May 1951 Vol. 32, No. 5
Imperative Needs of
Youth
Download
PDF version
Youth need not picture its age
as a slender, breathless and rather frantic interlude between
childhood and maturity. Youths leaving school and university
this year have not reached some place that is an end, a finality.
They are too old for some things, it is true, but they are
no longer too young for others - that is all.
On schoolclosing day, every graduating boy and girl
has a date with history. It is a date which ushers in the
significant period toward which their life so far has been
an approach. Now, their preparings come to fruition.
Everyone enters this stirring period with the beginnings
already laid of what is to be his personality. He has already
begun to assemble qualities that make him what he is as distinct
from other persons. His future depends upon how he welds these
traits and elements of personality into something which is
stronger than personality - character.
No one will wish to embark upon this second stage of the
voyage through life without a chart which will guide him to
the harbour of his choice. He needs to decide what he wants
and to count the cost. The very act of planning in this way
will develop in him something that employers of today find
to be the greatest lack in workers: sense of responsibility.
Thinking clearly on his own problems will prepare him to analyse,
to plan and to master situations. These are attributes which
make a man valuable.
The young men and the young women starting out from school
this year will wish to formulate a set of general principles
by which to set their life course. Only they can set that
course, but we can offer a few suggestions. The youth who
graduates this year must recognize:
The need for continuing education;
That living democratically is the most satisfying form of
society;
That freedom is an indivisible thing: everyone must be free;
That he is part of society;
That broadened intellectual activity depends upon the giveandtake,
the communication, of ideas;
That everything he hears is not necessarily true: he must
sift the evidence;
That he must discipline himself to meet difficulties, unpleasantness,
discomfort, frustration and hardship, and keep his colours
flying;
That he needs a spiritual guerdon;
That his greatest material satisfactions will arise from
achievement through work.
Some of these were expressed in his Meditations by
the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus more than 1,750
years ago: "I learned endurance of labour, and to want little,
and to work with my own hands, and not to meddle with other
people's affairs, and not to be ready to listen to slander,
and not to busy myself with trifling things, and to endure
freedom of speech, and to become intimate with philosophy."
Everyone wants Success
Like education, success is not a finality. Every step is
a beginning. It resides in the striving as well as in the
attainment.
No preparation, no planning and no strategy can guarantee
success; one can only deserve it. But if one has fun trying,
and finds his happiness along the road, then it doesn't matter
if the journey ever ends.
We can go further. Thomas J. Watson, who created the International
Business Machines Corporation, put it this way: "The minute
we say to ourselves that we have succeeded, we have confessed
failure. A man who is doing his best each day is truly alive,
but a man who did his best yesterday is starting to die."
We may give two hints about success. Do not allow yourself
to be put off an endeavour in which you thoroughly believe
yourself capable of succeeding just because some people tell
you it is impossible. Don't forget that at one time all the
world, including its greatest planners and savants, thought
it to be impossible that the earth should be round, or that
there could ever be a horseless carriage, or that man could
travel faster than the speed of sound.
The second hint is: never say to anyone about anything that
matters "I don't know." Say, instead, "That's an interesting
question: I'll find out." This is an attitude that has enabled
men of only mediocre education and qualities to succeed. It
demonstrates an eagerness to serve - and in so serving it
adds to one's knowledge.
Ambition May be Good
We cannot speak of success without mentioning ambition,
and we would divide ambition into two kinds: simply good and
bad. The latter can be dismissed in a moment by telling an
anecdote about Caesar. When he was passing through a wretched
hamlet in Switzerland one of his friends was speculating as
to whether rivalry and ambition agitated the hearts of such
impoverished people. Caesar replied: "I had rather be the
first man in such a village as this than the second man in
Rome."
The good ambition arises out of our creativeness. We want
to express in music, in poetry, in writing,, in painting,
or in craftsmanship, our ability to conceive and produce something
notable, or at least worth while. So long as we keep that
sense of purpose, ambition is healthy.
Prudence has its place in ambition, as well as impulsiveness,
and while it is not always wise to wait, it is well to cultivate
the ability to wait if it should become desirable. Besides
advising us to think before leaping, prudence tells us to
keep in sight both the near and distant. A high goal should
not blind us to immediate needs.
We are reminded of the philosopher who, while gazing at
the stars, fell into a pond. If he had looked where he was
stepping he might have seen the stars in the water, but he
could not see the water in the stars. Brought down to terms
of the youth starting work this year, the moral seems to be:
do your best on the job you have, while sizing up the jobs
ahead and preparing yourself to fill them.
Within reason, and if it is the right kind, ambition is
a good and a healthy thing. It should be founded upon a specific,
concrete and definite aim. William James tells in Psychology
about the hunter in the Adirondacks who shot a bear by
aiming, not at his eye or heart, but "at him generally." We
should not aim "generally" at successful living, but should
select targets one by one, and reduce them piecemeal.
Choice of Work
Littlebylittle is, in fact, practically the
only way we can tackle life today. We are hobbled by uncertainties
not of our making, and over every hill is a new unknown country.
Education, knowledge and intellectual skill contribute to
our help, but we still must use careful judgment.
We are all likely to boast of what we are going to do sometime
in future. The thing to boast about, really, is how much energy
we are in the habit of using effectively to accomplish things
worth doing. Make no mistake about this: performance is needed.
The man who never shoots cannot carry off the marksman's prize;
he who slinks away from a battle cannot be a hero; nor can
he who comforts himself with paper plans ever achieve success.
No titanic exuberance will carry today's youths through
the extraordinary world experiences they are embarked upon.
They need will power and fidelity to purpose. Those who succeed
will be the men and women who, in the most effective manner
open to them, go about getting things done. They will not
miss, and they will not be missed by, the sceptics who are
busy scorning work in their infantile debates about obscure
utopias.
It is, of course, well to press on toward some utopian ideal,
but with a sense of longrange cause and effect. There
are more instances in nature of transition than of abruptness.
He who has a chance to work gradually to his objective is
likely to compromise his victory if he seeks to hasten it
by indulging in wideranging forays that are foreign
to nature.
Next to trying too desperately is the fault of not trying
at all. Even the doctrines of leisure and recreation so commonplace
a few years ago are taking on a new look in these times. We
are learning that the goal of life is not idleness but achievement.
So don't be a faddist on short working hours. It is nice to
have abundant leisure, but history is at bottom the story
of great men who worked late.
With much less time than modern jobs allow, men in the past
and present have achieved the most remarkable works on record.
Spinoza ground lenses all day,
but in the evening wrote one of the major works of philosophy.
Mr. Churchill, we dare say, has been a pretty busy man, but
he found time to make himself a painter whose work is respected,
and a major writer. The late Lord Keynes worked himself literally
to death in public duties, and yet became an authority on
the ballet and theatre.
On Reaching Decisions
These people chose what they should do with certain criteria
in mind. They did not accept maxims from the past or snap
judgments in the present. They tested ideas for their worth
to them. It is wise, always, to question closely statements
that affect our lives. Do not, for example, accept this Monthly
Letter without asking yourself the truth of its reasoning
- not your friend's truth, not the "truth" handed down in
often contradictory proverbs, but the ultimate truth of what
it says as applied to your personal case.
That is just common sense. Someone has said that horse sense
is little more than the ability to say "no" to the things
that do not count in making one's way. It includes, also,
the quality of saying "yes" meaningly to things that do count.
But you can't do either effectively until you have an idea
of what counts and what does not. This involves knowledge
of your personal capacity, your tastes and ambitions, the
demands of the career you want and your ability to meet them.
To reach a great decision requires intellectual integrity,
the suppression of wishful thinking, and the strictest regard
for the truthfulness of evidence. Some of these requirements
can be assured of being met if some such device as the following
is adopted:
1. State your problem or your ambition m write it down for
greater clarity.
2. What are the choices? Write them all down, silly though
some may appear.
3. What are the virtues and faults of each? Here is where
you must be honourable with yourself and honest to facts.
4. After you write this far, some of the choices will automatically
eliminate themselves.
5. Out of what are left, what is the best solution (a) for
you today, and (b) for you and your family (or your familytobe)
in future?
Take into account in making choices what is involved in
the matter proposed, what defeat means, what success signifies,
your weaknesses and your powers.
Reading and Thinking
In everything that has been mentioned in this Letter as
desirable, we can draw upon all the ages for counsel. If we
want to find out what success is, what happiness and contentment
are, it would be well to ascertain what other thinkers have
thought success, happiness and contentment to be. A little
library will bring to any of us the problems, discoveries,
successes and failures of history. Those nowdead authors
are living and breathing in their writings, and their words
speak clearly today to all rational men.
Wide reading will help us to keep our balance in a world
that is becoming increasingly specialized in narrow grooves.
It will help us to think clearly, and to express ourselves
meaningfully.
These are days when our culture is in some confusion, and
there are no readymade answers. Our minds are likely
to get so printed over with slogans, rallying cries, and spatterings
of this and that ideology that we feel incapable of simple
and straightline reasoning. The situations that confront
us every day have more triangles and sharp points than Euclid.
Our young Canadians need heads that can think wisely, and
hearts that can feel warmly. What goes on in their heads and
in their hearts is more important in determining Canada's
future than what goes on in our laboratories and factories.
They must be able to get along with one another. Even worldly
success, if gained at the expense of goodwill, is bought too
dearly. Cooperation and affability have commercial value,
as well as personal satisfaction value. In business, the man
of good disposition, doing his work gladly, learning eagerly,
has a thousand chances to get on, where the sourlooking,
gloomy, discontented, "waiting for pay day" kind of person
has barely one.
Win by Persuasion
It was when men ceased to be individualists solely, and
came to recognize that they had interests in common, that
society came into existence. The wise man of today tries to
win his way by persuasion rather than by throwing his weight
around, and able men fight only when fighting, is beyond doubt
the one best way to control a situation. They do not cause
friction by raising issues that are not worthy, for that sort
of thing does not repay the fretfulness of dispute.
Another word for cooperation is participation. A life
in which everyone holds his home as his castle and refrains
from interfering with others is a community in a negative
sense only. Democracy is fraternity and cooperation
for the common good. When union is stressed to the exclusion
of freedom we fall into totalitarianism, but when freedom
is stressed exclusively we fall into chaos.
We are both one and many: both a people following the same
road to a joint future, and a set of individuals following
scattered roads as our personal gifts and circumstances dictate.
The Harvard Committee reported in General Education in
a Free Society: "The quality of alert and aggressive individualism
is essential to good citizenship, and the good society consists
of individuals who are independent in outlook and think for
themselves while also willing to subordinate their individual
good to the common good."
There are two significant contributions being made toward
building in Canada a nation wherein enlightened people may
abide in peace and dignity. The first is being made by the
church, which invites men and women to a mature relationship
with life. The religious life, in this sense, is one in which
there is a constant effort to link oneself, in joy and contribution,
to all ennobling movements in our world.
The second contribution is being made by admission of youths
as participants in adult activities of school, church and
community. This is, as yet, a puny effort compared with what
is required, but it is proving effective in some places. Mrs.
W. H. Clark, Secretary of the Joint Planning Commission of
the Canadian Association for Adult Education, put it this
way: "Youth needs to have a part, even though a small one,
in the decisions which control his life. The opinion of youth
should be sought and respected on all councils and deliberating
bodies, public or private, which touch on matters that concern
youth."
It is not necessary for adults to embarrass themselves in
such meetings between the ages by trying to talk youth's language.
What is needed is to ascertain their thoughts. First of all,
listen; then understand. Adults of today cannot search back
in their own youth to arrive at decisions affecting young
people today, because the whole environment of life has changed.
They can, however, season the thoughts of youth with all the
wisdom they have gathered along their many years.
Failure to bring about this cooperation of youths
and adults would have ominous results. Never since the first
high priest made sacrifices under a Stone Age moon have we
been more plagued by witch doctors with their crooked counsels.
Never before has such an onslaught been made upon the minds
of youth, to turn them to fanatical gospels, to scepticism
of all that the world has found worthy, and to unbelief.
The Good Life
The Greek philosopher Aristotle gave a famous definition
of society: "The State originates in the need for subsistence:
it continues through the wish for the good life." Canada,
and many other countries, have passed the stage of being joined
together solely to wrest a living from the soil. We know that
Canada's welfare is not to be built upon science, industry
or politics, but on goodness and wisdom.
We have three institutions that contribute mightily to maturing
us in these virtues: the church, the school, and the home.
The primary shaping of character takes place in family life,
where the child grows from stage to stage of confidence, skill,
affection, responsibility and understanding. Then the child
learns the rudiments of social life in school, where he associates
with scores of other children of many creeds and from environments
that differ from his. In the church, he is taught that not
all his efforts can lift a man higher than the level of humanity;
that only by setting his gaze Godward can he rise.
The Good Life is not the idle life of a beachcomber who
subsists on the bounty, the leftovers and the wrecks
of others. It is a strenuous life of responsibility. Life
has no savour for the good man unless he makes it consist
in service. If one service is completed, he grows restless
and invents some new standard, more difficult.
Freedom and Cooperation
An important ingredient of the Good Life is its freedom.
We have to be ready, in these days, to defend our country
and to help the free nations of the world defend theirs, but
our defence must be more than physical. We must equally uphold
the ideas and practices of freedom. The country that loses
these, whatever name it may bear of republic or democracy
or commonwealth, may as well content itself to living in servility.
The loss of freedom means the loss of the right to think,
and without thinking man ceases to be man.
What it all adds up to for today's youth is that they must
go on. This is not even a resting place, but only a transfer
to slightly new environment.
Youths and adults must go on together, growing in mental
and moral and spiritual stature. It is not enough to be literate,
we must harness literacy to ideals and to a sense of the first
rate. If we wish to carve images from clouds this year and
twenty years from now, we must have the tools, adapted to
the spirit and requirements of the age, with which to work.
We need to learn constantly, but more than that we need
to relate what we learn to the realities of experience and
practice. This means that education in our adult life will
consist as much of unlearning and relearning as of tackling
new subjects. If we don't do it we shall walk into future
years like a blindfolded person walking into a familiar room
where someone has moved the furniture.
Toward a Better World
Our vast programmes of economic and military mobilization
cannot fail to affect the outlook of youth. We must try, while
preparing to fight if necessary for what we believe is needful
to our happiness in life, not to lose in that preoccupation
the very basis of the thing we are fighting for.
It is appropriate, in days like these, to reflect with C.S.
Lewis that a consistent practice of virtue by the human race
even for ten years would fill the earth from pole to pole
with peace, plenty, health, merriment, and heartsease. That
is a dream hardly to be realized, but we can, under whatever
circumstances of strain and uncertainty, cultivate the basic
ethical values of democracy - devotion to equality, individual
worth, intellectual freedom, political liberty, democratic
processes and general welfare, and we can broaden down into
everyday use the high moral principles of the great religions.
Our ShangriLa is not a spot on a map, but something
in the spirits of men.
"It is all very well to talk in these sweeping words," some
may say, "but let us cultivate our garden." That is good advice.
We must, first of all, cultivate our garden. But it may be
for our good, as well as that of our neighbours, to cooperate
in a spot of irrigation, or in getting together to improve
our minds, or in signing a memorandum to the authorities about
the need for a new school.
The freedom and happiness of mankind depend upon how free
men of goodwill conduct themselves in the present crisis.
Young people of today have the capacity to build new and tranquil
cities of freedom, and to erect loftier and happier towers
of achievement.
Some may be shying away from the truth that the future depends
on them. But there are enough others for us to be sure that
today's passing turmoil in our affairs shall not end in endless
chaos, and that the liberty of men's minds shall not be fettered
by evil and cruel men.
These are embarking on adult life with spirits capable of
endurance, high ideals and rich achievement. Theirs is a challenging
and a noble prospect.
Published by RBC Financial Group. All editions from the RBC
Letter collection are available on our web site at www.rbc.com/responsibility/letter.
Our e-mail address is: rbcletter@rbc.com.
Publié aussi en francais.
[ Return to RBC Letter
home page ]
|