👈 Previous: Part 3 – Subjects Decoded
🔍 Purpose of This Part:
To expose how the education system subtly funnels students into specific jobs based on subjects — not talents. We’ll explore how students are trained to believe their subject = identity = career, and how this kills exploration, creativity, and real-life potential.
🧠 What Most People Believe:
“Pick the right subject, and your future is set.”
“Science = Doctor, Commerce = Businessman, Arts = Nothing.”
The system sells this as truth. In reality, this mindset traps millions in careers they don’t love, chosen from fear, not freedom.
🔄 What Actually Happens:
- From a young age, students are asked:
“Beta, science loge ya commerce?”
“Kya banna hai?” (What will you become?) - Subjects are falsely marketed as life paths:
- Science → Doctor, Engineer
- Commerce → Accountant, Banker, MBA
- Arts → Teacher (or… “no future”)
But life is not linear, and real-world success isn’t subject-dependent. Skills, mindset, and vision matter far more than syllabi.
⚠️ Dark Reality:
“The education system doesn’t help you find who you are. It decides who you should become — and punishes anything outside that script.”
- Talented writers are forced into engineering.
- Inventive tinkerers are denied because “commerce has more scope.”
- Artists are shamed for “wasting time.”
- Children are told to choose safety, not purpose.
The result? Millions of people in jobs they hate, wondering what went wrong.
📖 Real-World Examples:
- Steve Jobs loved calligraphy — which shaped the Mac’s design, not any tech degree.
- Elon Musk studied physics & economics — but taught himself rocket science.
- A.R. Rahman studied Western classical music — not “business studies.”
Their subjects didn’t define their destiny. Their curiosity did.
🧠 System Tactics to Enforce the Trap:
- Rankings: Create artificial superiority of “Science > Commerce > Arts.”
- Parents: Fear of poverty pushes them to force children toward “stable” careers.
- Teachers: Often promote safety paths because they were once trapped too.
- Culture: Reinforces this hierarchy in films, ads, society.
🧨 Psychological Impact:
- Passion becomes guilt.
- Talents go undiscovered.
- Career regret hits in 20s and 30s.
- Millions live with inner conflict: “I followed the right path. Why am I still lost?”
🧭 What Education Should Do Instead:
- Help students explore real-world problems early.
- Show how subjects intersect, not divide.
- Let students test multiple paths before choosing.
- Respect all professions equally — from artists to architects.
🔁 How This Links to Part 5:
If the system pressures you into becoming something… what is its true goal?
👉 In Part 5: Graded for Silence, we reveal how grading systems control speech, creativity, and power.
💭 Reflective Question:
“Are you choosing your path — or following a track designed to keep you quiet, useful, and replaceable?”