WHY YOU NEED TO KNOW WHERE YOU ARE HEADED
This morning, I asked our PD students to write down three changes they would love to see in them at the end of the course. We had started the course exactly a month ago, and, now, we had less than a month to go. So, I thought, I would gauge the changes that had come about in our young-ones, or they had hoped to see in them, by the time the course ended.
It was necessary. Many of these young kids are
here because their parents want them to; some are here because their teachers
or well-wishers want them to; some, because of their friends… and, there are a
few, who come because they want to…
So, I keep reminding them saying, “There is
nothing wrong if you are here because of your parents, teachers, well-wishers
or friends… Now that you are here, and you have seen… You are old enough to bring
about that much needed shift – to say and feel ‘I am here out of my own choice;
and I know what I expect from this course’.”
Most of them succeed in bringing about this
shift. This morning, I decided to stir them a bit by helping them get in touch
with themselves.
Every one of them wrote and spoke. Three things
were simple, clear and achievable. “I want to see myself as a very self-confident
person,” “I want to be able to speak well before an audience.” Yes, many had
these in common. “I want to manage my shyness, carry myself well socially,”
this, too, was common. “I want to improve my English, particularly my
vocabulary and style,” many had this, too. “I want to discover what I want to
do in life,” some expressed this important desire. “I want to develop
leadership skills,” “I want to build a healthy self-esteem,” “I want to excel
in my studies,” “I want to inculcate in me fine values,”… and so went their
wishes, their expectations about themselves…
“If you do
not know where you are headed, you will only land up in a no-man’s land,” I
keep reminding our young-ones, “You need to define your goals… You need be
clear about your expectations from every task you take up in life.” And, I add
this: “Else, you will be dodged, tossed and topsy-turvied by the blowing winds.”
There are no exceptions to this rule. No task or
activity in life escapes this test. Stephen Covey beautifully conveyed the same
principle by stating, “Begin with the End in mind.” Thus, our young-kids, too,
had to be clear about their goals… and, check if they were moving in the right
direction.
I was pleased, that, they all were.
What pleased me the most was what this young
Muslim-girl
expressed as her very first goal:
“I want to be a self-dependent person in
life.”
It was something no-one else had voiced…
something that prompted me, instantly, to applaud…
And, I did end up telling our young-ones, why, in
life, being a self-dependent person, was so, so, so important a value… Why it
was such an incredible life-tool…
The moist eyes of the young Muslim-girl endorsed every
beat of my words!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Neetu Sharma Sachdeva
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... Vivek