EXPERIENCE
IS THE BEST TEACHER
Outline:-
1.
Experience teaches how to live.
2.
We learn by experience, (a) Young
people, (b) and older people.
3.
It is we who make the lessons of
experience pleasant or unpleasant.
Experience, as everybody knows, is
the best teacher. Its main aim is to teach us how to live. No one can teach us
this as well as it can. It is stern schoolmistress. It sets us hard lessons,
punishes severely who are inattentive and stupid, and charges very high fees.
But what it teaches, it teaches in a way as through as possible. We never
forget its lessons. The worst of it is that we sometimes learn its lessons too
late. The man who breaks all the rules of health in his youth by
self-indulgence and vice, learns at last, when his health is wrecked for life,
the right way of living; but too late to be of any use to him.
It may be that we should be glad to
learn how to live well from the experience of our fathers, as recorded in
books, or as taught by the advice of our elders. But somehow many young people
do not. They scoff at warnings and advice, and go their own way. You may warn a
child against playing with matches; but he does not believe you, until he
scorches his hands. After the “burnt child dreads the fire”. You tell a boy not
to meddle with stray dogs; but he turns a deaf ear till he gets a nasty bite
from one. After that “once bitten, twice shy”. He has to learn from experience;
and its lessons he is not apt to forget.
In the same way older people have
to learn for themselves, often by bitter experience, such old truths as, “honesty
is the best policy”, All is not gold that glitters”, “A rolling stone gathers
no moss”, “He who touches pitch is defiled”, “No pains, no gains”, “Waste not,
want not”, “Cut your coat according to your cloth”, “A fool and his money are
soon parted”, “Look before you leap”, and “The way of transgressors is hard”.
In such old proverbs much wisdom gained by experience has been stored. It is by
suffering we learn patience; by facing danger we learn courage; by sorrow we
learn sympathy, by mistakes we learn wisdom.
But all its lessons are not
unpleasant. Whether they are pleasant or unpleasant depends on ourselves. For we
can just as easily learn from experience that honesty pays in the long run, as
that dishonesty does not; that temperance maintains health, as that excess
selfishness breeds unhappiness; and that hard work brings success, as that
idleness means failure.
In short, experience shapes us what
we are. It is on what our success in life depends.
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