ABOUT VARUN'S LEAVE NOTE AND KARAN'S JET LAG
“If you really want to do something, you’ll find a way.
If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse.”
Jim Rohn
Who
wants long sermons early in the mornings? I am asking this: Do you think, that
any college kid – a teenager – has the inclination or patience to listen to a
teacher’s ‘sermons’ in the early mornings? Well, the ‘early mornings’ may be 8
or 9 or 10, you see…
At the end of my
9 a.m. class today, I heard myself telling this class-12 group… “Don’t worry.
You may have to bear with my ‘sermons’ for a month more, maximum. You will be
free after that… ‘Chutkara’, once and for all!”
Of course, my tongue
was firmly tucked inside my cheeks as I was telling them what I was telling. I
knew, that it was their age to resist… find a teacher’s sermons ‘boring’ and ‘repetitive’.
But, I also knew, that the time to recall these sermons – appreciate them, and value them – would, always,
come later in life… It came later in my own life, and, it would come later for
my young students, too.
When young kids
come out with their excuses – for not attending classes or not doing their
homework – their teachers don’t believe them easily. When excuses come
repeatedly, habitually, teachers don’t buy them easily… For example, Varun*
sent this ‘leave note’ to me – via WhatsApp - a couple of days ago…
I sent him this
video…
Karan* comes out
with very interesting and innovative excuses… “Sir, I have difficulty
coordinating with Karan,” I wrote to Karan’s father, a while ago.
Karan and his
parents had returned last evening from a foreign trip. Karan, who was regularly
missing classes and skipping homework, had a very valid reason when they were
to travel for ten days. But, now that they are back… I wanted him to join
online this evening at 4…
“But, Sir, I
have a jet lag,” came Karan’s reason…
“My boy, your
dad has already resumed his office, this morning, and you will not be able to
get out of your jet lag even in the evening?”
Last
evening, my wife and I had gone to visit someone. As we were entering the gate
of that society, a car was coming out and it stopped… Neeraj and his wife
Ashwini were my students more than three decades ago. They and their teenaged
son got out of their car and excitedly greeted us. “He was our favourite teacher,”
the young kid was introduced to me by his proud parents…
Neeraj, Shankar
and Rohan – the trio was inseparable while they would attend my classes when
they were in class-12… I would give them the same daily dose of sermons even
then. I was quite updated about their progress in life… All three, today, hold very
big positions in global banks…
I spoke about
these three students of mine as I was telling my present class-12 batch, “You
may recall my sermons – appreciate and value them – later in life,” I had
reminded them, this morning. Yes, we all have our own time to know the difference
between an excuse and a genuine reason…
Nick Vujicic
calls his life not as ‘a life without limbs’, but as ‘a life without limits’”…
Thirty years
will be too long a wait for a 66-year-old teacher… How I wish, I could bump into Varun’s Mercedes or Karan’s Bentley, thirty years from now!
And, how I wish
the young kids could learn to differentiate between their excuses and valid reasons, early in life...
“I think the biggest
disability we have as human beings is unbelief,” says Nick Vujicic, “Everything
starts with a vision; and a man without vision dies.”
*Names
changed
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic’s: 1. Pixabay 2. Varun
Video: 60 Minutes Australia
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