Be the
best that you can be.
I
would say that was an underlying motto in the family. Dad had a degree in Engineering,
Mum studied while we were at college to become a teacher – she had studied
nursing when she left school.
There
wasn’t any pressure to go and get a qualification or go to university. If that
was what we chose - well and good, if not – no matter. In the 70’s you didn’t need
a qualification or a degree for the majority of jobs. If you did many workplaces
trained you as you worked – apprenticeships and the like. If you weren’t interested
in a trade, or nursing, or teaching, or doctoring and dentistry – you just
looked for a job doing something you could “just do”.
To
work in the bank or insurance you just needed to show an aptitude and demonstrate
a good work ethic, not like now when it seems you almost need at least a BA to
look at the positions vacant. If you had studied shorthand or typing that would
assist you into an office role in most cases, and accounting might have helped
you into a junior role in an accounting firm.
I
took languages at college – Latin and French. They didn’t really get me
anywhere. I had thought when I was 13 and had to choose course options that maybe
I might do Law – and that Latin might be handy. But plans change. To be
truthful I have never known what I want to do when I grow up !
Teaching
? Nursing ? Almost I did Home Science to become a dietician – how much different
would life be now ?
But
no – no formal qualifications – and I have done okay. Sometimes I think what if
? But what if might have changed my whole path and there are definitely some
things I wouldn’t want to change. So.
I’ve
been a bit the same as a parent – it takes time to work out the path you want
to take in life. The pressures are different and today’s youth a made to feel
they need a degree to do the most menial jobs, and that if they aren’t
academically amazing, then they are at the bottom of the pile. Who are we then -
parents with no qualifications – to lecture our children that that must have
this degree or that ? To encourage them to embrace lifelong debt in their early
20’s and beyond.
So
far it has worked for me. For myself and as a parent - I think.
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