Teaching English (as professorial jobs go) unusually labor-intensive d — Mary Rose O’Reilley, Barn End World: Apprenticeship a Quaker, Buddhist Shepherd

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Teaching English is (as professorial jobs go) unusually labor-intensive and draining. To do it well, you have to spend a lot of time coaching students individually on their writing and thinking. Strangely enough, I still had a lot of energy for this student-oriented part of the job. Rather, it was _books_ that no longer interested me, drama and fiction in particular. It was as though a priest, in midcareer, had come to doubt the reality of transubstantiation. I could still engage with poems and expository prose, but most fiction seemed the product of extremities I no longer wished to visit. So many years of Zen training had reiterated, 'Don't get lost in the drama of life,' and here I had to stand around in a classroom defending Oedipus.

Mary Rose O'Reilley, The Barn at the End of the World: The Apprenticeship of a Quaker, Buddhist Shepherd

Related Authors: Mary Rose O'Reilley | The Barn at the End of the World: The Apprenticeship of a Quaker | Buddhist Shepherd

Related Topics: attachment, fiction, spirituality, teaching

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