Sunday 24 November 2013

EDUCATION GUEST POST SASH FROM: Inked in Colour

This week’s guest post on Education comes from Sash from Inked in ColourStorytelling fulfils the need for human beings to cast their experiences in narrative form. Our ancestors probably gathered around the evening fires and expressed their fears, their beliefs and their heroism through oral narratives. Sash is a traveller who tells her stories to us, through her blog. Instead of a camp fire we all sit around our computers, gathered to hear her tales. Myself, like many others, can relate to her tales of travel. Her tales of motherhood, and single motherhood. Plus her tales of leaving a better foot print on our planet. Make sure you pop over to Sash's blog and Facebook page and give her lots of love.



I grew up in an upper middle class family. I went to a good private primary school and I had all of the educational opportunities that a doctor’s daughter might expect. Until of course my parent’s marriage broke up. Then I was flicked from school to school for a while and in the meantime I began to form the most important skill that I have since mastered in my adult life... the ability to be flexible. The ability to embrace change.
I am blessed, I get good grades without trying very hard. School was never difficult for me. But school is not the only form of education that counts. It is the foundation of skills one needs to go to university (which I’ve done, multiple times), it is the basics one needs so that they can read and write and count and push themselves. It’s essential and it’s undeniably criminal that so many women in the world are not afforded this right. The right to learn.

Basic education is a human right. There is no doubt about that. It’s very important to me that I am able to give my daughter the best education that I can, in the situation we are in. And that goes so much further than just school and university. It’s about the choices I make that shape our lives. It’s about the higher education I can offer her now, as a toddler, and then as a child and a teenager and one day as an adult. The higher education that has nothing to do with BA’s or MA’s or PHD’s (though I have already worked my own way through two of those already). But there is a much higher education that I want to provide to my daughter, an education that brings with it compassion and mindfulness and generosity. An education that encourages respect and self realisation, an education that brings with it power and love and sometimes pain... the education that comes from experience. The education that comes from never being afraid to live a great and adventurous life.

You will always learn more from doing than you ever will from standing still.
You can learn every word in a book by heart but if you have never seen real love or had your heart broken or stood in a field in a foreign country or ridden a motorbike or laughed at the wind or held the hand of someone who is dying or challenged your own beliefs. Have you truly lived?

It’s a question I ask myself every day. I ask myself and then I throw myself into the wind and I try something new. I put my hear t on the line and it gets broken. I trust and I get betrayed. I love and I get loved. I play and I laugh. I win and I lose and I lose and I get back up and I go again. And again. Because I’m alive. Because I’m fighting for something more than “just this,” because that’s what I want for me. And it’s what I want for my child. And it’s what I want for the world.

And it’s a question that is, unfortunately, only for the privileged. Because the large percentage of the population of the world does not have the privilege of asking ‘have i truly lived’ because they are still asking ‘how will I continue living?’

I think one of the most uneducated and insulting things we as human beings can do is to take our privilege for granted. To get hung up on grades and salaries and career s without a second thought to those people who have none of what we have. While we sit around and moan about our thighs and our hair and our skin and we spend money on things that are inconsequential and we worry about things that don’t matter, there are people out there who are happy with nothing. I’ve seen them. I’ve lived along side them in little villages on the edge of the earth. I’ve worked with them to harvest rice fields and to build houses and to grow food and to eat food. I’ve sat with them in mud huts and laughed with these people, the less privileged as they tell jokes in languages I don’t understand and hold my hand and hug me when I leave. I watch as they love their children and they work for food not for power or greed or recognition or fame.
The best education I have ever had in my life has not come from all of the essays I have written or the academics I have listened to or the presentations I have given. It hasn’t come from the late nights forming convincing arguments or referencing correctly or stressing over deadlines. It hasn’t come from journals or text books or lectures. I have learned a lot from all of this, sure, but it has never and will never be the best education I will receive.

The best education I have ever had in my life has come from people. From people all around the world. I’ve learned absolute joy from strangers and compassion from children. I’ve learned to appreciate my life and my privilege by living side by side in life with those who come from a different world. I’ve learned acceptance from those who have been ostracized and I’ve learned true strength from those who are considered weak. I’ve learned love from having my heart broken.

The more you learn the more you realise you know nothing. The more you travel the more you realise you haven’t seen anything at all. The m ore you experience the less you care about material possessions and the more you care about people.
Because let’s face it. At the end of the day... people are the only thing that matter. The rest? It’s just broken discarded plastic.






“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” ― Mahatma Gandhi



Please Note: Images and words are Sash's unless otherwise indicated

11 comments:

  1. A very lovely, thoughtfully written piece. I've never really 'lived' and the impulsive side wishes sometimes I could throw it all away and jump out into the unkown. The practical side of me is stronger and rules though. Maybe I'm letting the impulsive side rule a little in 2014. Who knows what it will bring. But one thing is certain, I haven't 'lived' but I know life has been extremely kind to me so far. :D

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think I have balanced both, I am an extremely practical person, yet the wanderlust in me is strong. Maybe 2014 is your year to be impulsive?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you so much for featuring my thoughts on your gorgeous blog Julie. xo Sash.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Such a powerful post...and so true.
    I find I often have to remind myself not to get caught up in the trappings of my current world...the job, the study, the mortgage...and to remember that none of that really matters.
    What matters most to me right now in drinking in the deliciousness that is my two year old...learning from him and trying to teach him to be a good human being.

    ReplyDelete
  5. You are welcome to come for a visit any time!

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love how Sash stated "the rest is broken discarded plastic". In the end none of the stuff matters. People do

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ahh the joy and memories that come from experience, from living. What a touching post. I had written something similar and can see many parallels between Sash and Bo's lives and my own.
    Love Bella xx

    ReplyDelete
  8. I can't wait to read what you have written!!

    ReplyDelete
  9. I think Sash inspires all to walk outside their own shoes.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Sash has just got it ALL going on. Love that chick. x

    ReplyDelete

Comments are almost as good as getting a letter or parcel in the mail.