What School Doesn’t Teach You (But You’ll Need in Real Life)
|
8
min read

'Staring but still blind.' That's exactly how I felt in my English class learning about rhetorical devices , not because I didn't care about English, but because I kept thinking, 'When will this actually be useful to me?' Meanwhile, I was also learning imaginary numbers in math, which is fine if you're going into quantum mechanics. But everyone was required to know this stuff, while topics like filing taxes, understanding politics, or even basic social skills , things every single person will actually need , were completely absent from the curriculum.
The Wake,Up Call
When a senior friend told me about filing his W,2 and navigating tax season, my jaw dropped a little. He was complaining about FICA deductions and didn't fully understand where his paycheck was going. When I got home and asked my parents about it, we ended up in a multi,day study session , with them trying to explain Social Security, FICA taxes, and more. They were actually glad I asked, because according to them, this was 'essential information.'
A Class That Should Exist
There should be a simple required class called something like 'Legal Paperwork' , where students learn to understand the basic legal forms and documents they'll encounter as adults: taxes, lease contracts, what a 'deductible' means. These aren't complicated concepts; they just overwhelm people because they're never taught them.
What Adults Actually Wish They'd Learned
I asked teachers, other adults, and did my own research about what people wish they'd been taught before entering the real world. A few themes kept coming up:
Networking gets a bad reputation. People hear it and think it means being fake or using people to get something. So most people default to just working hard and hoping someone notices. But what many successful people have realized is that opportunities often go to whoever has a connection in that space , not necessarily the most accomplished person. Networking isn't manipulation; it's building genuine relationships over time so that when you need help, you have people who can actually pull you up.
In school, failure means an F on your report card and a tanking GPA. You're strongly discouraged from making mistakes, because mistakes mean you weren't prepared for the test. But that's not how real life works. Everyone who's actually lived it will tell you their lives were full of failures , plans that fell through, rejections, things that didn't go as expected. The people who end up succeeding are the ones who treat those failures as data, not endings. They learn what not to do and keep going.
Things You Can Do to Prepare
Watch YouTube videos explaining taxes, contracts, and mortgages , free, detailed, and more practical than most textbooks.
Find a mentor , an older person you trust who can help you navigate situations your school never prepared you for.
Build connections online through Discord servers or forums centered around your interests , community is community, in,person or not.
Set one small goal every week to try something new, so you get comfortable with failure before the stakes are high.
Practice simply talking to people , a friendly 'good morning' goes further than you'd think.
This doesn't mean school is useless. I genuinely use algebra and rhetorical devices more than I expected, and history helps me understand the culture around me. But there's a whole other set of skills , equally important, maybe more so , that are completely absent from the classroom. Go ask the adults around you what they wish they'd known. Those conversations will teach you more than any textbook.


