The School of Life is a beautiful book written by Alain De Botton with wonderful insights on each page. The book has five sections Self, Others, Relationships, Work, and Culture. Sharing a few of the snippets from the book here.
The School of Life by Alain De Botton |
Alain maps many of our life
habits and reactions to our childhood upbringing. He says, “Children can’t go
anywhere. They have no extended social network. Even when things are going
right, childhood is a gentle open prison.” A volatile parent may be the reason
for our current meekness. A continually busy, inattentive parent was the
catalyst for someone to be an exhausting attention seeker.
The markers of emotional
health are self-love, candour, and communication. A few signs of self-love are
not pleasing others indiscriminately and being willing to leave an abusive
union. Candour is the ability to accept negative feedback about ourselves
because valuable lessons come in painful guises. Communication is not to think
that others can read our minds and thoughts. One needs to know how to formulate
one’s complaints into a convincing, perhaps humorously framed point that has a
chance of winning over its target.
Alain beautifully talks about fame
and its invariable negative impacts in four pages. He says, “One wants to be
famous out of a desire for kindness. But the world isn’t generally kind to the
famous for long. This is because the celebrity of a few people will always
contrast painfully with the obscurity of the many. So, soon enough the world
will comment negatively on their appearance, it will pore over their setbacks,
it will judge their relationships, and it will mock their new ventures. The
assessments will flood in from people who will express from the safety of the
newspaper office or screen.”
As a cure, Alain says that appreciation
and understanding are only available through individuals one knows and cares
about, not via groups of thousands or millions of strangers. There is no
shortcut to friendship – which is what the famous person is in effect seeking. A
famous person can market and advocate for their products in public but ignore the
good and bad comments of strangers in the wider world.
In a debate between
materialism and virtue, he talks about The Fable of the Bees written by Bernard
Mandeville. In the book, Bernard mentions that shopping for pleasure and
vanities helped the economy to grow. It was the consumption of Mandeville
called “fripperies” – hats, bonnets, gloves, butter dishes, soup tureens, shoehorns,
and hair clips – that provided the engine for national prosperity and made a
genuine difference to the lives of the weak and the poor.
Alain talks about the 12
ingredients of wisdom. In that, he says the following about Regret. In our ambitious
age, it is common to begin with dreams of being able to pull off an unblemished
life, where one can hope to get the major decisions, in love and work, right.
But the wise realize that it is impossible to fashion a spotless life. We will
make some extremely large and utterly uncorrectable errors in a number of
areas. Perfectionism is a wicked illusion. Regret is unavoidable. The errors in
life are not coincidental but structural.
The book has 295 pages. Apart from the book, the YouTube channel by the same name, The School of Life, @theschooloflifetv has wonderful videos. The videos have so many animations and graphics and are well presented. I have been handing out copies of School of Life book to my family and friends and I’m sure you will too once you read the book. Go for it!
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