"It’s Your Thing…
by Kym on November 29, 2006
…Do What You Wanna Do!”
The radio wasn’t on, the stereo was silent, but I was grooving to that song as I worked in the kitchen this morning. As I twirled around and shook my hips, I started pondering about the lyrics of the song. An odd moment for deep introspection, but there you go.
So what’s my thing?
I asked myself that question a few times over the course of the day. What do I wanna do? What defines me, gives me purpose, and makes me happy?
Now I’d love to go on and on about how I’m destined to be a wife and mother and that this is the culmination of my existence and nothing else makes me as fulfilled and happy as my current role in life. But that simply isn’t the case.
What I love to do is read, write, and learn. Ever since I was about eight years old, my greatest love in life has been the written word. I would read a book or two a day, staying up late into the night or even the wee hours of morning. I became very skilled in building pillow fortresses to hide my light behind, so my parents wouldn’t see the telltale light under the door.
Nancy Drew gave way to the Babysitter’s Club, which in turn was supplanted by some of my Mom’s favourite authours (Mary Stewart, Maeve Binchy, Phyllis A. Whitney, Mary Higgins Clark, Isabelle Holland, etc…). In grade eight I devoured the high school library, starting at the beginning with Jane Austen and finishing off with Oscar Wilde. I discovered poetry, and wrote some truly abominable drivel.
I yearned to explore and experience the worlds of the works I read. But my bookishness had some very unfortunate social side effects. I was shy, fearful, sheltered, and naive. Not good qualities for the first year university student I soon became. My decision to pursue a degree in English was soon shaken by my reaction to the course material my professor’s selected. And the format of the classes left me feeling small and insignificant.
In high school I’d been the ideal student. Studious and eager to learn. I picked things up quickly and received constant praise from my teachers. They would smile indulgently when they passed me in the halls, and share my essays with each other in the student lounge. One teacher handed a paper back laughing once, saying he’d had to have his wife help him with the big words. With so few social accomplishments to reflect on, I gloried in my academic ones.
I expected university to be the same only more so. Finding myself in classes of between one and three hundred students, never so much as meeting my professors, I felt lost and adrift. And I no longer earned a string of straight A’s with no effort. It was hard work, and my long enjoyed feelings of intellectual superiority quickly dissipated.
And I was being called upon to analyze books and poems that I found to be filthy and lewd. I read of rape and incest, torture and murder. The words swam in front of my eyes as tales of brutality and immorality tore my innocence and naïveté away from me.
Yes, yes, such a sad story…but was does it amount to?
Years have passed, and I’m finally recovering from the shock of it all. I’ve accepted that despite my knowledge of a variety of big words, my intellect is only slightly above average (136 IQ). I acknowledge that the world is indeed full of immorality and filth, but that it’s also full of beauty, and that I chose what I let into my life.
The yearn to learn is still very much a part of me. Fear of failure has held me back from actively pursuing any form of education, but no more! Learning is my thing, and it’s what I wanna do. It’s time to leave the past in the past and enjoy the present to the fullest.
8 comments
So . . . learning’s your thing . . . whatcha gonna learn? ;)
by Anonymous on November 29, 2006 at 12:11 pm. #
First of all, my fellow nerd, IQ is a social construct and is considered to be a terribly inaccurate judge of true intelligence. (And I don’t hang with dummies, so that should tell you you’re S-M-R-T too).
I’m all about the life-long-learner approach to life – What are you gonna do – take some courses, or self-direct?
by Nurse Pickles on November 29, 2006 at 1:07 pm. #
A woman after my own heart! I love learning, too. It makes me so giddy it’s embarrassing. :-/ (Truly. Sometimes I feel like I’m the only one.)
And yeah, what Kate said … I want to know what you’re learning, too. :-D Share with me your wisdom!
Also, I now have “it’s your thing” jammin’ in my head. *Beth bops her head dorkily*
by Bethanny on November 29, 2006 at 4:52 pm. #
Wow, sounds a lot like me, except that I never liked English and don’t want to go back to school, but I always did so great in high school, especially English, I read tons and tons like you, I was shy and all that too and once I got to college it was like a slap in the face. Good for you for wanting to continue learning :) As for me, not too likely at this point lol.
by Anonymous on November 29, 2006 at 8:02 pm. #
Why did nurse pickles have to go and ruin everything for me and my high IQ? I knew something was up and I was just living a lie.
Are you making an announcement? I’m have a blast unschooling myself!
by The Lazy Organizer on November 30, 2006 at 8:36 am. #
I bow to your greatness. Are you going back to school then? We’ve talked about me doing something with the kids getting older and all.
PS. I have tagged you for a fun Christmas meme.
by Amanda on November 30, 2006 at 4:24 pm. #
Hey Lazy Organizer -
Don’t worry. You’re still smart. Just don’t measure yourself by IQ points – consider your knowledge, both acquired in academic settings (the main concern of IQ testing) as well as in life lessons. You’ll probably wind up a lot smarter that you thought in the end.
(I read somewhere that Einstein had a low IQ…)
by Nurse Pickles on November 30, 2006 at 4:28 pm. #
Hi! I cliked over her from Mental Tesserae’s blog. It it nice to know that there are other people out there who love to be moms, but who also love to do their own thing. I, too, love to learn and read and I am learning to love to write. Blogging is good therapy when you get tired of talking to 5 year olds and 22 month olds all day.
And I had to laugh when I read you loved reading Nancy Drew, The Babysitters Club and Mary Higgins Clark. I read all of those, too. I still love to read, just wish I had more time to do it!
by Anonymous on December 5, 2006 at 10:41 pm. #