When John Lennon was 15 years old, the smart people in authority at his school didn’t see him as a world-changing artist.
The headmaster wrote this on Lennon’s report card that year: “He has too many of the wrong ambitions and his energy is too often misplaced.” (Click the graphic above to see a larger version.)
Although he was seen as intelligent, a science teacher wrote, “His work always lacks effort. He is content to ‘drift’ instead of using his abilities.”
In math, he missed the final exam and the teacher wrote, “He is certainly on the road to failure if this goes on.”
His teachers clearly didn’t think much of him. By the accepted standards of the world, he was heading toward failure. Surely he would become a nobody — because he refused to fit into the box that the world was trying to push him into.
Because of his work with the Beatles, though, Lennon turned out to be a pivotal cultural figure of the 1960s. He will be remembered long after everyone has forgotten those experts who judged him.
The pounding rain from the storm brought me warmth, light and love
Love & Hope — Episode 1:
Time is the most unrelenting enemy that any of us will face
What do you do when it feels as though your entire world is over?
Would life be better without news? Maybe it’s all just distracting trivia
Art builds bridges for aliens who crave connection with humans
My need to win isn’t pretty, but it’s key to who I’ve always been
Bachmann’s attack on Obama’s TelePrompTer was cynical hypocrisy
Only certainty of life is that every one of us crosses River Styx alone