Yesterday, as I drove Oren and Erez to daycare, I had NPR on
the radio. I don’t often listen to the news on the daycare commute because I am
nervous about the kids picking up on bits and pieces of information that might
not be age appropriate, but with everything going on – Trump’s first press
conference, the leaked dossier, etc., I was overly curious about what was going
on in the news.
Of course, the words “President-Elect Trump” were spoken on
the radio within seconds of my turning it on. And Oren, ever the curious child,
asked me when Trump was going to become the president. When I told him Trump
would be president within the next few weeks, Oren looked thoughtfully out the
window. Then he looked at me and smiled.
“Trump says girls are PIGS!!” he said, and started laughing.
I hadn’t told Oren that Trump had called a woman a pig. He
had heard it from a girl in his preschool class back in September, when the
campaigns were heating up. From that point on, whenever he has heard Trump’s
name, he has the same reaction: Trump says girls are PIGS!
And I have had to have the same conversation with him. Over
and over and over again.
“Oren,” I say, “It was absolutely wrong of Mr. Trump to call
a girl a pig. That is name calling, and it hurts people’s feelings.”
Oren looked at me. He GETS it, but he still doesn’t seem to REALLY
get it. He’s four years old. To him, saying the words “poopy” and “fart” is
REALLY funny. He thinks calling people animal names is funny, too. He doesn’t
understand that the word “pig” and “cow” are used to degrade a person and make
them feel fat and shameful.
“Oren,” I continue, “There
are some words that SEEM funny, but they aren’t funny, and people use them to
hurt other people’s feelings. If someone called ME a pig, I would be really sad.
Would you want someone to call Mommy a name that would make me sad?”
Oren shook his head.
“Sometimes, even important people can behave badly, and can
do mean things. Even the president.”
And that is the end of the conversation. For a while. Until
the next time Trump’s name is mentioned and Oren remembers that Trump said
girls are pigs.
Unfortunately, this is a conversation I think I am going to
be repeating many, many times in many different ways over the next four years. I
think about Oren evolving from a four year old preschooler into an 8 year old
grade school boy all in the era of Trump, and it scares me. As his awareness of
the world around him grows, and he is more mindful of news and politics and our
country, I know I am going to have to continue to run interference between our
president’s words and my son’s interpretations of those words. I am going to
have to have to continue to explain that our chosen leader doesn’t always say
nice things, doesn’t always treat people with respect, and doesn’t always lead
by example.
As we ready ourselves for the inauguration next week, I find
myself filled with concerns I never imagined myself having. How am I going to
teach my children to respect others, show kindness to their peers, to speak
with empathy, and to exhibit restraint and care, when their president is unable
to do so?
Make sure you tell your son to not be like former President Obama also, because he smokes, and smoking is bad. He also thinks it's perfectly fine to murder innocent, unborn children, even AFTER they've been born. Oh, and he prefers to sleep with men. Tell your son not to be like that, either. In fact, tell him not to be like Obama IN ANY WAY, because if he is, when he dies, he will go to hell.
ReplyDeleteI feel sorry for you.
DeleteI try to be respectful of the president because I don't want my kid to grow up hating the office. Sometimes it's really hard though. I have told him that he sometimes tells untruths.
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ReplyDeleteI have no idea how I ended up here on this blog but that's the way of the internet I suppose. An interesting challenge and a well crafted question; a thought to consider is the institutional architecture that is designed to promote continual hate across our culture. Continually dividing through emotional tugs of us vs them while seemingly ignoring the smallest percentage of people who influence policy at the expense of the masses; it is why if you have also read the Dumbing down of America young people today have a difficult time substantiating their own position as they through K-12 have been measured by how well they follow a standard and that compliance with the process is more important than the solution itself. This essentially allowed for mass capability removal for critical thinking and challenging authority. You hit the nail on the head; what needs to happen is true principles of values and discussion that accepts and allows for the grace of our fallibility, or in other words empathy. You see it everyday the anger and visceral violence directed towards each other with political disagreements. Empathy as you said must couple with critical thinking to allow crucial conversations to mature the fabric of society. We get front and center to those who hold ideas against our own and we share our common humanity, we all get sick, we all have mothers we love, we all want whats best for our children and we build from there. Cheers =)
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