My learning experience was that of driving a car. I had always wanted to know how to drive a car, but the availability of cars was limited. My dad would not just release his car for me to handle, even though I had clocked eighteen. Unfortunately, I was not comfortable going to a driving school, especially because I did not have a readily available vehicle to practice with after the training. My dad was pretty stingy with his car and guarded it like a new wife or precious baby. This, however, did not prevent me from stealing my dad's Mercedes-Benz to drive occasionally, even though it was limited to the compound.
I realized that getting anyone to teach me for free was going to be difficult, and I didn't like the idea of driving schools. I have heard from different sources that you would probably spend most of the days of the training doing practical sessions and sometimes hardly completing the basics of driving. Eventually, I made up my mind to learn driving by myself and committed myself to it. My strategy was simple: learn by observation. As simple as it sounds to learn by observation, it's never that simple when reality dawns.
I began to study drivers whenever I entered a car. I preferred to sit at the front where I could have access to observe the actions and inactions. I watched how the gears were changed and at what point. I felt very confident that I could handle a car when the time came. Lucky for me, my mom procured a Honda Accord in 2009. My older siblings were far away from town, and the implication was that I was the only male in the house to drive the car. This was how I laid my hands on the steering of a car for the first time on a major road. I had a mix of pride and fear as I drove my car past the seemingly narrow gate of the compound (probably because I was a newbie at it).
My first drive was to the main campus of the university, and there, I had no companion. I had a light brush on the rim of the tires as a result of distraction, but gradually, my hands stabilized on the steering. My mom was surprised when I informed her of my action, and it took a while before she was convinced to let me handle the car, not without attaching the learner sign to the car. I didn't mind the L sign on the car, for I knew it was only a matter of time before I overgrew such.
My driving skills have improved, and I have driven to distant parts of Nigeria like Kogi, Niger, Kaduna, Kebbi, and Sokoto. I have come to love driving and pride myself on it as a skill.
A skill I was required to learn before graduating from medical school was venepuncture or perhaps, cannula insertion. I was practically nonchalant about this skill as a student. Karma however caught up eith me as an intern when I was left alone to secure an intravenous access. My escape was a very lovely senior doctor who took his time to take me through the process and the skill has remained stuck with me till tomorrow.
Thank you for reading. I would love to have your comments and contributions.