How Crappy Students Become My Best Teachers
- Mick Scott
- Apr 13
- 3 min read
Errrrrr! I was feeling impatient and frustrated!
I did NOT want to help this student out.
He missed class, he was often late, he was distracted during class, and he asked for help much later than he should have.
Besides, I had top students who also wanted my attention and assistance at that same moment. Those were the students I really wanted to be working with.
And I was annoyed with him and my duty to support him.
But the students who test my patience? They're not actually testing my patience: they're building it.
Every time I breathe out my frustration and relax my body around, beneath, and through any impatience, I build my patience.
Impatience and frustration can be a gateway to deeper connection and peace of mind.
It’s one way my students become my teachers. My most challenging students are actually some of my biggest teachers.
The truth is, my impatience and frustration never come from anyone else. It's always born right here inside of me. That's why it's my responsibility to manage it.
There’s a selection from chapter 77 of the Tao Te Ching that I’ve been quoting recently:
“The Human Route:
Depriving the poor,
Offering to the rich.”
Isn’t that what I’m doing when I want to turn from the struggling student and toward the more accomplished students? Depriving the poor, offering to the rich?
This is even trained into many of us in our family and educational structures: respect authority. What about our peers? What about the lowest among us?
Here’s what Jesus said that mirrors that Tao Te Ching lesson:
"Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me." Matthew 25:40.
This lesson applies in all contexts of our lives:
Teacher to students.
Student to teachers.
Adult to children.
Man to women, man to men.
Woman to men, woman to women.
And yes, to poor and rich too. (The largest companies in the world keep getting my money each month, but how much am I giving to the least of my brothers and sisters?)
It applies to ourselves too. Which of the parts of yourself do you shower with more care and pride? Which parts of yourself are you depriving of your care and pride?
And what’s one the most valuable gifts we can ever give? Our attention. Our listening. Our presence. Our compassion.
Giving these gifts is a practice. Practice practice practice. Most of us are crappy at it. With practice we can get better.
The path to heaven - whether for you it's a place or a state of being - is to expand our own awareness and treat the least of the world’s beings as if they were the Divine itself.
The universe doesn’t see hierarchy. It’s only through the filter of our interpretation and story that we see some beings as more important or valuable than others. That’s why this is such a powerful spiritual practice - to see the beauty, holiness, and goodness in all people, and to let go and move beyond those inner constraints within ourselves that keep us from seeing it.
A relevant verse from the Bhagavad Gita that I also read recently (chapter 5 verse 18): “The humble sages, by virtue of true knowledge, see with equal vision all beings, knowing that all beings are expressions of God.”
Much Love. ❤️

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