‘Good habits formed at
youth make all the difference.’ Aristotle
Teenagers get a bad press:
selfish, loud, moody, aggressive, messy, irresponsible - the list could go on.
The reality is more complex than this. Teenagers often express total contradictions:
intense and playful, sensitive and thoughtless, dreamers and doers.
Interestingly, many of these attributes are essential for creativity.
Over the last few weeks,
for various reasons, I have been thinking back to my school days and teenage years.
This has not always been a pleasant exercise – school was not my favourite
place to be. I can remember making myself sick in order to stay at home. I
experienced bullying at both primary and secondary school. The walk down memory
lane was not a journey for re-living these experiences. I was looking for my
best moments, the times when I felt truly alive.
‘Adolescence is a new
birth, for the higher and more completely human traits are now born.’
G.
Stanley Hall.
As adults, if we think
about reliving our teenager years it is associated with bad taste. Whether it’s
clothes or hairstyles, buying the fast car we dreamed of owning or attending an
event where some tribute band are playing the tunes you rocked out to, there is
the memory of freedom perhaps even rebellion.
I’ve been searching for
the lost and forgotten dreams. The activities that made me feel free. These
teenager years are often referred to as our formative ones because they are so
crucial to creating the person we are today. When I look back there are
definitely passions or capabilities that I have forgotten. These have been
overlooked or discarded because the responsibilities of adulthood have taken
over.
A simple example that I
rediscovered recently was the joy of being on a swing. I was in someone else’s
garden and there at the bottom was a huge tree, from it dangled a swing. The
sun was out and the garden was bathed in spring-time glory but more than the
comfy looking bench, the walk through a woodland area or the beauty of the
flowers themselves, it was the swing that called out to me. Tentatively, I
asked permission to sit and swing. (I had thought perhaps it was just for
children). I was greeted with surprise and then a smile ‘Of course you can use
the swing!’ So I indulged, gently at first and then with greater abandon. My
eyes took in the garden from an entirely new view-point and then I closed them,
enjoying the tingle of not knowing exactly where I was going.
I have taken some time to
think back, to make a list and consider what was and what has been lost. Some
of what I have rediscovered has affirmed my current choices. Others have been
surprises and encouragements to try forgotten activities and reclaim passions
that have been dormant.
As I look back, time and
friendships appear to be different. Now, I make appointments to meet up with
friends and usually they involve some kind of plan; dinner, drinks, cinema etc.
Then, everything seemed more fluid (this may be poor remembering on my part)
but there were definitely times of just ‘hanging out’ no plans, no agenda
except to spend time with my friend. Sometimes the best times were those
unplanned ones.
Time is a gift. It is up
to us to decide what we will do with it. This is easier said than done and even
with all my ‘flexible’ time, I am still learning about time management. Prioritising
the important is my new habit. I now block out periods of time in advance so
that they can be devoted to something I do not feel I have enough time for. I
physically do it in my diary and I am finding it works. My husband and I have
done the same for time together too. Nothing is to infringe on that time
without permission from the other. There is no agenda for these times together
and I think that is part of what makes them really special.
‘It takes courage to grow
up and become who you really are.’ E. E. Cummings
What passion or skill has
been dormant since your teenage years?
How could ‘hanging out’
with no agenda benefit your relationships?
What
activity would you like to try to recapture that feeling of youthful freedom?P.S. The novel is progressing (slowly) and I will shortly be introducing you to my new blog project, so watch this space.....
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