The point of education is to improve life for people. Reading and studying and listening, we learn. Travel is often an educational experience. We gain knowledge, but it does no good if we hoard it. That’s why some become teachers. In a society that undervalues education, a self-fulfilling prophecy sets in. Just look around you. The usual path into becoming a teacher is education in education. You can major in it. You don’t have to be wise necessarily, since, like all things capitalistic, choice of career is economic. You pick something for which you feel suited. If you’re lucky, you get a job doing it. For “higher education” it’s a bit different. First of all, you need not study education at all. You choose a field in which to become a specialist and, if you’re lucky, get a job teaching it. And those jobs are dependent on, of course, the dismal science.
This is one of the main reasons I write. When your intention is to be a lifelong learner, you know that if you don’t share what you’ve picked up over the years, it will simply be lost. As a society, we really don’t encourage sages. The motivation is to make money, to look out for yourself. Education becomes a means for self-promotion rather than for sharing what you’ve learned. In my case, I sometimes feel guilty for writing about horror. Is it really helping anyone? I have to believe that it might be. A certain segment of the population finds horror therapeutic. Psychologists are starting to explore how it’s actually good for your mentality. I can only hope that if it means something to me, it will mean something to some others. And I want to share it.
Religion, at least among the non-cynical, is meant to improve people’s lives. There is a reason that I wanted to be a religion professor, as I was for a few short years. My circumstances steered me toward horror as a form of self-care, and I think there’s something much deeper here that has to be mined. Writing the books I do is more like speculating or prospecting rather than staking a claim and digging tunnels. If they were causing more harm than good I wouldn’t publish them (or try to). Life is an educational opportunity. And if we learn from those who care for other people we might have a chance of improving the lot of many. Look around you. Is that where we are today?
