Recently I went into Home Depot to pick up some deck
paint. As my 5 gallon container was
being mixed, a lady and boy I assumed to be her son entered the area. The boy was sitting in the child seat in the
cart, although I judged him too old to be sitting in the cart, and wondered why
he was there. Did he have a tendency to
wander off? Was he a “problem child” of
some sort?
The boy immediately noticed the paint being shaken. “Look at that machine! What is it doing?”
I expected the mother to give him a reasonable answer. Instead she snapped at him, “Don’t pay any
attention to that!”
I was three or four steps away from the boy. I caught his eye and smiled at him. The mother was turned away looking at color
samples.
My paint continued to shake, and I continued to be concerned
about the mother’s response to her child.
Did he spend his entire day asking questions? Was she sick of answering?
Eventually, I couldn’t help myself. I took two steps closer to the boy, and said,
“The machine is shaking up my paint in order to mix it. If someone had to stir the color in by hand,
they would be stirring all afternoon to get it mixed properly. The machine can do it much more quickly.”
“Wow,” he said, “that machine is really interesting.”
“Yes, it is,” I replied.
The mother ignored me and the boy, for which I was
grateful. I had wondered, if she would
be angry that I had spoken to her son. I
did make sure not to get too close and invade his personal space.
Why would a mother be unwilling to answer her kid’s
questions….even if he asked thousands of them.
Isn’t that how kids learn?
About 40 years ago, a friend was visiting at our home. We sat in the living room talking while my
first daughter played on the floor. At
one point, my daughter pointed at something under my chair and asked what it
was. I more or less stood on my head to
see what she was pointing at and answer her questions. My friend said, “That is why your kids are so
smart, you know….you take the time to answer their questions.”
It has never occurred to me NOT to answer my children’s
questions! It isn’t just a matter of
satisfying their curiosity and “making them smart.” It is a way of respecting their dignity as a
person, and that is one of the most important things a parent can do.
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