Hey, Mind Benders!
What world do you live in?
I wander between
conifers and the cosmos
discovering clues
Living in the Real World
It’s the start of the school year, which means I received another reminder from the middle school that my children have attended for the past seven years that they are trying to prepare my children to excel in the real world.
Ugh!
It’s hard to overstate how much I detest this framing. I cannot speak for other families, but our family very much lives in the real world. We deal with chronic illness, death, mental illness struggles, and late-stage capitalism regularly.
There’s also the idea that somehow school is not the real world. But considering many of the teachers and administrators have worked in education their entire careers, after graduating from school, do they even have any real-world experience?
I mostly keep these thoughts to myself, or this public newsletter. :) I truly love the middle school my children have attended (we only have one child still in that phase of life.) However, this school is far stricter than the high school and college my other children attend. Their policies around deadlines, timeliness, and attendance are far more punitive than any employer I’ve ever experienced or heard of.
However, the core reason I dislike the idea of preparing children for the real world, is that it assumes we all share a common reality. We do not.
To one degree or another, we all shape our own reality. We bring our prejudices, biases, and trauma into the world and create a reality bent around our experiences. The real trick to thriving in life isn’t adapting to other people’s rules and expectations, it’s learning to use your creative power to change your reality.
The reality our family has created for our middle schoolers is that they are expected to turn in their best work, and we all agree to not worry about the grade that work receives because middle school grades have no impact on their future.
While the school is working to prepare my child to work in a capitalist hellscape called “The Real World”, our family prepares our children to build their own reality.
Be the weird you want to see in the world!
Cheers,
Jason
I so agree with you! We are a neurospicy family also with chronical illnesses and other „fun“ things. And our „real“ is so much different from what others perceive as their „real“ world.
My kid goes to a similar school with similar values (although the school system in Germany is slightly different). They are fantastic in supporting us and especially my kid‘s special struggles. My kid is really thriving their to our surprise. And we feel the same about grades. We want our kid to get through school - and then we will see what happens. There is enough pressure already on the kids, so we try to not add unnecessary stress as parents.
wowsers! brilliantly spot on. I love how you write my feelings, ways of seeing and perceptions. Now I can be lazy and simply repeat your words to friends and family.... my opinions spoken better than my own words could. You are gifted