despite all this, managed to go up. I lasted for seven years in that job before someone with more government seniority stepped in to replace me.

Ever since, I’ve been trying to get that ‘follow your interest and excitement’ and ‘avoid the frenzy of distinction’ vibe back in another, more rigid, job context, but it is not really what the big administration is looking for. I have to sneak it in. I snuck in a Kate Bush song last week, and we’ll be studying the recipe for fudge in English, and eating it, of course, next week. But it isn’t the same as that last job of 7 years of magical teaching when I was giving in to almost all of my desires.

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harpreet's avatar

It is a beautiful sunny day here in Lichfield, England. I just got back from running some chores, and saw the notification for Hanif's new substack. The sun is shining, I'm drinking lemonade, and have been immersed in Hanif's recollections. The passages about depression contrasts with my mood, and yet I recognise the terrain of it, and feel strange, happy because of the lovely nascent English summer, dwelling on the perfection of Hanif's words here: "In these moods you can forget that you are the engine of your own tempest." Sadness and a happy mood coincide.

By the wonders of technology I am listening to The Koln Concert on YouTube for the first time, as I re-read this piece. Everything has changed so fast in our lives. We can type on a website and listen to all the music ever made in the world. I feel distance from things but very close too. And I have decided its time to re-read The Buddha of Suburbia, after so long. Hanif wrote it and lots of us suddenly found a voice and experience of our own reflected, the milieu of South Asian life in modern England. What a wonder it is to be alive and listen to music, read words like these, and hope for understanding of ourselves by ourselves and others. Nice to be reminded we are not alone, sometimes.

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