A Moral Story
” Mother continued her earlier line of defense, “I told you na, the door is closed and we cannot go out.” The child, as ever, was sharp with his logic, “But I can see people going out, let’s go” Father piped in with a different line of convincing, “Your Sangeetha aunty had called me and said that Prasang is a good boy and he will learn a lot at the play. She said, she wanted to increase Prasang’s knowledge. “I don’t want any play – Let’s Go!
I felt sad. Not so much for the child but more for the parents. Didn’t they deserve some quality entertainment on a Sunday evening? Didn’t they deserve something better then struggling with an adamant bored child!
What followed was the typical second half – parents got frustrated and irritated. They scolded, child started crying. This made parents more frustrated (and embarrassed). They scolded strongly and this particular child’s cries reduced to sobbing and finally sleep by the end of the play. A more strongly willed child would have thrown a tantrum and ensured that the whole family was out of the auditorium. I felt in this case, the parents were lucky!
I felt sad for the parents because having deserved it, they squandered their chance! I felt sad because just as nobody trained the child how to deal with situations which are boring, nobody trained the parents how to train the child! All the parents could think was to desperately try a lie after another lie, but all in vain.
I was even sadder because, to me, the parents missed a golden opportunity. At a basic level this was a how-to-discipline-the-child issue. But more importantly it was an opportunity to develop trust and honesty amongst family members. An opportunity to exemplify to the child the basic principles on which we live our life; to build that grounding of moral values.
Many of us believe that moral stories and telling (lecturing) the child on moral values will work. Sadly, most of us (and Prasang’s parents) have experienced the contrary. I am sure even Prasang’s parents want their child to have high moral values. It is just that we tend to behave as if there is a time to preach moral values and then there is another time to operate out of convenient shortcuts.
If I constantly blame the society and the TV for setting wrong examples and then I go ahead and lie all in the name of he-is-just-a-child or it-was-just-a-play, then watch out what we are sowing and what we will reap. And it isn’t enough to watch what we are sowing. It’s imperative that we sow rich seeds to reap superlative crops.
I am less worried about what negative the child is learning (i.e., it is OK to tell a lie). I am more worried what right the child is not learning. What wonderful opportunity of value education his parents have missed. What richer experience we could offer a child to understand the magic complete honesty and trust can create!
Ponder what would have happened if Prasang’s parents would have told him the truth: That they are really enjoying the show and they want to see it till the end even if Prasang is bored. Honesty is not just the ‘best policy’, with children it is the ‘only policy’ – otherwise they learn otherwise!
If Value Education is important to you – here are some guidelines:
Some Don'ts first:1. Avoid lectures, especially during or immediately after the act. If you daughter says a lie (e.g. “I have brushed my teeth”), ‘now’ is not the time to lecture her on importance of honesty. Just accept her lie by saying something like “fine”.
3. Avoid discussing about the child’s act in front of others. Even both parents discussing about it in front of the child (“You know what your son did today…”) causes extreme embarrassment and stress and typically closes the child for further listening. Discuss the issue in private, decide on a strategy and both parents follow the same. If both disagree on the course of action – then let one take over and other just acts ignorant.
The following would be the rough steps I would take to develop any value: 1. Pre-decide a set of values I want to consciously work on: E.g.: honesty, generosity, gratitude, trust, respect etc.
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