It’s 2am here, and I’m feeling philosophical, instead of being sleepy and going to bed.
It’s probably the problem most writers have when they’re working on a novel, a short story, or a blog post, or something else.
The other day a thought ran through my mind, whether or not my first school was still standing and if so, would it remember me?
Probably not. I went there in 1958, I think when I was five. I stayed there till I finished Grade six and then moved onto secondary school.
In those days, we could stay at secondary school till Form four and then, if we were 15 or over, we could leave. I went to a technical school, i.e. one that taught a trade, rather than going to a High School which was for the more academically minded and who would go on to University.
But in my day, you had to have rich parents to get into a University, and we were decidedly poor. It was a technical trade for me, and become a builder was to be my lot in life.
I wasn’t very good and sheet metal, the precursor to plumbing, or machine ship practice the forerunner to being a mechanic, or technical drawing, the forerunner to being a draughtsman
I could have just as easily been a farmer or gardener, it too was on the curriculum.
Where is this going?
Oh, yes. My old primary school. Yes, it’s still there, and it still looks like the gothic nightmare it used to. Gothic or not, I guess those years in that school were good, and I don’t seem to have any bad memories, except,. of course, of the teachers, but that’s only natural.
secondary school, that was a nightmare, so different, and much like going to university, with different classes, different teachers, different rooms, and a lot of other kids who were older, larger, meaner, and made the navigation of early teens an annabilus horribilis four times over.
So the question did my education define me?
No. I was a builder for a while, but my aspirations led me towards office work, the sort where you start at the bottom and languish there till you’re noticed.
Failing that, you work for a relative, then get headhunted, watch that opportunity slip away, and become an IT teacher that leads to computer programming.
But, as they say, always have a backup plan.
Yep! Writing. Been doing it since I was fifteen.
Now, those years I was at school have provided me with a diverse collection of people who have become characters in my stories, and I’m still waiting for the know on the door from the process server to tell me one of them finally recognized him or herself and didn’t like my impression of them.
Hasn’t happened yet.