Thursday, June 18, 2009

Common Sense

I’m working on four hours sleep and two cups of black coffee. The rain outside is somewhat comforting, like little pellets of God's tears falling onto my skylight windows. It looks beautiful. The raindrops are making tiny circular ripples in each puddle they create out on my garden patio table. As the darker clouds move in, the wind picks up, creating a beautiful dance for the trees outside. Days like these, I don’t ever want the sun to come back out. There’s a certain kind of feeling I get when it storms like this. I live inside my head.

I tend to think too much, feel too much and react too much. Sometimes the rain brings out deeper thoughts on levels I never knew possible. Thoughts as: why are we here on earth? What’s our purpose? Why doesn’t God let us know why we’re here?  I know theologians and people of faith can bust that question in half and come up with a million reasons why, but truth be it: we will never ever know until we meet our maker. Why do we go through so much turbulence in our life? Why do people hurt others? Why are we constantly fighting and trying to prove something? Is it worth it?

It’s all meaningless.

“The fastest runner doesn’t always win the race, and the strongest warrior doesn’t always win the battle. The wise are often poor, and the skilled are not necessarily wealthy. And those who are educated don’t always lead successful lives. It is all decided by chance, by being at the right place at the right time. People can neer predict when hard times might come. Like fish in a net or birds in a snare, people are often caught by sudden tragedy.” -Ecclesiastes 9:11-12

We work hard to get from point A to point B. We work to pay the bills, to keep a roof over our heads and to maintain life as it is.  Some of us work to gain more power and abundance, while others simply try anything to get rich quickly. When a traumatic incident in my life hit home while I was sixteen, I decided to quit school and work, so I could help out at home since my mom was going to be without my dad for a while. During the right time and the right place, I got into a medical firm as a temp doing product control testing for computerized PDR handbooks in New Jersey. That led into advancement in my position to data entry, which led me into the world of accounting since I was very good at numbers. My career for most of my life was accounting and no one asked about my degree, because I had simply moved up from a previous position, which gave me hands on experience, plus tons of references. I had made more money than my friend who had finished college, stuck in a retail job making a bit over minimum wage.

All these jobs were meaningless. I just wanted to help my mom, take my parents on a vacation they would never forget and to have a savings of my own just to maintain life as is. I never wanted a big mansion or dreamt of having way too much than I can handle. I just wanted enough. I wasn’t settling for mediocre nor refusing to apply myself: I was just happy with the way things were. I was enjoying my life and still doing that.

A person who had been very close with me stated to a few people that I was “uneducated”.  She had said, “She quit school and she’s uneducated.” Of course, this being out of anger, I knew where it was coming from, but I was hurt nonetheless. While she sits at her entry level position, while having completed school for many years, and then coming back home to her one bedroom apartment not being able to pay the rent on time, I can only assume the motives of why this was said. Or, I can just believe her and chuck it up to, “Wow, I really am uneducated.”

Although I believe that education is important, I also believe that hands on experience and the determination to use the skills you already possess is better. There are some people who don’t even have a job of which they majored in---and that’s ok. But, to put down people who work hard and yet lack the desired “education” from a schooling program is detestable. My father stopped going to school at the age of fourteen and was able to provide a five bedroom house for his entire family and enough food for an army that my mom always cooked every night.

I think people place too much emphasis on “status” and focus more on immaterial things, rather than the accomplishments --- the accomplishments that one makes while having the talent they have used given by God...not school.   So yes, I may be “uneducated” in terms of finishing school, but I know better to why that statement was made in the first place.   Sometimes common sense outweighs book smarts in most cases.

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8 Comments:

Blogger Ananji said...

Insightful writing... especially on only four hours sleep. You must be in touch with your subconscious mind day and night.

I do love your insights.

ananji

June 18, 2009  
Blogger Xmichra said...

I had to read the link as I wasn't reading you in 2005!! WOW! I never would have guessed anyone would ahve gone through something like that! Although I have a similar story, it involved local police, not the FBfreaking I! lol... you are a survivor, that's for sure!

This whole education vs experience thing has me in a tizzy. I have half a mind to get that damn piece of paper just to get ahead of a few people then fire them for stupidity ;) but alas, schooling would take me away from home, work already does. So, I will just be mad at that, but happy I get to spend my time with my girls. Time much better spent I say.

June 18, 2009  
Anonymous Tonz said...

I love the way you wrote this. It's something I've thought about too. I've always thought that works for one person doesn't work for everyone. Study is a good place to start but if it's not working for you or circumstances prevent you from continuing, you need to find what does work. I guess not having been to college or finished school does make you offically uneducated but I've always thought that there are more ways to learn and many skills that can take you far that you can't learn in formal institutions.

June 18, 2009  
Blogger Deb said...

Ananji: Thank you! Sometimes when I’m running low on mental fuel (which is often), I have too many thoughts flickering in and out of my mind... I appreciate your input!

Xmichra: It was a total shock for me, definitely. I had absolutely no clue, until that day. But, I think of it as, worse things could have happened in my life...much worse. So I’m grateful. I think if someone can go out there and get themselves a degree and actually utilize those skills that they’ve learned --- then I give them credit! A lot of people go to school and never use it. But, like you said, time spent away during adulthood - you have to weigh your options.

Tonz: I agree, there are more ways to learn skills and I am not saying going to school is bad - I just never had that opportunity, nor found a reason to go because I had learned my “trade” all through work and experience. Education doesn’t necessarily mean successful. It’s sad to see a highly educated person not being where they should be. I even had a friend who went through years of school in another country, until he came to the US and found out that all of his degrees meant nothing over here. He had to start working for a chain restaurant as a cashier. Thankfully, he worked his way up to owning a business, however he had to start from scratch without his “education”---literally. It’s so weird how the US doesn’t recognize other degrees from other countries. I never understood that. Anyway, thank you for stopping by & commenting!

June 19, 2009  
Blogger the walking man said...

Pshaw to a paper for the wall. At best it opens a few doors most of which the person they are opened for finds that they chose the wrong one.

June 19, 2009  
Blogger Deb said...

Well, it sure as hell comforts me when I'm in a surgeon's office, but yes, you are so right!

June 19, 2009  
Blogger Kevin said...

Hey Deb,
I really liked this. That paper on the wall doesn't mean very much--what does is what people decide to do with their life. You can have a degree and be totally snobby and in the end, lonely. Not having a degree doesn't make anyone 'uneducated.' It pisses me off to no end to hear academic snobs talk about people who don't have degrees. When I lived in Australia there was a great divide between those who had them and those who didn't. It was pretty sad.
It happens here too. I would be happy working in my garden and building bird houses and mosaics (if I could think of a way to make some money doing that!). I think the point is to be happy with who you are--not with the degree you may or may not have.

June 19, 2009  
Blogger Deb said...

Kevin,

Thank you for that comment. For the longest time, even while without a degree, working in offices doing accounting, I wanted to do something I actually loved, like painting, playing guitar or photography. I never knew I wanted to be a writer until the age of 30. I've always written lyrics and stuff, but to actually make money from it was another thing. It took me a long time to get here and I'd rather be loving my job without a degree, rather than being stuck at a place that I had do desire to be at. We're at our jobs 8 hours a day - you might as well like it, right?

I've seen so many "educated" people with degrees that couldn't form two sentences together. I dated someone once who went to a high end school (I will refrain in case they read this), but they could not spell one word right. How in the world did this person get a degree (from a very well known school) and cannot spell nor put two sentences together?

THAT I don't get.

Thanks for input, Kevin!

June 19, 2009  

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