The Story Behind Why I Stay Positive and Keep Learning By Susan “Honey” Good Albert Camus┬áwas a French writer┬áand philosopher,┬áthe second youngest recipient in history to win the Nobel Prize in Literature at the age of 43. He was born in┬á1913. The last time I thought about Camus was when I was in my early 20s. I read his book ΓÇ£The Stranger,ΓÇ¥┬áat the insistence of┬ámy brother, a Harvard undergrad and Harvard Law School grad┬áwho talked and talked┬áabout the author. I mention my brotherΓÇÖs school credentials, not to brag about my family but┬árather┬áto mention┬áone of the absurdities of life. Why wasnΓÇÖt┬áa girlΓÇÖs education as important as a┬áboyΓÇÖs then?┬áI tie Camus to┬ámy┬ápattern of┬áeducation┬ábecause he contributed to the rise of the philosophy known as absurdism; the conflict between human tendency to seek inherent value and meaning in life┬áand the human inability to find┬áany.┬áOne absurdity that had a direct effect on my life was that boys were afforded and entitled to a better education than girls. Growing up in Kankakee by the Sea in a large Jewish family,┬áeducation was very important, especially for sons. Daughters did not count.┬áI had 14 first┬ácousins. The boys were sent┬áaway to prep schools;┬áthe girls┬ágraduated from Kankakee┬áHigh┬áby the Sea. The boys were all┬áaccepted into Ivy League┬ácolleges such as Harvard and Yale.┬áThe girls attended Big Ten Universities. I have wondered on occasion where life would have taken me if I had been afforded the opportunity to attend┬áprep school.┬á┬áNot one to live in my past,┬áunless it suits my fancy,┬áI say to myself, ΓÇ£La de da. Just another one of lifeΓÇÖs absurdities.ΓÇ¥ Two days ago, out of the blue, my friend Emilie sent me a quote by Camus. It reminded me the absurdity of my education. I will love this quote for the rest of my life. ΓÇ£In the depth of winter, I finally learned there was in me an invincible summer.ΓÇ¥ I was euphoric. I felt┬áintense emotional excitement as I re-read the quote because the quote summed up who I am.┬á┬áMy positivity is indestructible, unbeatable; bulletproof. I search for┬áa way to turn┬áa┬ánegative┬áinto an ΓÇ£invincible summer.ΓÇ¥ My glass is┬áhalf full. Such was the case when I entered college.┬áI was so excited until I bought my books at the bookstore. I was overwhelmed by their size, their thickness. I was overwhelmed by the number of books I needed for each class. My┬áfirst lecture┬áwas World History 101.┬áI was overwhelmed by the size of the auditorium, the number of kids, maybe 300 strong. I cannot recall a word the professor said because I had not been taught┬áto take notes. I was a lost 18-year-old girl who graduated from Kankakee High by the Sea. ΓÇ£Why wasnΓÇÖt I a boy?ΓÇ¥ I remember thinking to myself. I knew I had to find a way to survive. You have to be thinking all the time, darlings, especially when you are faced with a┬ámajor┬ádilemma┬áthat could turn catastrophic.┬áThis was catastrophic.┬áEach class was huge. English 101 may have had 500 kids. I felt fear. One day, in a lecture, I found myself seated next to a girl┬áwhose notes were impeccable.┬á┬áI immediately seized the moment and introduced myself. It turned out we were living in the same freshman dorm on the same floor. ΓÇ£Today is going to be my lucky day,ΓÇ¥ I thought to myself. After┬áclass, I asked her if she would┬áhave lunch with me.┬áHer name was Barbara.┬áIt turned out that she was a brilliant student who graduated from New Trier High School, a great school in the Chicago suburbs. BarbaraΓÇÖs skin was as white as chalk. She had red kinky unmanageable long hair. She was slightly overweight and walked with her feet pointed out. She wore no makeup and had no style. But she was so smart and so nice. I liked her immediately and though our lifestyles┬áwere opposite, she wanted to incorporate a little of me in her person and I definitely wanted to incorporate a lot┬áof her in mine. Over lunch, I opened up to her, told her how lost I was in class. I asked her to help me. ΓÇ£Would you please teach me how to take notes; to do a perfect outline?ΓÇ¥ She was the type of girl who enjoyed helping.┬áI was her perfect candidate, her student. Barbara became my personal professor and close friend. Not one to take advantage I tactfully mentioned to┬áher I would love to ΓÇÿschoolΓÇÖ her on fashion. ΓÇ£If you will let me I┬áwould love to be┬áyour fashion consultant.ΓÇ¥ Hysterical right? We were like Mutt and Jeff.┬á┬áShe was brilliant. I had style.┬áI loved sorority life. She preferred to be alone. What we had in common, was our inner values and the thrill of learning in all areas. I have tried to find her. I would love to know if she became a college professor, a writer, a mother, a grandmother.┬áI would love to know where she is living. I would love to know If she traveled the world or preferred learning from books. I would love to knowΓǪ. Barbara and I would continue our friendship; I have no doubt. We would be intellectual friends. Fashion would not enter the picture. I would not let it because in the realm of my life words speak volumes over material possessions.┬áBarbara opened my eyes to the value of the written word. I will be ever grateful. Susan “Honey” Good is the founder of┬áHoneyGood.com┬áwhere this blog originally appeared. The site is a collection of lessons learned, life advice and insights from not only her, but from a fantastic group of contributing writers, each adding their own spice to the recipe.┬áHoney Good.com representing ΓÇ£a family tree of┬áwomenΓÇ¥ — wives, mothers, daughters, granddaughters, mothers-in-law, daughters-in-law, sisters, aunts, cousins and girlfriends — coming together to talk about what┬ámakes them tick as well as what they have in common. Honey Good discusses┬álife experiences with wisdom, humor and intellect, enabling all┬áto attain┬áa “Honey Good Style of Life.ΓÇ¥