Saturday, 5 September 2015

Leaving a Legacy...




“A great teacher is like a spark that ignites the raging fire of passion and inspiration in a student’s mind”



               Today, 5th of September is a Teacher’s Day in India. It is a day that we dedicate to pay much underpaid gratitude to our teachers. For each one of us a teacher has a different role in their lives, but I’m sure each one of us has come across a teacher that has changed our lives. A teacher is like the first ray of sunlight on a cold foggy morning that engulfs you in their arms full of warmth and makes you comfortable with the new subject and then gradually increasing its warmth to give you the nudge to get up and achieve the fiery success. As much as it is a vital role of a teacher to teach the students academics, it is more important for them to inspire the student. Even if a teacher is entrusted with a class full of 40-50 students, it is the ability of the teacher to recognize the untapped potential and the seed that is there in the student’s brain and to nurture it to help it blossom. It is the same class of 40 students which will produce a Winston Churchill as well as a Picasso. A great teacher will never tell you what to do, will never tell you what is right or wrong or will never tell you do this or that. A great teacher will just create and ignite a few questions in your mind and help you find your own answers and your own footing.

As a famous poet Robert Frost has aptly written,
“There are two kinds of teachers: the kind that fills you with so much quail shot that you can’t move, and the kind that just gives you a little prod behind and you jump to the skies”

               In today’s day and age imparting knowledge although important is not the only aim to be achieved any more. Finding information about any damn thing in the world has become just a click away. Does that mean the role of teachers has diminished in our lives? Well, actually no. It has become even more important, to help you filter, to help you listen to your heart amidst so much of chaos and humdrum. A teacher is that whisper in your ear saying “Follow your footing” when there is so much blaring noise about everything outside. A teacher is that reassuring hand on your shoulder saying, “I know you can do it” when you are over-burdened by the expectations of your society. A teacher is that third person who is not your blood-family and is technically not biased by any outside factors but has a one to one association with you, and will never judge you. 



              I have been lucky to be blessed with having all my teachers, including my parents to have encouraged and inspired me beyond limits. I have immense respect and reverence for all my teachers and especially for this particular teacher in my life. This teacher gave me a hand when I needed it the most. “Do this or do that” was never his style, instead would just spark a question saying “What do you think you should do?” and make sense out of everything. This teacher gave me wings to fly, freedom to think out of the box. Never dismissed my ideas but rather spent time reasoning them with me, gave me freedom to fall and stretched an arm to pick me up from the puddle of my mistakes. He never told me read this or that, but posed some questions that I could never answer by just googling them or without having to put effort in them. A teacher with whom I could share my concerns and doubts, a teacher who gave me opportunities to shine and make the most out of my career, knew the perfect balance of pushing beyond the limits and pulling the reigns when necessary. He is someone who would never allow self-loathing and would keep me grounded all the times. While going out there in the real world when I faced with self-doubt, it was this teacher who said, “I am there”. No fancy words, no pretense but just a general expression of reassurance, which was just enough to lift my spirits up.




                 But it does not end there, does it? In our Indian mythology we have heard stories of great Gurus and their students. The story of how the Gurus would ask for ‘Guru-Dakshina’ (something in return for the knowledge imparted to their students). There are two debts, one that every generation owes to the preceding one and the other that they pay back to the next generation. The debt that we owe to our parents and teachers, the only way that we can pay these debts back is not by turning to them at some point and saying “We are even” (we can never be even, not in a lifetime) but by doing for our children and students what our parents did for us. And thus to To Carry The Legacy Forward…  





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