What would be your Mastermind subject?
I was thinking about this in the shower the other day, as you do.
And it occurred to me that I no longer have a subject that I can honestly say I
specialise in.
The revelation made me genuinely sad. Have I let myself down?
I don’t really specialise in anything any more – I just generalise,
badly. It’s not the end of the world. I’ve managed to get through life so far.
But over the last few days I’ve been asking myself the question – what exactly do I know?
It’s generally acknowledged that you’re supposed to know more things
when you get older, right? But in reality while (some of us) become wiser,
cold-hard-facts-knowledge is something we just end up forgetting. Life takes
over and we stop practicing - getting on with daily life doesn’t leave an awful
lot of time for knowledge pursuits. Not unless you’re doing it as part of your
day job.
I’d say that my knowledge peaked at 22 and it’s all been drip
dropping out like a leaky tap since.
Does part of us stop caring? I’d argue that most of us get to a
point where we’re not trying to prove ourselves to the world anymore. You start
to relax.
I was quite happy with this relaxing, until the other day in the
shower. Now I’m worried - should I be learning more stuff?
You forget what it is like to learn. The confidence it brings. When
I was at school, absorbing all that information was effortless. Natural. So
much so that I took it for granted. But now as an adult, well – it’s a totally
different, scary slog of a story.
Last week – before the shower – I was told that my punctuation is
all over the place. At the age of 31 and owner of a Bachelor’s Degree in the
English Language this bombshell was hugely shame inducing.
Handily, for some reason I’ve had the Penguin Guide to Punctuation
in my bookcase for who knows how many years. So, I thought I’d spend ten
minutes reading through that to refresh my ageing memory…
Eight days later, and I still have not grasped the functions on the
comma. *At this point I will take the
opportunity to apologise for the offensive and incorrect use of commas riddled
throughout this blog post.
When the weekend arrived I was at my wits end. I thought I’d give my
poor brain a break. Do some relaxing, something I am confident I am good at.
We walked into town. Loafed around the library. Got tired from all
that hard work. Sat down in said library for a break. We looked up and realised
the square outside was packed. Positively teeming with throngs of over-excited small
children literally running, throwing
themselves at whatever was going on.
I’ll tell you what was going on. Science.
The British Science Festival had come to town, and my word was it
going down well.
Some children were blowing bubbles bigger than the London Eye.
Some children (and grown adults) were running barefoot through a
bowl of custard – which held solid under the weight of those who ran quick
enough.
But the biggest hitter – and most entertaining to watch – were the
mini canisters which, when filled with two reactive elements, exploded.
The sheer glee on each child’s face as the canister propelled itself
into the air as if by magic, and the rapt fascination as they were shown how
this had happened was really was heart warming. And a little inspirational.
That thirst for knowledge is something I wish I had made more of an
effort to hold on to.
But of course, it’s easy for kids. They have tons of time to
dedicate to learning. They don’t have any worries about money, work or getting
the washing done.
Perhaps the answer is to stop being so damn lazy. Just take up a
hobby. REALLY take up a hobby. (Not just buying Kirstie Allsopp’s Craft book
and leaving it there next to the TV.)
Because despite it being hard work - and I already have enough of
that at actual work - learning new
things really does make you feel better about yourself. Helps you feel as
though you can go about the world with some confidence - even if you don’t want
to take it over any more.
Being a specialist in something – no matter how trivial or obscure –
is a small way of demonstrating to the world, and to yourself, that you’re
still here. In a small, relaxed way.
So, I think after I’ve conquered commas I will release the inner
child with me, and learn something. Perhaps I’ll start by taking out a science
book from the library. Who knows, maybe this time next year I’ll be the one
showing small children how to walk over custard.
And if John Humphrys invites me over to the big leather chair, I’ll
have the confidence to say yes.
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