OUT TO LUNCH
___STEADY_PAYWALL___
When I was at school we had something called a “careers master”. In fact, most boarding schools in England seem to have had a careers master back then and the incumbent at my school was someone who had spent his entire life in the teaching profession and was thus well qualified to advise young men going into the world as to what career they should pursue. The thinking was that after about five years of expensive education the teaching staff should have built up a pretty accurate picture of a lad and would be able to filter that information to the careers master for the all important interview in your final term.
When it came to my interview the careers master (who was also my English master and had managed to teach me enough Eng Lit to get an “A” at A level) offered me a cup of coffee and some biscuits and asked me what I would like to do with my life. This, I found out later, contrasted sharply with some of my fellow pupils who weren’t offered the courtesy of coffee and bics and were told what they would be best suited for – accountancy, the army, the church, legal profession etc – in an interview lasting barely ten minutes. Mind you, with about 100 boys leaving the school each year that would amount to at least 17 hours of extra work and schoolmasters were never keen on extra work unless it involved a sports field.
My well considered answer to what I would like to do with my life was that I wanted to be a drummer in a rock band. There was an awkward silence and then the careers master asked me if I had any second choices maybe, should the job of drummer in a rock band already be taken. I didn’t want to seem indecisive so I mentioned that directing movies might come a close second. I based that on the fact that I had already scripted and directed a well received documentary to help raise funds for the new sports hall while at school but wanted to move onto something more ambitious, preferably involving actresses.
Neither of these career choices impressed him very much and he obviously didn’t share my view that the world would be the poorer for having been deprived of my drumming talent and directorial skills. So he suggested what he thought would be best suited for me and top of the list was teaching English followed by law. I did give the law a bash but discovered a pub called the Essex Head near Middle Temple and that proved too much of a temptation when I was supposed to be studying that dreariest of subjects, constitutional law. This accounts for the “failed as a barrister” which appears in my Wikipedia profile and which lefties like to taunt me with on social media, being too stupid to realize that I wrote it myself as the blurb on the cover of my first best seller.