Today on my Facebook feed, a friend
posted about the acceptance letter her son had received from one of the
colleges he applied to. Lately, there’s a post about an acceptance letter every day, or a photo of an acceptance letter,
or news of a scholarship. It’s fun to imagine my son’s friends, the
children of my friends, embarking on their college careers, picking majors,
making new friends, and discovering the joy of having your worldview challenged and
changed by encounters with new ideas and new people.
My son
is a junior, so this is not the year for him to receive those letters. Instead he’s been receiving glossy pamphlets
and enticing come-ons from colleges, each promising wonderful opportunities for
intellectual growth and doors flung open to marvelous careers. There are pictures of beautiful young people
walking on shady paths, or peering through microscopes, or reading
picturesquely in the grass. When they
come, I just toss them in the recycling.
Sam doesn’t even look at them, and he won’t be one of those beautiful
young students, because he’s not planning to go to college.
This has
been hard for me to accept. I’ve taught
at a small liberal arts college for my entire adult life, and I absolutely adored
being a student in college and graduate school. I loved every class I took except two, education and anthropology, one because the material was stupid, or seemed so to me at the time, and one because the teacher read his notes from an overhead projector.
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| How they made information boring in the olden days before Powerpoint. |
But Sam
from a very young age resisted the idea that college was essential, and once he
entered high school, the idea of purposely prolonging his time in school became
deeply unappealing to him. I could write about the way his highly rigorous
academic school has failed to meet his needs as a learner – and perhaps I will
some day; but that’s really a pretty minor factor in Sam’s lack of interest in
college. It’s not really high
school. It’s him.
He
could go to college. He tests extremely
well. He writes extremely well. His grades are not bad, though not as good as
they should be judging by his standardized test scores. For a long time I have thought of him as an
underachiever. But that’s true only if I
use his grades as the measure of achievement. But to do that is to measure him by my experiences,
passions and desires. His passion has never been for academic work, despite his
capability, and measured according to his own priorities, he’s achieved plenty.
He’s written so many songs since he was five
years old that he can’t keep track of them all. He formed a band when he was in
third grade that continues to play together.
He’s recorded an album and is planning a second. He lines up gigs. He arranges music and sings in three a capella
groups. He plays guitar in church. Besides music, Sam’s priority is friendship,
and Sam is a loyal and loving friend, a gentle soul who wants to make other
people happy. He’d rather skimp a little
on homework and spend more time enjoying the company of other human beings. He’s often said that the best thing he can
imagine is writing a song that brings another person comfort and hope in a hard
time.
He
wants to devote himself to music when he’s done high school. He wants time to make the band happen. He
wants to get a job to earn money for the gear he needs to make the band
happen. He told me when he was twelve
that he was going to be a rock star. I sometimes
think my job as a mother is to be the realist, the one who points out that
hardly anybody gets to be a rock star and tells him he should have a back-up
plan. For several years I quietly
insisted that he would be going to college, in spite of his almost total lack
of interest. You need a degree in case
the music career doesn’t work out, I’d say, even though the greatest benefits I
got from going to college had little to do with my career, and even though my
post college career has not been at all lucrative.
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| Early Days |
In
fact, our family’s poor finances have given his decision to forgo college a
certain practical appeal. I have to
admit to feeling some relief knowing we won’t be scrambling to pay the
debilitating cost of tuition at even an “affordable” college. Yet there is a little sting when I hear his
friends discussing their college plans, when I hear other parents talking
excitedly about their children’s academic achievements. I imagine his high school graduation will
have a strange anticlimactic feeling to it as he moves on not to the hallowed
halls of a prestigious institution of higher learning, but to a low wage job
and dreams of making it big. I might
feel embarrassed when I tell people what he’s doing, though I know I will also
feel proud. I still wonder, sometimes,
if I should try to change his mind.
But I’m
done with that. It’s not my job to say
his dream isn’t realistic. People can
make a living in music, though often not a steady or regular income. Some people even become rock stars. And if rock stardom is not his destiny, he’ll
learn that eventually, and discover some other path, a path that he chooses
because it lights him up. And who knows,
that path may even, eventually, include college.
You can check out Sam's music here: https://soundcloud.com/circusfiction/sets/the-maze



Mandy, this is the only blog entry of yours I've ever read and I am so glad the title caught my eye in my newsfeed. I can completely relate to every single thing you've written here, since Jordan has not been the biggest fan of the formal education system. Sam will most certainly find his way, and I can't wait to watch from the sidelines as he does wonderful things with his music and his open heart.
ReplyDeleteI feel the same way about Jordan. I'm so glad they found each other. Jordan's been a wonderful friend and musical inspiration for Sam.
DeleteYour post makes me smile, watching Mandy still learning, still teaching. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThanks Deev. You were one of the teachers that had a huge impact on me. I felt seen and recognized by you, and that meant so much in that middle school time of life. Thank you.
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