Wednesday 21 November 2018

The benefits of foresight

This blog comes with a warning: This is one of those which I'm worried I’ll look back on in 12 months’ time and think, ‘How naïve was I to write that’, ‘That is so superficial’. I expect to be cringing and hiding my head in my hands when I do.
I hope I don’t. I hope the points I make are still valid and stay valid. But I know the problem that has me pre-occupied at the moment is far more complex than I can imagine right now. I've learned so much in such a short space of time in the weeks since I started university that I know it probably won't take long for this piece to become outdated.
More learning, greater discovery might indeed make this early contribution obsolete. But it’s important to remember where we started when we calculate how far we have come so I expect to be doing a little reflection on that this time next year, too.
I need to get down in writing where my thoughts are now so I can hopefully look back and see how far I’ve come in the future. Maybe I’ll manage a smile instead of a wince. Maybe a ‘How quaint’ instead of a ‘How naïve’.
So bear with me. Even make excuses for me, if you’re feeling particularly warm and generous in the future. Remember, I was doing my best when I wrote this!
Now back to the issue that I’m grappling with. A few weeks ago, I met a young guy. I say met, but he doesn’t exist. He was one of six fictitious characters with different qualities, traits and issues we were given as part of an exercise in how we regard different people in society.
They all had qualities to test our empathic responses. Some were certainly easier to like than others.
It was an exercise in prejudice as much as anything. In counselling, we have been told, there can be no room for judgement, no preconceptions, no ‘verdicts’ on our clients. But this one young guy who stood out among the six examples was testing a lot of people’s ability to be impartial.
The subject was described as ‘a 19-year-old unemployed man who has been on benefits for the past six months. He says that he is fed up of the way his mother keeps going on about how he should get a job. He says he spends much of the day in bed and that it is really the Government’s fault that he hasn’t got a job.’
Sounds familiar to many people. It feeds into the general conception that there are a lot of people out there like this young man who are takers, not givers who believe everything should be handed to them on a plate, that the world owes them a day in bed, every day.
It’s a view held by people who believe they have earned everything they have, that they have had to graft for the nice things in life, for the odd day in bed, which is a chance to recover from all the effort we have put in improving our lives and contributing to society. The exact opposite of this young man. We need a malaise in society, we need to look down on people as wasters to increase our sense of self-importance. To make us feel better about ourselves.
But of all the six characters we were introduced to when we met him, this guy appealed to me the most as someone I would love to help.
For a start, I do not believe anyone wants to be a failure (you know I hate to use that word but occasionally it gets the message across efficiently). Nobody wants to be unsuccessful.
The first thing about him that struck me was that he wasn’t happy spending most of time in bed arguing with his mother. There’s no joy in his situation. Just inertia. A sense of emptiness, lack of purpose and low self-esteem. To me, he longs to get out.
He doesn’t want to fight his mother but he can’t let her win or his self-esteem, his sense of self-worth will be even lower than it is already. He must blame the Government for his situation. He cannot pile any more burden on himself. He feels enough guilt already about his situation already.
But all he is conscious of is hearing his mother’s nagging and hearing people – politicians, neighbours, strangers – put him down all the time. ‘Get a job!’ ‘Get a life!’ What he really needs to get is help. And someone to show him his true self.
Back to my core beliefs. Here’s one - we are all capable of far more than we imagine.
No-one dies having achieved everything in life they were meant to. Whatever age you die, whether it’s tragically young or tragically old, it’s always tragically because everyone dies at some point on a journey that never ends.
What we need to do is make the most of what time we are given on that never-ending journey. To make every step count and to always move forwards.
Sounds very grand. Now back to our young man in bed. Deep down, he wants to be a success. Everyone does. He wants to feel better about himself today than he did yesterday. He wants to make every step count but he can’t bring himself to put one foot in front of the other. When we discover what is stopping him, something even he isn’t conscious of, we can overcome it and he’ll suddenly find his way out.
It could be his mother has been over-critical of him since he was a child. That night be just one of several layers to peel back as we talk. But I firmly believe once he is aware of where his lethargy comes from, he’ll be able to get his life back … and, most importantly, on his terms.
So out of all the six characters I was introduced to, he is the one I want to help the most. If we are more understanding of our troubled teenagers we can save society a lot of pain, money and resentment when we try to solve their problems in adulthood. By then they are more deep-rooted and difficult to get at.
At this stage of my journey, it doesn’t sound naïve to me. I hope, in a year’s time, it still doesn’t.





Friday 21 September 2018

Tale of the unexpected


It's a while since the last post but a lot has happened. Both emotionally and professionally it has been a period of great change. On Monday the Running With Diane story takes its latest twist as I begin a degree course at university.
At my age? Why not. It's a dream, but it's not a pipe dream. It's very real, and it gets very, very real on Monday..
There’s a difference between day-dreaming and dreaming big.
Day-dreamers wake up too late to grab their chance as the opportunity passed them by without them noticing.
Dreamers who dream big, on the other hand, create the opportunity in order to chase their dreams. They don’t allow anyone to tell them they can’t, that the dream is out of reach. If it is not to be, then I’ll make sure I am the one who finds out. I’ll not rely on someone else’s doubts about my ability.
At my age, becoming a full-time student at university is unorthodox, I admit. But age is no barrier to having a dream, nor should it ever be. And age should never stop you chasing your dream.
To tinker with one of George Bernard Shaw's more famous quotes, ‘We don’t stop dreaming because we grow old, we grow old because we stop dreaming’.
So the secret is, ‘Never stop dreaming’. Because then we’ll never grow old. Of course our bodies will weaken and our times over 100 metres might start to look less impressive, but between the ears we will never grow old. And between the ears is our most important bit.
I’m in a familiar place this weekend, standing at the foot of a mountain and daring to look up. I can’t see the top, it’s up in the clouds somewhere. But I can see the first ledge I need to get to. It’s called Semester 1.
From there, I’ll get a better view of the second ledge (no prizes for guessing what that’s called). If I successfully reach every ledge it means I will at some point reach the summit. What a day that promises to be in three years’ time if I stick to my one-ledge-at-a-time approach.
The latest challenge is probably the toughest yet by some margin. If I reach the top, I will have a BSc (Hons) degree in Psychology & Counselling from the University of Salford.
To experience university life has been a long-held dream of mine, ever since I squandered the opportunity more than four decades ago. I’ve become a full-time student at a time in life many are contemplating a more relaxing future.
But one of my favourite tenets is, ‘Never be the person they expect you to be’
Make sure you take control of what happens next in your life. Don’t hand the job to someone else.
The latest challenge ticks quite a few of my ‘mantra’ chart-toppers…

Never lose the urge to challenge yourself
Never put a ceiling on what you can achieve, you’re capable of far more than you could ever imagine
Aim further than you can reach
You’re never too old, too young, too fat, too thin
Look up and not down, ahead and not behind
This new chapter is exciting and daunting in equal measure, which usually means it’s a proper test of  mettle. The first steps of the climb take place on Monday. Let’s see how high we reach…