#NaBloPoMo 4 – Sowing in fertile ground

14549937_1177869235605300_8490640351185338368_n

I wasn’t always lazy. As I have written before, I think it became a safety valve for me around the age of twelve, when I realised that I couldn’t keep up with the scholarship kids whose class I found myself in. And the word lazy doesn’t really cover it. The pace was furious, unrelenting. Three homeworks a night, punishment if you were late. But somewhere inside I think I began to disappear a bit, knowing I could never keep up or understand everything that everyone else seemed to pick up without trying. Especially the maths.

The one place I felt safe was English, taught by a man called Alan Booth. His lessons were electric. For the first time a teacher actually asked us to talk. He wanted to hear what we had to say. To do that, I now know, he must have believed that we had things to say. This was revolutionary. He read us short stories, and had us taking different parts of the plays we read out loud in the classroom. It wasn’t long before he got us writing. The feedback from our homework were events in themselves, where he would read out chunks of our work that interested, pleased or puzzled him. ‘God, that was good,’ he might say to one boy. ‘God, that was terrible,’ he would say to another.

The teachers who came after him, who showed us Ted Hughes and Orwell and Lawrence, were sowing in fertile ground. I do think without him I would not be here today, I mean here, writing this, thinking about words and teaching, and the impact that both can have across a life.

6 Comments

  1. I had exactly the same experience at school. I cried in my math classes but was always top of the class in the arts and English. I had several teachers that nurtured my gifts and saved my life. It did weird things to my self-esteem.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Yes, two or three teachers stand out for me – English, of course, but a few in other subjects as well. And I recall a day in my own teaching experience, first year college Literature, when a brash and handsome young student who had otherwise smart-alecked his way through the poetry segment stopped me as I walked the aisle near his seat and handed me a tightly crumpled note. At my desk I unfolded it and read, “I think I’m starting to like poetry.” Suddenly gobsmacked by Robert Frost, he didn’t dare let his sports team pals know this secret. It was a wonderful moment.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.