There are more than one ways in which one can get educated. This is a list which I found on the net... pretty insightful (though it does not add to 101:0):
- Grow enough grain for one loaf of bread -- and make and eat the loaf
- Answer ALL the questions of a 3 year old for a week
- Spend a day alone in a wild place
- Follow your trash to its final resting place
- Collect food and blankets and spend a day giving them to homeless people taking the time to stop and talk about life
- Help in the birth of a lamb, cow, or horse
- Visit a slaughter house (try to withhold judgment)
- Organize a rite of passage ceremony for an adolescent, someone at mid-life, or yourself
- Switch genders for the day
- Build a house (your own, or for Habitat for Humanity)
- Ask a low rider how the lifters on their car work
- Apprentice yourself to someone you've always wanted to learn from
- Take a picture of you and all your stuff in front of the place where you live. Compare it to the pictures in Peter Menzel's Material World
- Read the sacred texts of another tradition
- Imagine your most delicious relationship and then go first
- Work for a week on an assembly line
- Spend a week without stepping in a car. Pay attention to how your town looks from a bike, bus, or sidewalk
- Exchange tutoring with a teenager - math or bicycle repair in exchange for Web browsing, skate boarding, dance, or ??
- Go to someone else's church, synagogue, or place of worship
- Go on a vision quest
- Take a dance class from a different culture
- Interview the oldest person you can find; record the conversation
- Interview a child
- Imagine a day in your life 15 years from now
- Plant and care for a tree
- Ask yourself, "What if everyone in the world behaved the way I am behaving?"
- Get the names of the favorite books of your dentist, grocery store clerk, mother, co-worker, and your minister/rabbi/priest or spiritual guide. Read those books
- Pretend to be someone else on the Internet
- Trace your water supply back to its source - and follow it down the drainpipes to its destiny
- Finger paint
- Spend a day in a neighborhood where you've never been before - without carrying any money
- Ask your friends, and your ex-friends, to anonymously send you a list of your five best and five worst character traits
- Live for a day off your garden
- Channel surf for an evening; ask yourself what about the programs is drawing people
- Be quiet for 5 minutes per day; increase gradually to 20
- Ask a young person what's on his or her mind and heart, and listen (don't try to 'fix it')
- Figure out when and on what part of your dwelling the sun's rays fall at different times of year (for extra credit: calculate the photovoltaic potential of your roof)
- Take a year off
- Read a foreign newspaper
- Meditate on the life of your unborn grandchild
- Talk to the janitor
- Assume that everything is your responsibility, if not your fault
- Examine a handful of compost or rich soil under a microscope
- Go without food for three days
- Watch a child being born
- Write a creation myth
- Visit an observatory, and look at the stars through a big telescope
- Map the creeks, streams, and rivers in your watershed
- Choose six jobs that interest you; find someone to interview for each and spend a day working alongside them
- Watch a snail
- Find out what percentage of the world's financial wealth is owned by the top 50 corporations, and how much by the 50 wealthiest people
- Visit the emergency ward of a major hospital
- Sleep outside under the stars
- Discuss these questions with a friend : If the Universe is finite, what happens at its edge ? If it's infinite, how did it get there ? If the Universe started 15 billion years ago, what was there before it started? Does time go on forever ?
- Visit a spiritual healer
- Find out what the clerk at the grocery store is thinking about
- Follow your electric wires to the source of the electricity
- Learn to line dance
- Spend two hours with a counsellor exploring your life
- Pick three trees of different species and spend an hour meditating under each one
- Go on a week-long solo journey by bus, bike, or foot to a place you've never been; listen to the people you meet
- Learn how to build a wall
- Fall in love
- Take a bicycle to pieces and put it together again
- Visit a Native American reservation and talk with the people you meet about their past and future
- Learn how to give a good massage
- Spend a day watching a state or provincial legislature at work
- Calculate how much carbon dioxide your family is adding to the atmosphere each year
- Ask a good friend to share the most important lessons he or she has learned about sex and how to make love
- Perform menial or repetitive work at a job that lasts at least a week
- Read primary sources on history, science, social science (that is, avoid the authors who are interpreting the work of others)
- Carry all your trash around with you for a week. At the end of the week, weigh it all
- Write an episode of one of the current top-rated sitcoms on commercial TV; explain the story line to a friend
- Repair a damaged relationship
- Start that band/garden/book/art movement you told yourself you'd always do
- Throw the biggest party you can; try to get someone from every decade dancing
- Ask your parents about their relationship
- Refuse to do meaningless work for one week
- Offer to help your child's teacher
- Admit that you don't know and ask for help
- Tell people how you are really doing
- Go to a punk rock or hip-hop show
- Sell your car and go to India
- Seek out a friend of a different race & class
- Ask people what they are planning to do about the year 2000 computer bug
- Calculate the total miles traveled from the towns labeled on food cans in your pantry
- Ask a kid about divorce
- Teach yourself to play guitar
- Go to the industrial section of town and see how much free stuff is available (go dumpster diving)
- Make a movie about your neighborhood
- Visit the nearest creek once a week for a month and notice changes along the banks, in the water flows, in the pools
- Collect dumpling recipes from around the world; throw a dumpling party
- Imagine yourself looking back on your life at 90 years of age: what are the highlights? Who has been most important? What do you wish you had done?
Now go out and do those things, thank those people and live those highlights.
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