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Secrets kids know
by Allen Klein
"By learning to act more
like a child, human beings can revolutionize their
lives and become for the first time, perhaps, the kinds of
creatures their heritage has prepared them to beyouthful
all the days of their lives."
Ashley Montagu
Waiting for my plane one morning, I was not
aware of any children nearby, only adults reading their newspapers,
chatting with others or gazing into space. Suddenly there
was an announcement over the loudspeaker that the flight had
been canceled. Disgruntled, the passengers made their way
to the
counter to be reticketed. Two children, perhaps six and seven-years-old
caught my eye. They were the only ones not complaining. They
were the only ones who seemed to be having a good time in
spite of the situation.
Sitting on the floor, they reached into a
small carry-on bag, pulled out a handful of plastic Mutant
Ninja Turtles, and proceeded to enjoy themselves. When they
tired of this, they traced the lines of the carpet with their
feet. They repeatedly counted the number of colors in each
section of the rug. And they made up a game by hopping from
one pattern to another.
Kids can amuse themselves with almost anything.
I remember my mother telling me that when I was very young,
we would sometimes visit a distant aunt. I would immediately
go into the kitchen, take out all the pots and pans from the
cabinet and proceed to play with them for hours.
To a child, often the box a toy came in is
more appealing than the toy itself. "My one-year-old
is never happier," says Susan Lewis, "than when
he is unraveling an audio tape, wearing underwear on his head
or making music by clinking a crystal ornament against the
glass coffee table. Even my older
children don't need toysthey are quite content reprogramming
my computer, taking apart the lens of my camera or face-painting
with the makeup in my bathroom." Lewis amusingly notes
that maybe it's really the adults who need the toys to keep
the kids away from their possessions.
Kids even find joy in things that annoy adults.
For Rich Fullerton, who was trying to do some quiet work at
home, one of those things was an incredibly noisy garbage
truck. Every few houses it stopped to grind and crush the
trash. Each time it would break Fullerton's concentration
as he struggled to continue working. Finally, he walked to
the window hoping, he says, "to speed the trucks
passing with an annoyed glare." But, instead, what he
got was a big lesson from a small child.
"In the front yard," Fullerton says,
"my five-year-old son was thrilled. I watched him climb
on top of a fire hydrant near the street. From there, he had
the best possible view inside the back of the huge truck where
giant mechanical teeth chewed up the garbage. The noise just
made it more fascinating to him." Fullerton concludes,
"Its a marvelous thing that five-year-olds can
enjoy life by just watching garbage trucks. . . ."
The lesson adults can learn here is that the
world is filled with things for our enjoyment. The trick is
to open our eyes and look for them. "On the whole...kids
are pretty lucky," writes Michael Burkett, author of
The Dad Zone. "They can find a penny on the sidewalk
and feel rich. They can find a fossil-shaped rock and feel
like Indiana Jones. They can find an anthill and feel like
God. Kids find enjoyment in the simplest of things.
You can too.
Children remind us to treasure the smallest
of gifts, even in the most difficult of times. Erma Bombeck
found this out when she was doing research for her book about
kids with cancer, I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up,
I Want to Go to Boise. Dealing with cancer herself, Bombeck
remembers one eight-year-old diagnosed with cancer of the
nervous system. When asked what she wanted for her birthday,
Christina answered after much thought, "I don't know.
I have two sticker books and a Cabbage Patch doll. I have
every-thing!"
No matter what has happened, you too have
the power to enjoy yourself. One woman told me how her young
son helped her do this and to relish life again after her
husband was killed in an accident. Thinking his mother could
not see him, the ten-month-old child hid, stark naked, behind
an open-meshed chain link fence. At that moment, it became
clear to her that she could not raise her son with solemnity.
She says, "I resolved that I was going to find things
to enjoy in life. The playful child was a turning point for
me to realize that no matter what we have lost or gone through
we can still find joy."
The toddler also helped her turn tears to
laughter. When she would be crying
he would go into the bathroom and repeatedly return with tiny
postage-sized
pieces of toilet paper to dry one tear at a time.
Please
visit Allen Klein's web site for more
HEALING HUMOR
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