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  • The School of Life has produced 500 films and written 5 million words. This is an enormous

  • problem. To stand any hope of remaining in anyone's

  • mind, ideaseven very good ideasneed to be brief and reduced to an essence.

  • That's why, for the sake of our followers, or scholars as we playfully call them, we've summarised everything we believe down

  • to eight key points, if you like: the credo of The School of Life.

  • It goes as follows: 1. ACCEPT IMPERFECTION

  • We are inherently flawed and broken beings. Perfection is beyond us.

  • Despite our intelligence and our science,

  • We are all, from close up, scared, unsure, full of regret, longing and error.

  • No one is normal: the only people we can think of as normal are those we don't yet know

  • very well.

  • 2. Friendship

  • Recognising that we are each one of us weak, mad and mistaken should inspire compassion

  • for ourselvesand generosity towards other people. Knowing how to reveal our vulnerability and

  • brokenness is the bedrock of true friendship, which we universally crave.

  • People do not reliably end up with the lives they deserve.

  • We should embrace the concept of tragedy: random terrible

  • things can and do befall most lives. We may fail and be goodand therefore need to

  • be slower to judge and quicker to understand.

  • Be kind. 3. KNOW YOUR INSANITY

  • We cannot be entirely sane, but it is a basic requirement of maturity that we understand

  • the ways in which we are insane, we can warn others we care about what our insanities might

  • make us do, early and in good time and before we have caused too much damage.

  • We should be able to have a ready answerand never take offenceif someone asks us

  • (as they should): 'In what ways are you mad'?

  • Most of the madness comes down to childhood, which willin a way unique to our situation

  • have unbalanced us. No one has yet had a 'normal' childhood; this is no insult

  • to the efforts of families. 4. ACCEPT YOUR IDIOCY

  • Do not run away from the thought you may be an idiot as if this were a rare and dreadful

  • insight. Accept the certainty with good grace, in full daylight. You are an idiot but there

  • is no other alternative for a human being. We are on a planet of seven billion comparable

  • fools. Embracing our idiocy should render us confident

  • before challenges because messing up is to be expected it should make us comfortable with ourselves,

  • and ready to extend a hand of friendship to our similarly broken and demented neighbours.

  • We should overcome shame and shyness because we have already shed so much of our pride.

  • 5. GOOD ENOUGH The alternative to perfection isn't failure,

  • it's to make our peace with the idea that we are, each of us, 'good enough'. Good

  • enough parents, siblings, workers and humans. 'Ordinary' isn't a name for failure.

  • Understood more carefully, and seen with a more generous and perceptive eye, it contains

  • the best of life. Life is not elsewhere; it is, fully and properly,

  • here and now. 6. BEYOND ROMANTICISM

  • 'The one' is a cruel invention. No-one is ever wholly 'right' nor indeed wholly

  • wrong. True love isn't merely an admiration for

  • strength, it is patience and compassion for our mutual weaknesses. Love is a capacity

  • to bring imagination to bear on a person's less impressive momentsand to bestow

  • an ongoing degree of forgiveness for natural fragility.

  • No one should be expected to love us 'just as we are'.

  • Genuine love involves two people helping each other to become the

  • best version of themselves. Compatibility isn't a prerequisite for love;

  • it is the achievement of love. 7. CHEERFUL DESPAIR

  • We are under undue and unfair pressure to smile. But almost nothing will go entirely

  • well: we can expect frustration, misunderstanding, misfortune and rebuffs. We should be allowed

  • to be melancholy. Melancholy is not rage or bitterness, it is a noble species of sadness

  • that arises when we are open to the fact that disappointment is at the heart of human experience.

  • In our melancholy state, we can understand without fury or sentimentality that no one

  • fully understands anyone else, that loneliness is universal and that every life has its full

  • measure of sorrow. But though there is a vast amount to feel

  • sad about, we're not individually cursed and against the backdrop of darkness, many

  • small sweet things should stand out: a sunny day, a drifting cloud; dawn and dusk, a tender look.

  • Despair but do so cheerfully, believe in cheerful despair.

  • 8. TRANSCEND YOURSELF We are not at the center of anything; thankfully.

  • We are miniscule bundles of evanescent matter on an infinitesimal corner of a boundless

  • universe. We do not count one bit in the grander scheme, that should be a liberation.

  • We should gain relief from the thought of

  • the kindly indifference of spatial infinity: an eternity where no-one will notice, and

  • where the wind erodes the rocks in the space between the stars. Cosmic humilitytaught

  • to us by nature, history and the sky above usis a blessing and a constant alternative

  • to a life of frantic jostling, humourlessness and anxious pride.

  • ** A final point:

  • We knowin theoryabout all of it. And yet in practice,

  • any such ideas have a notoriously weak ability to motivate our actual behaviour and emotions.

  • Our best knowledge is both embedded within us and yet is ineffective for us.

  • We forget almost everything.

  • Our enthusiasms and resolutions

  • can be counted upon to fade like the stars at dawn. Nothing much sticks.

  • For this reason, we need to go back over things. Maybe once a day, certainly once a week. A

  • true good 'school' shouldn't tell us only things we've never heard before; it

  • would be deeply interested in rehearsing all that is theoretically known yet practically

  • forgotten. That's why we should keep the eight rules

  • in mindand why the next step is to subscribeand to return here often.

The School of Life has produced 500 films and written 5 million words. This is an enormous

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生命學校的八大規則 (The Eight Rules of The School of Life)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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