Can a sentence affect the course of your life? Five authors reveal the interactions that transformed the way they saw themselves – and the worldWhen I was 14, I had to start a new school. I wasn’t great at starting ne...
See moreCan a sentence affect the course of your life? Five authors reveal the interactions that transformed the way they saw themselves – and the world
When I was 14, I had to start a new school. I wasn’t great at starting new schools, even though I had done so quite a few times – once for my dad’s work, once because I wasn’t fitting in at my primary school and once because my parents didn’t like the teachers. Of course, 14 is possibly the most awkward of all the ages to start a new anything. Anyway, it was halfway through the first term at the new school in Newark, Nottinghamshire, and I was taken aside by my history teacher, Mr Philips, at the end of a lesson. He didn’t like me very much. To be fair, I was probably hard to like, from a teacher’s perspective. I had trouble concentrating, I stared out of windows, I clowned around. However, it is difficult to explain the shock to my self-conscious teenage soul when he told me, “I think it would be a good idea for you to join a special needs class.” Now, for context, the year was 1989, and in my state comprehensive at that time the idea of being “special needs” was akin to being given a leprosy bell or being marked with a cross for the plague. It was a binary system. You were either “normal” or you were “special needs”. To make matters worse, I was told that another teacher – my art teacher – had come to a similar assessment.
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Can a sentence affect the course of your life? Five authors reveal the interactions that transformed the way they saw themselves – and the worldWhen I was 14, I had to start a new school. I wasn’t great at starting ne...
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