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Letter From A Mother
by Shoo Shoo
When I was young, my mother did not like the schools that were available to us.
She was a teacher and so she kept my brother and me at home and taught us
herself. It was great for my brother, who gobbled up all of the material she
offered him. He repeatedly jumped two academic years in one. For myself, well, I
got through the school years just bearing the whole thing, until I began
studying art and took off on a plane that had some real meaning for me. At
seventeen, my brother won a scholarship to a top U.S. university and continued
to devour knowledge for years. He became a thoroughly learned man, not only in
the fields of mathematics and electronics but also in social science, politics
and psychology. He once told me that he was learning a couple of dead languages
as part of being “learned”.
Then came the time when my own son was ready for school. There was not much
choice. All of the local children went to a new, well-equipped, modern little
school in a green, affluent suburb of London. But the year was not yet out when
all that went on there felt not quite right. Many talks with the teacher brought
me to the conclusion that somehow we were not really communicating. So my son
changed schools, and I began to read all of the books on education that I could
lay my hands on. We changed schools again and again. All that I read was in one
way or another partial, incomplete, idealistic, experimental.
But one afternoon, searching the shelves of a library, I picked up a book titled
"Beginnings of Learning". From the first paragraph, the world I had been looking
for opened itself to me, and when the lights were lowered and the library was
being shut, I took the book home. Quite soon, a faint memory surfaced of the
name Krishnamurti. At some point in the past, my dear, aged neighbour, an artist
friend, had left a small pamphlet on my desk, prompting me with, “I was lucky to
have come upon this in my life. Maybe it will be of interest to you. ”Well,the
name had made me put it away! Now, a few years later, it had come to me once
more and it was right, clear and sane. It was what I had been looking for. It
was only a book, yet the printed sentences gave me the unbelievable joy that
someone somewhere was really with me, that at long last I could have the courage
to trust my feelings and not feel absurd about all of the dismay that I felt
with schools.
So next was my journey to Brockwood, where I listened to the Talks, to Ojai,
where my son attended the K school there (the Oak Grove School) for two years,
and then back to England so that he could attend Brockwood Park School for two
years. By this time, my son had built up a strong resistance to schools. We
discovered that all was not the dream I had conjured up in my head. I had to
learn that schools, even these schools, were made up of people such as us, with
all their own individual struggles.
When, many years later, I had two more children, my elder son told me that I
should simply send them to the local school and leave them there until school
was finished and not repeat the same story as with him. Now living in Germany,
in a new situation and with new insecurities, I opted for the local, attractive,
affluent school that my neighbours’ children attended — there was such a gulf
between my inner wisdom and the forces of insecurity and social and family
pressure to fit in. After all, these people were so “successful” and
“confident”. Silently and timidly, I again tried out the average path. By the
third year, it was quite clear that those who pushed for conformity were failing
to live their lives rationally, and that it was wrong for us to follow their
advice. Once again I had to open my eyes and ears and listen to my heart rather
than to others.
At this point, my second son wanted to try Brockwood. He was fourteen and his
main teacher at his German school had just been found dead in the woods with a
suicide note. There were so many stories about this man’s silent despair and all
of these fourteen-year-olds sitting in my son ’s room talking about the hows and
whys of such an act. We began to see that there was so much more to life than
running a school efficiently, having exams and rushing towards some vague goal.
We saw that everyone was so helpless but pretended to be confident. We saw that
something essential was never touched upon. Not because no one felt it. Not
because no one needed it. But because this jungle of unknown fears, struggles
and insecurities was so dark and deep that no one, apart from some who had
studied psychology and those who showed severe emotional or behavioural
dispositions, were involved in such questions — that is, when people for one
reason or another did not fit into the system, but had to!
I phoned my older son in the U.S. and told him that his brother wanted to go to
Brockwood. There was a long silence. Then he said, “I want you to know that out
of all that you have done for me, my years at Brockwood were the most valuable
of my life.” So my second son, who had a real struggle at the state school,
finished his education at Brockwood, two years ahead of his contemporaries back
home. My daughter is now at Brockwood, as she wished to join her brother before
he left and also be in the place that she had so often visited and grown to
love. So it all started with the "Beginnings of Learning". As the saying goes,
“Wipe the slate clean,” learn to listen, learn to look, within and “outside".
Learn to learn about all those things that no one in the world can teach you
about.
Brockwood Park School has a splendid building and grounds, though it needs
donations to keep it in good repair. It is home to a number of people, old and
young, for whom the “beginnings of learning” are essential. Yet it was my notion
that all there “should” know how to “know”, or be all that I had imagined that
wisdom to be. But it is exactly that they are not like this that makes for the
learning that is so neglected elsewhere! Brockwood offers the ground for such
beginnings of learning. We can choose to send our youngsters there or not. We
might find that it does or does not fit our expectations. We might find that we
keep waiting for others to solve our problems and that there are no experts out
there.
As a mother, I have found Brockwood over the years to be a unique extended home
to my children from their fourteenth to eighteenth years. I am glad to have the
support of an extended family and home where time, space and care are possible
amongst a large international group of people — that apart from the school
curriculum there is time for exploring such fundamental questions as the
“beginnings of learning” and an environment for healthy living; while elsewhere,
during exactly these volatile years, the world at large is pushing on young
people, with the force of a broken dam, all of its trends, false values,
confusions and contradictions. It seems to me that when we hold a mirror pressed
to our nose we see nothing at all, that when we ride a fast train we cannot see
the ground beneath the wheels. Only in distance does there seem to be clear
vision.
K had the remarkable ability to point out the detailed processes within us. Once
we had heard him, we could say, “ah yes, of course.” Such beginnings of learning
grow within and flower. In Brockwood we can give our youngsters the chance to
have the fertile ground for such growth. But we as parents also have the
responsibility to see that nowhere, not even Brockwood, can be the right place
for our children if we as parents live in contradiction to what we wish for our
children. The school is run with the best of intentions by mortals such as
ourselves; we have the responsibility to co-operate as one body, with one heart,
so that the whole organism can live in health.
Why do I write all this? If my reflections are too personal and have no meaning,
please forgive me for the time taken to read this. There is an urge to share
what we go through in this life. There is an urge to unveil barriers of
pretence. There is a feeling that we are not all that different from one another
and that we do not need to permanently puff and colour our feathers to appear so
very in the “know”, that we are all rather vacillating between the struggle to
build securities and the despair of the unknown, that we seem to choose the
average path rather than the challenge of standing alone in existential
decisions regarding our own and our children’s lives. We are so very frightened
that we run off to experts and find out, often too late, that they were lost
too.
As a final note I will return to the story of my brother. Not so long ago, when
his busy and very demanding life brought us together for a couple of days, I
heard, saw and was saddened to see that he who is so learned, my dearest, only
brother, was actually living a life of chaos. I did something that I had decided
long ago not to do so directly: that is, to give him a small volume,
"Krishnamurti to Himself". Later, when I asked how he had found it, he
apparently felt that it did not apply to him. He said that such books are of
interest to people who have psychological difficulties!
This naturally caused me to question what he really meant by this remark and who
was sane, what was sanity and so forth. We have always had very lively and
interesting conversations. It has always fascinated me how this younger brother
— who has always been so ahead of his peers, so very respected for his
intellect, whose knowledge and power of language could flatten me like a
steamroller in the midst of any debate — how he mesmerised me with his words;
how, helpless and metaphorically pinned to the ground, I would feel starved of
the truth and keep on kicking within, sure that the truth remained way beyond
all that store of eloquent knowledge!
At one such entanglement he paused and said," You know, in the field of modern
psychology it is accepted fact that there are two types of people: those with
primary security such as you, and those with secondary security such as myself.
I have to gather my security for life through knowledge, create and understand
the world through this knowledge, make sense of life through reading and
writing, naming, creating tables and ordering things. These are the railings to
hold and guide us through life.”
Is that true? Is that final? I do not know. Are we different? How can we know?
All that I can see is that there are apparent, visible, noticeable patterns of
order and health as well as disorder, contradictions and confusions. I can see
that throughout the life of mankind many have come and gone who have tried to
convey something outside the sphere of common knowledge, a glimpse of what they
had seen from that totality of life. Unfortunately, language, words, our means
of communication have generally left such teachings open to abuse or
misunderstanding. Language, for better or worse, is also our means of
communicating that which is beyond words.
So we are left where we started. Do we understand what it means to bring a child
into this world? Do we take the right care with our hearts from the moment of
conception, through birth, health, growth, environment, education? It is all so
overwhelming when we see how confused we are and that we are supposed to educate
our youngsters in a world where every finger is pointing them in the wrong
direction. Are we so clear that we can give them enough courage to stand
completely alone against that mass of opinion and find out the right path for
themselves? It is daunting. Brockwood is one place that the ground is fertile
for this seed to grow in health. We the parents, with the help of the right
teachers, may bring about that fundamental leap in the beginnings of such
learning for our children — to find the courage to live a clear life like a
light on their path.
Shoo Shoo, February 2002
(This letter was published in "The
Link", issue #22 2002/3)
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