By Vera Koo, Women’s Outdoor News, November 7, 2018

I am a college student again.

Yes, at 71 years old, I returned to school.

I enrolled this semester for a class called “Introduction to Digital Imaging” at Cañada College in Redwood City, California. It meets twice a week for 75 minutes.

My son, Austin, helped me get my student ID and registered me for the class, and I can credit him for sparking my interest in taking the course.

A few years ago, when Austin decided to buy me a computer, he asked me what I wanted. I told him I would like a computer with a couple monitors. It appealed to my interest and background in visuals.

Austin got me a quality computer and dual monitors, and for the next few years, I proceeded to use the computer for only the most basic functions. Simply put, I did not know how to do anything else on it, nor did I have the time to learn because my shooting career was in full swing.

But I retired from competitive shooting after last summer’s Bianchi Cup, and my son asked me a few months ago whether I ever planned to use the computer in the way it was intended.

I majored in art in college. I am a right-brained person with an artistic eye. I know the way something should look. However, advances in technology had left me behind. Anytime I needed a graphic, illustration or design, I had to go to my daughters for help with Adobe Photoshop.

I thought about what my son said for a few weeks and decided it was time to learn Photoshop for myself.

On the surface, this could seem like a daunting task at my age and with my relative lack of computer skills. However, my experience with competitive shooting showed me that you are never too old to learn something new.

Many competitive shooters had experience with firearms beginning at a young age and got involved in the sport early. I did not. 

I never learned how to shoot a gun until I took a class at a community college when I was 41, and I did not get serious about competitive shooting until I was in my late 40s. Through hard work and persistence, not only did I learn to shoot, I became one of the top female action pistol shooters in the world for a period of time.

If I could learn that, I could learn this.

My son offered to drive me to my first class, but I told him I would go solo. I could handle it. After all, I had managed to travel the world for shooting competitions –- places like New Zealand and Germany –- so I figured I could find a college classroom.

There were a few hiccups. First, I parked in the wrong parking lot; then, I had to ask a professor for directions to the correct building –- but, I made it to my first class.

I was by far the oldest student in the class. Most of the students were college-aged.

For young folks, working on a computer is like drinking water. It is a natural human function.

That is not the case for me.

We have a saying in China that translates to: It was like playing piano to a cow.

That adage applied to my first class. In this case, I was the cow, and everything the instructor said went right over my head.

I did not feel defeated, though.

Go To Full Article | Translations:  继续阅读簡體字 Simplified Chinese – 繼續閱讀繁體字 Traditional Chinese

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