Here are some basic rules that children should be learning in school, but unfortunately don’t. Not all of these have to do with academics.
Rule #1: Life is not fair. Get used to it. The average teen-ager uses the phrase, “It’s not fair” 8.6 times a day.
Rule #2: The
real world won’t care as much about your self-esteem as much as your
school does. It’ll expect you to accomplish something before you feel
good about yourself. This may come as a shock. Usually, when
inflated self-esteem meets reality, kids complain it’s not fair.
Rule #3: Sorry,
you won’t make $40,000 a year right out of high school. And you won’t
be a vice president or have a car phone either. You may even have to
wear a uniform that doesn’t have a label.
Rule #4: If
you think your teacher is tough, wait until you get a boss. He doesn’t
have tenure, so he tends to be a bit edgier. When you screw up, he’s not
going to ask you how you feel about it.
Rule #5: Flipping
burgers is not beneath your dignity. Your grand-parents had a different
word of burger flipping. They called it “opportunity”. They weren’t
embarrassed making minimum wage either. They would have been embarrassed
to sit around talking about Kurt Cobain all weekend.
Rule #6: It’s
not your parents’ fault. If you screw up, you are responsible. This is
the flip side of “It’s my life,” and “You’re not the boss of me,” and
other eloquent proclamations of your generation. When you turn 18, it’s
on your dime. Don’t whine about it, or you’ll sound like a baby boomer.
Rule #7: Your
school may have done away with winners and losers. Life hasn’t. In some
schools, they’ll give you as many times as you want to get the right
answer. Failing grades have been abolished and class valedictorians
scrapped, lest anyone’s feelings be hurt. Effort is as important as
results. This, of course, bears not the slightest resemblance to
anything in real life.
Rule #8: Life
is not divided into semesters, and you don’t get summers off. Not even
Easter break. They expect you to show up every day. For eight hours. And
you don’t get a new life every 10 weeks. It just goes on and on. While
we’re at it, very few jobs are interesting in fostering
your self-expression or helping you find yourself. Fewer still lead
to self-realization.
Rule #9: Television
is not real life. Your life is not a sitcom. Your problems will not all
be solved in 30 minutes, minus time for commercials. In real life,
people actually have to leave the coffee shop to go to jobs. Your
friends will not be as perky or pliable as Jennifer Aniston.
Rule #10: Be nice to nerds. You may end up working for them. We all could.
Rule #11: Smoking
does not make you look cool. It makes you look moronic. Next time
you’re out cruising, watch an 11-year-old with a butt in his mouth.
That’s what you look like to anyone over 20. Ditto for
“expressing yourself” with purple hair and/or pierced body parts.
Rule #12: You
are not immortal. If you are under the impression that living fast,
dying young and leaving a beautiful corpse is romantic, you obviously
haven’t seen one of your peers at room temperature lately.
Rule #13: Enjoy
your youth time while you can. Sure parents are a pain, school is
a bother and life is depressing but someday you’ll realize how wonderful
it was to be a kid. Maybe you should start now.
By Charles J. Sykes
Printed in San Diego Union Tribune
September 19, 1996
Printed in San Diego Union Tribune
September 19, 1996
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