Welcome back, all! Last week, we talked about how chaos is always loud in English—how we metaphorically treat overwhelm as noise even when it’s completely silent. This week, I’ve been noticing how weirdly spatial our language of success is.

We “climb” the career ladder. We “reach” new heights. We’re “on top of the world” when we’re happy and “hit rock bottom” when we’re not. English treats achievement like altitude—the higher you go, the better you are. But here’s what’s strange: height in real life is terrifying. Falling is fatal. Being high up means being vulnerable, exposed, one misstep away from disaster. Yet we use height as our primary metaphor for success, as if the point of ambition is to make yourself as precarious as possible. The language never acknowledges that. We don’t say “I’m reaching new heights and I’m scared of falling.” We just say “I’m reaching new heights” and pretend the vertigo isn’t part of the deal. It’s as if English has decided that aspiration and fear can’t coexist in the same sentence—so we delete one and congratulate ourselves for the other.

This week’s essay prompt: “Write a story with the title, ‘Reaching new heights'”—Question 5 from the March 2025 Paper 2 series.

Here’s what makes this title quietly treacherous: it sounds inspirational. Students will default to stories about winning competitions, getting promotions, achieving dreams—triumphs wrapped in neat narrative bows. But that title is a cliché for a reason, and the strongest responses understand that the only way to survive a cliché title is to complicate it. Can you write a story where reaching new heights is terrifying? Where success feels like exposure? Where the climb matters more than the summit?

The danger is thinking this prompt wants a happy ending. It doesn’t. It wants honesty about what it costs to go higher. The phrase “new heights” can be literal (a physical climb, a bridge, a rooftop) or metaphorical (an achievement, a risk, a breaking point), but either way, the word “new” is doing serious work. New means unfamiliar. New means you don’t know if you can handle it. This tests whether you understand that good storytelling doesn’t avoid discomfort—it lives inside it.

Most students will write success stories—someone tries something hard and wins. The sophisticated ones will write survival stories, where the character realizes that reaching new heights isn’t about glory, it’s about learning to function while being afraid. They’ll understand that the best version of this title isn’t about what you achieve—it’s about what you discover about yourself when you’re too high up to climb back down.

The full essay is available for our premium members and is also marked and graded according to the IGCSE First Language English official rubrics and marking criteria. By reading it, you can see how a top-band narrative transforms a canyon bridge crossing into a meditation on inherited fear, the weight of other people’s expectations, and the moment when survival becomes a form of defiance.

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