Lessons Learned…
Children Are Children
Kids are resilient;
everyone says that. They are resilient to the extent that their minds and
hearts are malleable, they are willingly vulnerable and trusting until they
learn otherwise, and they have little to no choice concerning their
circumstances. They are, at their young age, along for the ride of life and
fully at the mercy of the scruples, opinions, perspectives, insecurities, and
personalities of those to whom they’ve been entrusted. Raising kids is such an
incredibly humongous and significant responsibility with unbelievably
long-range rippling ramifications frequently accepted with absolutely flippant
and casual consideration. Kids are resilient becomes the fallback excuse for
complete irresponsibility, and that is simply not good enough for these
treasures known as kids who bring unique gifts to this world that no one has
ever seen yet. Although it may not clearly show, these little ones carry
the burden of our incompetence, our irresponsibility, our immaturity, and all
of the rest of our unresolved adolescence, and even though covered under the
guise of resilience, occasionally the burden shows up unexpectedly. He
was just six young years old, but he had been to a war zone far too many times.
He smiled and laughed and played, studied and learned alongside his classmates,
but it was unmistakably evident that a rage was simmering just below the
surface. With extra patience, grace, and love an intuitive teacher would serve
and reach out to a child such as this one every day, every day, every day. The
burning desire, the motivating hope to make a difference especially in this
burdened life would be a daily over-riding mission to an intuitive
teacher. Could the rage silently consuming him and confusing him be
assuaged with generous and regular doses of all things good? I hoped so.
Kneeling down one morning to help him with his backpack, I noticed he was
visibly agitated. You okay? No. No. No. I am not okay. Nothing is okay.
Everything is bad. Everything. Everything. Everything! The final everything was
shouted as he wound up and punched me in the eye and then melted into a
sobbing, remorseful puddle of tears and shame and frustration and anger and
fear. I hugged him until the sobbing quieted. The class was silent and stone
still, yet with deer-in-the-headlight eyes, their deep concern begged to know
why. Sometimes life is just very hard and it makes your heart really hurt.
That’s why we need each other. Over the next days and weeks we gently
unwrapped the paining issues and engaged the strong, necessary support to help
bring healing and peace to that precious little six year old. Children
are children and their resiliency is that of a child and should never be
overestimated to accommodate errors of the adults in their world.
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