Monday, December 22, 2014
People Say the Damnedest Things
Being a parent has really forced me to get back in touch with myself and what I believe to be truth. Kids do ask the damnedest questions:
"Why do people kill people?"
"Where do people go when they die?"
"Why did (my friend)'s younger cousin die of cancer?"
"Why is (a boy) in my class hungry every day?"
"Why did (a boy in my class)'s father die in a war?"
"What is war?"
And I believe that people need to talk about and debate things, hard things, controversial things, to have any hope of living through them, understanding them, or correcting them—for ourselves and especially for the next generation.
But I also believe wholeheartedly that we need to learn to doubt ourselves more, too. (And I learned that in a morality class in my eleventh year of religious school. Thank you, Father McSweeney.) This does not necessarily have to be a turning away from what you believe in either. It just means doubt. And I believe that doubt can lead to understanding.
"Do you think it was fair to tell your brother he couldn't play with you and your friend? How would you feel if they left you out?"
Occasional doubt in what you say and do is valuable.
I also believe that these arguments can be done without going out of one's way to put others down, but I think that people need to stop being afraid of passionate or comedic words, too. Sticks and stones may break bones, but an f-bomb or a joke—even a bad, poorly written one—ideally shouldn't hurt anyone, (Mr. Stinkypants).
And why are people's souls, spirits—whatever you like to call it—not built stronger? I lean toward the belief that most often people are not taught—or do not have the opportunity—to handle debate, both internal and external debate, in a safe, open, supportive home with their family first.
Now I'm usually not too afraid of an argument or my own hurt feelings because I have some confidence (which is not the same thing as intractability), and I recognize that thinking usually comes out of these conversations. I also understand that my sum intellect is not in question if I am sometimes wrong. And I don't want my children to be afraid to think because they are afraid of being wrong. Great discoveries were made by people with great minds who were once greatly confused. And I am often greatly confused. (Therefore, I must be great?!) At any rate I am very comfortable with confusion now. (Thank you, kids.) Confusion makes me feel closer to truth.
After a debate, I then try, painfully at times, to remain open to others with whom I don't agree. That often means forgiving my former self, too. Sometimes I need time first, but I feel as though I must continue to acknowledge that these opinions exist. This part is really hard. It's hard to keep my ears open.
"Ma, Ma, Mommy, Ma, Mom, Mum, Mom."
"I hate you."
"You're stupid."
Or the facebook-experiment versions:
"They're so stupid."
"Fuck them all."
"Let them and their children die fiery deaths."
"Get rid of them (and anyone who agrees with them or who doesn't think like I do) and start over."
Sure, kill everyone you don't agree with and start over. That's always worked well in the past.
People, myself included, say the damnedest things.
And we so often say too much and do too little. It's so easy to be tyrannical in our beliefs when we push buttons from behind screens. But yes, I did just say that words should not break us. I do believe that. But I also believe that we need to sit in greater judgment of ourselves before we spew fear and hate mongering in the sickly blue, antisocial light of our laptops, too. Being brave on the Internet isn't the same thing as being brave in real life. Not at all. Fortunately being hateful and murderous on the Internet isn't the same as being hateful and murderous in real life either. Phew.
By the way, I also think that a fear of argument or just poor debating skills is why some marriages don't work. You can't live with other people if you're always on different teams. You can, however, live with people who don't share your opinions.
I think I married a pretty open, loving, forgiving man. And I thank him for always accepting me as myself and for caring enough to argue back. And he aaaallllwaaaays argues back.
I wouldn't want it any other way.
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