“…had not yet freed her from the gentlewoman’s
oppressive liberty.”
--
George Eliot, in Middlemarch
It’s strange to think of liberty as being
oppressive, but I have seen it be so, both in school and in life. There are
little, invisible chains surrounding students, and any of us, who feel that we
are totally free. If we feel no boundaries on our behavior, no borders or margins
that mark out the terrain of our lives, it’s rather like living in a limitless
desert land, where we are so free that we feel utterly aimless and lost. We feel like we want to ask for some rules and regulations so our wanderings can have some
orderliness and purpose. The freedom that some teachers offer – or impose on – their students is like this fantasy freedom we feel when we believe we are the absolute rulers of our own
lives. The students, I’m afraid, begin to feel forsaken and lost in this
type of freedom, and we, when we imagine we work the controls of our lives,
sooner or later learn how lost we really are, and that higher powers than our small minds make our
destinies. All of us live in a vast and gracious universe that continuously
finds the best path for each of us, and our best bet is to bow a little to its
rules and regulations, and to allow our lack of freedom to be the best blessing
in our lives. Students should be thankful that teachers take the reins and show
them the boundaries and signposts of success, and all of us should say thanks to
this sturdy cosmos that shepherds us the way we should go.
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