School is Still On
by Utah Lt. Governor Greg Bell
06/07/2012 | 1583 views | 1 1 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
I ran into one of my dear friends from law school six or seven years after graduation. He still worked for the same old-line firm he had started with, as "bag carrier" for a senior attorney. With no sarcasm, he smiled and said, "School's still on." His answer intrigued me. He was telling me that he was learning from some of the state’s best trial attorneys, and that takes patience and humility.

Is school still on for you? Are you continuing your learning even though school is over? Even the best and broadest college curriculum will give us only a survey view of the many fields of knowledge AND teach us how to learn, how to educate ourselves. There are six essential things I think one MUST study:

1. Emotional Intelligence. Your happiness is affected by your understanding of how your emotions influence you and how you can influence your emotions. You will be happy as you become emotionally mature and wise. How you interact with other people will probably be the defining influence in your life and will largely determine whether your family and friends will love you or turn from you.

2. Eating and Exercise. Your ability to enjoy life to the fullest will depend in great measure on your health. Most of us need to know more about how to exercise properly and how to eat in a healthy manner. Use information based on good science and common sense. There are no shortcuts to good health. Good health is far more important for enjoying life than I ever supposed as a young person.

3. Biographies. Biographies are among the best textbooks for learning life's lessons. Come to know Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Hamilton, Lafayette, Henry, Lincoln, TR and FDR, Kennedy. Mother Teresa, Churchill, Gandhi, and Hannibal will teach you great things. Hellen Keller’s My Life is one of the most influential books I’ve ever read. Their lives will speak to you and uplift you, warn you and encourage you.

4. Politics and Economics. The U.S. is engaged in a political and economic conversation like I have rarely seen. Much of this is positive. However, much of it is not worthy of us, because it is based on personal opinion, anecdote, speculation and sloppy reasoning. Stretching facts, skewing history, and personally attacking political opponents have come to substitute for good policy proposals. Matters of our economy and our polity are difficult and sophisticated and cannot be approached with shallow “I’m right and you’re wrong” thinking. We must become informed of the facts rather than being lazily doctrinaire. Exposure to good thinking on all sides of issues serves one far better than believing ranting talk show hosts, whether on the left or the right.

5. Learn New Things. Socrates’ aphorism still speaks great truth: "The unexamined life is not worth living." So examine your life, your thinking, your values, and your personality. Throw out the bad and keep the good. Become familiar with medical advances, emerging technology, new perspectives on human rights, etc. Associate with new people, especially those you may have misunderstood or disagree with. Embrace unfamiliar things which prove uplifting and which make you wiser or better. Leave behind that which is unhealthy, isolates you from others, perpetuates ignorance, or interferes with a happy life

6. Spirituality. Finally, I strongly commend deep, daily study of the spiritual resources available to you. A rich spiritual life is essential to a happy life. It grounds, directs, and comforts us.

My final plea to graduates and anyone seeking to further their education: Avoid the great time-wasters of our day: television, video games, insipid movies, wasteful time on the internet, pornography, endless texting. Avoid and overcome addictions. Be in control of your lives. Live with purpose. Be happy by being informed, healthy, strong, wise, good, and by serving others.

My schooling and especially my education after my schooling have greatly enriched my life.

SCHOOL IS STILL ON!
Comments
(1)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
|
June 08, 2012
Great advice, thanks Lt. Gov.
today's headlines
Local Headlines
May 17, 2013 | 20957 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Salt Lake Tribune

Op-ed: Swallow and the Legislature

Editorial: The right decision: Herbert should stick to his guns

Suit: Make EPA force Utah to cut winter pollution

Hatch wants IRS probe to expand, include Freedom Path

Green activists, neighbors blast new West Davis freeway plan

Hatch calls for investigation of Obamacare funding

Thousands of Utahns face Defense Department furloughs

Utah charter schools under new performance scrutiny

Midvale's streetlight project stalls over flawed bid process

Deseret News

Matthew Sanders: Imploding trust in America's institutions

Editorial: Habits die hard

Utah lawmakers look to regulate child access to e-cigarettes

Oil, gas wells to move closer to Duchesne County homes

Health care reform about to 'get real' for Utahns

New poll shows GOP caucus attendees support changes to nomination system

2 county attorneys investigating Swallow, Utah Attorney General's office

West Davis Corridor project unveiled amid criticism

Elder Oaks promotes strengthening the free exercise of religion

Other

Heidi Toth: Squandering the public trust (Daily Herald)

RedBlue: Can Barack Obama survive scandals? (Daily Herald)

Op-ed: The gigabit community (Standard-Examiner)

Editorial: Don't make AG an appointment (Standard-Examiner)

UDOT releases DEIS, recommendation for Legacy extension (Standard-Examiner)

Ogden School Board faces anger over cutbacks (Standard-Examiner)

Will Swallow make appearance at the state GOP convention? (Standard-Examiner)

Hatch pushes for expanded probe into IRS actions (Standard-Examiner)

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
utah tweets
RSS Feeds
Utah policy stories feed
Policy buzz feed
Daily news highlights feed
Washington watch feed

With support from PinPointInternetMarketing.com