Still Learning… Thankfully

Are you a lifelong learner?

I’d like to think so.

Not because I have a wall full of certificates, or because I’m forever signing up for courses, but because life has a habit of reminding me just how much I still don’t know.

The older I get, the less interested I become in being right all the time.

I’d much rather understand.

That might sound like a small distinction, but I think it’s an important one.

Learning isn’t just about collecting facts. It’s about allowing new experiences to reshape old opinions. It’s about listening to people whose lives are completely different from your own and being willing to admit they might have something valuable to teach you.

Some of the greatest lessons I’ve learned haven’t come from classrooms at all.

They’ve come from raising children.

From loving someone.

From making spectacular mistakes.

From living with autism long before I understood I was autistic.

From photography, where standing still and really looking at the world often reveals beauty everyone else walked straight past.

And, of course, from books.

Books have introduced me to worlds I’ll never visit, people I’ll never meet, and ideas that have quietly changed the way I see life.

One of those ideas comes from the Buddha.

Whether you see Buddhism as a religion or simply a philosophy, there’s something deeply refreshing about the idea that we’re all works in progress.

The Buddha didn’t really teach that life should be comfortable.

He taught that it could be understood.

The Four Noble Truths ask us to look honestly at suffering instead of pretending it isn’t there. The Eightfold Path isn’t a quick fix or a self-help slogan. It’s a lifelong practice of becoming a little wiser, a little kinder and a little more compassionate than we were yesterday.

I like that.

Not because I expect to become enlightened.

Let’s be honest—I still lose my patience when technology decides today is the perfect day to update itself.

But because it reminds me that growth isn’t a destination.

It’s a direction.

Too often we think learning stops when school finishes, or when we retire, or when we reach a certain age.

I think that’s when the real education begins.

Every conversation teaches us something.

Every mistake offers a lesson—assuming our pride doesn’t get in the way.

Every challenge asks us whether we’re prepared to adapt or whether we’d rather stay comfortably wrong.

For me, lifelong learning isn’t about becoming the smartest person in the room.

It’s about becoming a slightly better version of the person who walked into it.

If I can go to bed tonight knowing something I didn’t know this morning…

If I can understand another person’s perspective just a little more…

If I can show a little more compassion than I managed yesterday…

Then I’d call that a day well spent.

After all, none of us ever truly finish learning.

And perhaps that’s one of life’s greatest gifts.

Stay safe,

BC