It’s February, 2025, the month to celebrate Valentine’s Day. The usual greeting cards and boxes of Whitman’s Chocolates (do they still make them?) will be exchanged… maybe a new red sweater or shirt will end up in each other’s closet… a nice dinner out to celebrate the love… all good, all recognizing each other as being thought to be worthy of each other’s love and affection.
I am all for it! I absolutely love Valentine’s Day! Bring it on!
I love being loved, I love being “in love,” and I love to love!
But a poem about love did not pop up in my brain this month… timing is a little off, I guess. No, what popped up this month is a subject that has been weighing heavily on my brain for some time… so, of course, you get it in a poem of mine.
The subject is Lifelong Learning.
As some people my age (and younger) are adding the years to their lives, I notice the conversations are more about the “good old days” and the fond memories of yesteryear than they are about today and the future and the new things they have learned… the things they can’t wait to share with their friends.
Remembering the past can be lots of fun, can’t it? But learning about new things can be just as exciting! Believe me!
And I, who can tend to jump to conclusions, have determined (for myself) that not bringing new ideas and new thoughts into my life as I age can tend to make me old before my time. I believe (or fear) that it could shorten my life, or at least diminish the quality of it… God forbid!!!
… just something to think about… Enjoy the poem.
And, in honor of Valentine’s Day… and every day…
“Whatever the question, love is always the answer!”
LIFELONG LEARNING
Lifelong learning is a lifelong journey.
It begins when you’re born, it ends when you die.
Your own personality can pose an obstacle
To your ongoing education… it is true! Oh, my!
Pride or stubbornness or fear of submitting
To the process of discovery as you live
Are all things that can slow you down in your learning.
Above all, dear friends, stay inquisitive.
It’s said that half of what we’ve not learned in a lifetime
Could easily have been learned were it not for our pride.
We thought we knew better; or we didn’t apply thinking at all.
One thing for sure: our talents were “unapplied.”
Now, with age, we see things differently.
We are excited with the nature of discovery.
But we no longer have enough time or energy to partake;
Are we doomed to end our days playing the lottery???
I THINK NOT!!!!
“The education of a man is never completed
Until he dies,” said General Robert E. Lee.
And… “Learning is the only thing the mind never exhausts,
Never fears [nor] regrets,” spoke Leonardo da Vinci.
And, according to Montaigne, Socrates himself
Took up music and dancing when he was older.
He is said to have thought it was “time well spent.”
(Imagine if he had learned it when he was bolder!)
We often learn more by looking for the answer
And not finding it in our exhaustive pursuit
Than we do from learning the answer itself.
So, continue searching, and remain resolute!
It is essential for you to keep moving… keep learning…
And keep evolving for as long as you’re here.
Stay curious about everything; learn as much as you can.
Your quality of life will increase! Persevere!
GANDHI:
“Live as if you were to die tomorrow.
Learn as if you were to live forever.”