ROLE MODELS, PASSION AND MAKING A DIFFERENCE
One of the great features of any language is that
its form constantly changes. Words, expressions and even spelling are obedient
subjects to time. Of course, English is by no means immune from regularly
updating the wardrobe.
Just as importantly, the meanings of words and
expressions can alter over the years and decades especially when ‘value-adding’
(itself an example of this tendency) and ‘emotion’ come into play.
The evolution of passion is one such instance. When I was a nipper, passion only
really had two meanings. One was something to do with Jesus Christ and his
personal fretting over the impending doom. I have a vague recollection of him
sweating blood and I always considered it a bugger of a way to spend his Easter
holidays. The other meaning required the user to either add the suffix ‘ate’ to
the root word (no pun intended) or truncate the former to forge ‘pash’ which
was more in the vernacular mode. For the younger viewers, both variants
described two individuals involving themselves in a game of
‘connect-a-man/woman’ in the oral regions and testing each other’s taste buds
at first derivative levels. Moreover, impure thoughts often accompanied the
participants’ awkward soldering of the tongues.
But all that has changed. Now many punters list ‘passion’
on their CVs and it has nothing to do with Type O-positive or ‘quick empties’.
Whilst still engaged in the world of work, I was once introduced to a new
colleague at our school whose first words to me were, ‘Hi Paul, pleased to meet
you and I have a passion for teaching.’ My initial audible response was ‘Hi’
but there was an inaudible sub-text of ‘Yeesh!’ The fact that this young
co-worker soon proved to have more teaching ability in her little finger that I
had in my whole withered corpus was irrelevant and she never lost that ‘Yeesh’
factor as far as I was concerned.
‘The only passion that guides me is the truth …………….
I look at everything from this point of view.’ Che Guevara
Making
a difference is a relative
newcomer to the game and it is, like passion, soaked in the self-importance of
the user. It’s always seemed an inane grouping of words to me. Everyone ‘makes
a difference’ no matter what they do or how they think. Whether that difference
is positive or negative really depends on the situation. The wearing of a
rubber stingray suit will definitely scare the kiddies away but it has made a
tangible difference to the normal course of events. Take note……… if it’s
altruism you’re promoting, choose some more intelligent words.
The concept of role models is
one of my favourites. The social media sites are full of ‘role models’ or, at
least, allusions to them. Sportspeople, colleagues, married couples and
post-work dudes all achieve podium positions in the R.M. stakes. Again, the
credentials of these punters for such lofty status are dodgy and rely only on
the subjective opinions of their sponsors.
I’ve never met a role model for anything. There are plenty of people
that I like but role models they are not. Punters are flawed, inconsistent and
political…….myself included. In reality, the role model is an invention of the
narcissist or the bounder, depending on what side of the equation you’re on.
In conclusion, I’ll pitch my tent in William S Burroughs’ caravan park…..
‘All the role models are being exposed and this is good because role models are
shit. The quicker we expose them the better. The whole concept of role models
is frightful. You gotta make your own role.’

Paul, well done. A sausage role model is as good as it gets. You may find this interesting...
ReplyDeletehttp://curmudgucation.blogspot.com.au/2014/02/up-against-data-wall.html?m=1
Thanks, Ray......and Greene makes some bloody good points. I reckon that I would last about 5 minutes in a school these days.
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