13/09/2025
A Few Words from Me
I ask you to read these words with an open heart and clear mind. Share them only if you truly feel their weight and meaning. This is not an advertisement, not a money-making scheme, not a romantic tale it is a reality unfolding before our very eyes. And if we unite, if we move forward with courage, real change is not just possible it is inevitable.
A Few Words About Education That the Soul Cannot Yet Accept
When we look deeply at our education system today, our hearts ache. Education should be the pillar that holds up a nation, the foundation on which society stands, and the light that guides future generations. But the bitter truth is this: our education system is fragile, wounded, and still chained by countless challenges. Promises of reform have echoed for decades, yet the ground reality remains unchanged. From crowded villages to busy cities, students in government schools are still deprived of the quality education they deserve.
The pain grows sharper when we see that even government school teachers hesitate to send their own children to the very schools where they teach. If teachers themselves cannot trust their institutions, how can parents and students be expected to believe in them?
This truth cuts deep, exposing the broken spine of our system.
Meanwhile, education is being sold as a business. Private schools multiply, but only families with financial power can enter their gates. The poor, the rural, and the struggling are left with no choice but government schools. And so inequality spreads like a shadow: while some walk the road of opportunity, others are left in the dark, with education reduced to nothing but a hollow formality. Education is supposed to be a birthright for all but in reality, it has become a privilege for the few. This divide is splitting our society into two worlds: one with hope, and another with despair.
In the face of this injustice, can we remain silent ?
Will we keep complaining, grieving, and blaming without daring to act?
The answer must be,
Now is the time for courage, unity, and real solutions. Change may be difficult, but it is not beyond our reach. One bold step could ignite a revolution: make it mandatory for teachers to enroll their own children in government schools.
If this happens, everything changes. Classrooms gain life. Standards rise. Discipline, cleanliness, and management sharpen. Because suddenly, the school is no longer just a job it becomes the lifeline of their own childrenтАЩs future. What could drive more responsibility, more care, more love for education than that ?
This rule may sound simple, but its impact would be profound. It would shake the system at its core. It would bring dignity back to government schools, restore trust, and make every teacher, parent, and community member share equal responsibility. Education would finally become what it was meant to be not just lessons from books, but the shaping of character, discipline, skills, and awareness.
But let us not forget change is not only the duty of government or teachers. It is the duty of us all. Parents, students, activists, conscious citizens we each carry a role. We can attend school meetings, build honest dialogue between teachers and students, support local initiatives, and use our voices to demand fairness. Education reform is not a miracle that happens in a single night it is a movement, built on continuous effort and collective strength.
So, what must we do?
We must speak the truth without fear. We must bring this conversation to every home, every community, every platform.
We must commit, starting today, that we will not stay silent while our childrenтАЩs futures are at stake. Education is not the privilege of the rich it is the right of every Nepali child. Together, our voices can become a storm that breaks the silence, spreads awareness, and forces solutions.
The burden rests on us. If we remain still, the next generation will bear a heavier pain. But if we rise now, we can gift them a brighter future.
So let us not stop at complaints. Let us move toward action. Let us demand equal standards, let us demand that teachersтАЩ children study in government schools, let us demand that parents be active in school life, and let us demand a system where every child, rich or poor, can grow in the same light of quality education.
This is not a personal grievance it is the cry of our collective soul. If these words touch you, do not keep them within your heart. Share them. Discuss them. Let them inspire someone, somewhere, to take a step forward. That step could be the spark that sets a transformation in motion.
Education is the backbone of a nation. If that backbone remains weak, the nation itself will never stand tall. Strengthen education, and you strengthen Nepal.
May everyone be blessed, may everyone be happy, may everyone be healthy, and may everyone attain peace.
Thank you so much for taking the time to read this post.
Long live our Motherland. Long live Nepal. Jay Nepal,Jay Nepal,Jay Nepal.