"Que Sera, Sera"
When I was just a
little girl
I asked my mother
What will I be
Will I be pretty
Will I be rich
Here's what she said to me
Que sera, sera
Whatever will be, will be
The future's not ours to see
Que sera, sera
What will be, will be
I asked my mother
What will I be
Will I be pretty
Will I be rich
Here's what she said to me
Que sera, sera
Whatever will be, will be
The future's not ours to see
Que sera, sera
What will be, will be
Now I have Children
of my own
They ask their mother
What will I be
Will I be handsome
Will I be rich
I tell them tenderly
Que sera, sera
Whatever will be, will be
They ask their mother
What will I be
Will I be handsome
Will I be rich
I tell them tenderly
Que sera, sera
Whatever will be, will be
.................
When Doris Day first sang this
song in 1971, she probably had no idea what a tough life young people would
lead 34 years after her song, especially now. ‘Que Sera Sera or whatever will
be will be’ was sung at a time when life was easy; competition was low, friends
were helpful, days were about singing and playing the guitar, laughing to our
hearts content with friends and family, reading adventure story-books, sipping
lemonade, taking a walk by the lake, boating on a lazy afternoon or simply
enjoying Mother’s special recipe for dinner and politics was absolutely for
elders to talk about. Talking of which, these activities used to be normal
things to do with not a worry about what the future holds for us.
Having said this, these days
children hardly have any time for some lazy day-dreaming, though day-dreaming
plays a very big role in shaping the future of young people. Dreaming doesn’t
cost a thing and we can do it at our own time and pace, whenever and wherever
we want it. What we dream, we achieve. And if we project all our energy and
activity towards the dream, nothing can stop it from taking shape. But I have
noticed that children are scared to dream, as if their dreams will be nipped at
the bud by someone. However, if they are confident enough, they will see their
dreams taking shape in front of them.
While counselling for Class VIII,
IX and X, I have noticed a similar pattern in the minds of the majority of the
children. Whenever I ask them, “What is that one thing that you are passionate
about that you dream to be or want in life?” And most of the answers would be,
“Ma’am, let us see the school leaving results and then we will decide!” Others
would say they would like to take up science and then ‘try’ to sit for their
medical or engineering entrance exams. There are quite a large number who want
to take up arts, some commerce. And these days, quite a handful want to become
politicians and ‘good incorruptible politicians’, they say, which I think is a
heartening and positive trend. The country now is in desperate need of
extremely ‘good’ people.
What I want to say is that at a
time when the world has come down to their study tables, young people are still
indecisive about what they will ‘take up’ or what and who they want to be even at
the eleventh hour. The internet offers almost all the answers to even the
weirdest questions we might throw at it. And children are still stuck at being
a ‘doctor’ or an ‘engineer’?
However, there are some students
who are absolutely confident about their careers and they exude this passion in
the way they talk, walk, behave and ask questions. These young people have
dreamt and are on their way to achieve their dreams. They are confident about
their future and there is absolutely nothing which can hold them back to get to
the point which they have envisioned. I was particularly impressed by the
confidence of one young boy who said he would like to work at NASA! Dream on!
Dream and the stars will be yours!
As a young girl, I remember
someone telling me that schools in Japan screen students as early as the Second
Standard. They find out through their personalised process as to which student
will go onto become a scientist, a teacher, an engineer, a doctor, a journalist
etc. They then segregate the students and teach them only that particular
subject relevant to the career they will take up in the future. Now, how good
is that?
If our schools too can think of
implementing such an idea, the future of each student then becomes a reality. A
young person will not have to think of how her/his future will be shaped by the
school leaving exam results. She/he will be confident enough to concentrate entirely
on the relevant subject. A student with a dream to become a journalist will
study only those subjects pertinent to journalism. Field visits can be
implemented into the course and by the end of the academic session the student is
moulded and shaped to be a journalist par excellence. Likewise for other career
options as well!
However, the onus lies with the
parents, the guardians and the teachers. If we are talking of a cohesive and
healthy future of the world, then we have to think of moulding our children;
children who will understand about giving back to the society. Getting a
percentage as high as 99.9 is a shocker but it shouldn't stunt the growth of the
achiever. This should be the wings to fly to a direction which will be
beneficial for the growth of not only the individual but the world.
No one wishes to be Alice in
Wonderland with no sense of direction and sing Que Sera Sera or do we??
No comments:
Post a Comment