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The Courage to Be a Learner

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

 

I was complaining again—about mistakes, about how hard it was to guide others when I myself felt unsure so often. He listened quietly, the way he always did, without interrupting.

After a pause, he said something that shifted the entire conversation.

“The most important place where we need to become role models,” he said, “is right here—where we are observing, improving, trying to understand, and learning from our mistakes.”

I looked at him, slightly confused. “You mean role models in success?” I asked.

“No,” he replied gently. “Role models in learning.”

That word settled into me slowly.

“Especially for teachers and parents,” he continued, “this is the most critical responsibility. Not to present themselves as flawless—but to show how a human being grows.”

I felt a strange discomfort rise inside me. I had always believed that authority came from certainty, from knowing, from being one step ahead. Admitting mistakes felt like losing ground.

“But won’t that weaken respect?” I asked.

He smiled faintly. “It does the opposite. It strengthens trust.”

He told me about a classroom he once observed. The teacher made a small mistake on the board while solving a problem. A student hesitantly raised a hand and pointed it out. The class held its breath, expecting embarrassment or anger. Instead, the teacher paused, looked at the board, and said calmly, “You’re right. I missed that. Thank you for helping me.”

The room changed in that moment. The students relaxed. Questions increased. Fear dropped. Learning became shared.

“That one sentence,” he said, “taught the class more than the lesson itself.”

I thought of how many times I had pretended to know, just to protect my image.

“The deepest character development in children,” he went on, “does not come from watching perfect adults. It comes from watching adults who are willing and striving to improve.”

That sentence echoed inside me.

“Children don’t just absorb our words,” he said. “They absorb our relationship with truth, with effort, with failure. When they see us correcting ourselves, they learn accountability. When they see us reflect, they learn humility. When they see us struggle honestly, they learn resilience.”

I remembered a father I once knew who never admitted a mistake. His children obeyed him—but they also feared him. Years later, one of those children confessed, “I never learned how to say sorry, because I never saw my father say it.”

Silence took over for a few moments.

“You know what takes real courage?” he asked quietly.

“What?” I said.

“To say comfortably, without shame: I don’t know this yet. Let me learn, and I’ll get back to you.

That struck me deeply.

“So many adults,” he continued, “feel that not knowing is a weakness. But in reality, pretending to know is far more damaging. It kills curiosity. It trains children to hide confusion instead of exploring it.”

I thought of a young student who once asked a sincere question in class and was mocked for it. The child never raised a hand again. Not because curiosity died—but because safety did.

“When a child sees a parent or teacher say ‘I don’t know,’” he said, “the child learns that not knowing is not shameful. It is the doorway to growth.”

I felt something tighten in my chest.

“So being a role model,” I said slowly, “is not about standing on a pedestal.”

He nodded. “It’s about walking on the path.”

He leaned forward slightly and said, “If life gives you the privilege to consciously decide what kind of role model you want to be, then choose to be a role model of a learner. Say with confidence: I am still learning.

We both fell silent again.

I remembered a time when my child had asked me a difficult question. I had rushed to give an answer—not because I was sure, but because I didn’t want to appear unsure. Later that night, I realized my answer was wrong. I corrected it the next day. The relief on my child’s face wasn’t just about the correct answer—it was about seeing honesty in action.

“That correction,” he said when I shared this, “built character more than the original answer ever could.”

Slowly, unmistakably, I began to understand.

Character is not built by watching someone who never stumbles. Character is built by watching someone who stumbles—and rises with integrity.

“So the real legacy,” I said, “is not how much we know…”

“…but how we learn,” he completed the thought.

As I walked away from that conversation, I carried something new with me—not certainty, not expertise, not authority—but a quiet resolve:

To remain a learner. To be honest about what I do not yet know. To improve where I fall short. And to let those who come after me see that growth is not a destination—it is a way of living.

Because the greatest role model is not the one who never errs. It is the one who never stops learning.

Process Over Results

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

In nearly every area of life—whether it’s education, parenting, relationships, or even religious practice—we often fall into a results-focused mindset. We concentrate on outcomes: Did my child do well? Did the student understand the lesson? Did I receive a reward from God? However, life continually reminds us that although results matter, they are never entirely within our control. What we can control is the process.

This shift in perspective—from results to process—is both a practical and a deeply spiritual principle.

The Farmer’s Lesson

Imagine a farmer who plants his crops. He tills the soil, waters the field, and makes sure every step is done properly. But when hailstorms hit and destroy the crop, the farmer doesn’t curse the heavens or give up farming. He goes back to the same process—plowing, sowing, watering—because he knows this is the part he can control. The harvest, whether plentiful or ruined, is never completely in his hands.

Human beings are no different. Like the farmer, we can only work faithfully through the process, never guaranteeing the outcome.

The Child Learning to Speak

Parents often worry when their child is slow to talk. However, language development is a natural process. If the child is placed in the right environment where language is spoken, they will eventually start talking—unless there is a medical issue. Pressuring, comparing, or punishing will not speed up this process; it might even cause harm.

This illustrates the broader principle: development happens through exposure, modeling, and environment, not through force or obsession with results.

Process Orientation in Parenting and Teaching

Imagine a parent trying to teach a child generosity at the dinner table. A results-driven approach might scold the child: “You should share right now!” But a process-driven parent will demonstrate generosity, share stories of role models, and foster a culture of sharing over time. In the end, the child’s heart will lean toward sacrifice—not because of fear of correction, but because of the natural internalization of values.

Similarly, when teaching fasting (roza), parents may fall into the trap of using reward and punishment: “If you fast, you’ll get this gift; if you don’t, you’ll lose this privilege.” This approach might work temporarily, but once the external motivation fades, so will the practice. The real process is in cultivating faith, conviction, and a relationship with God, so that fasting naturally becomes an act of devotion rather than merely an obligation.

Why Result-Orientation Fails

  • It creates pressure and judgment. Parents, teachers, or religious guides often resort to scolding, labeling, or forcing because they seek immediate results.
  • It fosters hypocrisy. People act for appearances or rewards, not out of conviction.
  • It collapses when external control is taken away. When pressure or authority is removed, the behavior disappears.

This is evident across society: we impose bans, punishments, and external restrictions, but seldom focus on developing inner will, faith, and self-control.

The Civic Sense Example

One notable observation from Hajj is the lack of civic sense among pilgrims. Many perform rituals outwardly but fail to demonstrate patience, order, or consideration for others. Why? Because their religious practice is viewed through a results-oriented lens—praying for rewards or fearing punishment—rather than through a process-oriented lens of gratitude, discipline, and service to God.

Process Orientation in Self-Development

This principle applies not only to parenting or society but also to ourselves.

  • If I wake up early, stay disciplined, and put effort into my business, I may or may not become wealthy—but I will definitely develop resilience and good habits.
  • If I study sincerely, I might or might not top the exam, but I will definitely become more knowledgeable.
  • If I practice patience in small daily tests, I may or may not change others—but I will transform my own character.

As the saying goes: “Don’t control what you cannot control. Control what you can—and that is your process.”

A Personal Anecdote

A student once told his mentor, “I study hard but still don’t get the top marks.” The mentor responded, “Your responsibility is not the top marks. Your responsibility is to learn with sincerity, honesty, and consistency. Marks belong to the system, effort belongs to you. Don’t confuse the two.”

That advice stayed with him for a lifetime—not just for school but for every challenge.

Reflections for Our Lives

  1. Am I obsessed with results? Do I judge myself or others solely based on visible outcomes?
  2. Am I faithful to the process? Do I stay committed to what is in my control, even when results are delayed or unseen?
  3. Am I fostering conviction or simply enforcing compliance?

Conclusion

Process orientation doesn’t mean ignoring results. It means letting go of the illusion of control over outcomes while putting our best effort into the actions, attitudes, and environments we can influence. It means trusting that in time, results will appear—some sooner, some later, and some possibly never in the way we expect.

In religion, parenting, relationships, and personal growth, this principle protects us from despair, arrogance, and judgment. It keeps us grounded in humility, patience, and trust in God.

As the farmer teaches us, hail may ruin the crop today, but tomorrow the soil still encourages us to plant again.

Reflection Prompt

Think of an area in your life where you’re frustrated by not seeing results. How would it change if you focused on the process instead of the outcome? What steps in the process are within your control today?