Personal vs Professional
![]() |
| With Students 2014 |
“How do you balance your professional and personal
life?” I’ve never really understood that question though I’ve heard it umpteen
times, the latest being at a blog hop community. In fact, I’m writing this only
because of that hop.
I worked as a teacher for all of 40
years and retired last year at the age of 65. In all those years I never
experienced anything like a tightrope walk between my job and personal life. I
was a bachelor for the initial ten years. So I had to cook my meals, wash my
clothes, fetch water from far away in summer… And prepare classes for the next
day, question papers for exams, check answer sheets when exams were over… All
that happened like a smoothly flowing river on the mountainous terrain of
Meghalaya where I worked.
Shillong remains at an elevation of
1496 metres from sea level and it has no streams, let alone rivers. The only
river that flowed was my life itself. Until things went wrong and the river was
riled totally. That’s the only time when I found my life a worse than a
tightrope walk. And I quit the place eventually.
Then I ended up in Delhi doing the
same job but in a residential school which gave me staff quarters and free
food. The job became even more lovable and exciting. There is little
distinction between personal life and professional life in a residential
school. Mine was an exclusively residential school and it was like a huge joint
family. Nothing was too professional. We were all involved with each other day
and night, so to say.
We teachers were there with the
students on the playground before sunrise for what was known as PT [Physical
Training]. The classes began as early as 7.10 am. Two periods, then breakfast
students and teachers together, morning assembly, classes, lunch, free time,
games, supervised study-time, and dinner. We had duties after dinner too until
students went to sleep.
Where could I draw the line between
personal and professional life? All the practices for our extracurricular
activities like Annual Day and interschool competitions took place after
dinner. Most of my time was spent in school. And I enjoyed it. I loved the job.
I taught in a regular school in
Kerala for the last ten years of my working life. My involvement with students
became much less. Some kind of a line appeared between personal and
professional life. But the truth is I cherish my Delhi days more where that line
didn’t exist.
My only grief is that my
former students of Delhi seem to view me as a traitor now because I question
the menacing sectarian politics in the country and they all belong to that
dominant sect. My classrooms in Kerala had both Hindus and Christians, with a
few Muslims. Balancing my views on religion was tough, but not balancing
personal and professional life.
Now, retirement has only changed the
contents of my timetable. The alarm clock is less authoritarian. I spend more
time in my personal library, reading or writing. In the last one year of
retirement, I wrote a book on religion which is pretty well
accepted by readers. I am gratified, though I wish more of my students took
interest in this new book of mine especially since we all discussed religion
pretty much in the classrooms.
Looking back, I think the expression
‘work-life balance’ assumes that work and life are two different things
competing for our attention. Perhaps that is true for some professions and some
people. But teaching never felt like that to me. Teaching wasn’t merely what I
did for a salary. It shaped my relationships with people, my reading, my
travels, my conversations, and even the books I now write. It became part of my
life rather than its rival.
I’m not suggesting that life was
stress-free. Far from that. There were exhausting days, impossible deadlines,
difficult students, unreasonable parents, and administrators who seemed
convinced that teachers didn’t need leisure. There were family emergencies and
professional disappointments. Yet I seldom felt that I was carrying two
separate loads on my shoulders. It was one life carrying many responsibilities.
Perhaps that’s why the question of
“balancing” puzzles me. Nobody asks: “How do you balance breathing and
walking?”
Perhaps the real balancing act wasn’t
between profession and personal life at all. It was between expectations and
contentment. Today, looking back at those 40 years, contentment wins.
![]() |
| With Students 2018 |
This post is a part of ‘Beyond the Desk Blog Hop’ hosted by Manali Desai and Sukaina Majeed under Every Conversation Matters blog hop series
PS. I'm eager and willing to walk into another classroom and teach - till my last breath.


Great. Contentment wins, more so... Because it is s mstter of the Within.
ReplyDeleteWas blessed to have you as one of my teachers
ReplyDeleteHope to see u some day soon till then take care sir😇🙏
You integrated your profession into your personal life. Your profession did much to shape the person that you are. So the line of demarcation was very thin or nonexistent.
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteAh, this might indicate, too, the difference between simply working and undertaking a vocation. It is a well-worn adage that to gain the best from life, to be in work that one does not feel is so, is to find that balance! Based on this, I would say that you have had success. YAM xx