T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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955.1 | EXPERIENCING THE REALITIES OF LIFE... | BRAT::DISMUKE | | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:10 | 22 |
| I think I would not use the term "exposing them to" rather "experience
realities of life with children". We have two boys 4 and 6 and have
been asked many questions that I took for granted. Why is their
mommy's skin brown, or that brown skin person, or why can't he walk
like me, or why does he look different. We live in a great
neighborhood for these experiences - we have very handicapped boys
living next door, we have an interracial couple with children, we have
an Indian family, and we had a family that allowed the kids free reign
of everything - the 16 yr olds were left responsible for the two young
girls (age 5 and 7) and those girls were exposed to EVERYTHING
imagineable. And that's just the families within 4 doors to my house.
Luckily, my boys are still at the age where they are comfortable asking
parents questions. We, too, deal very honestly with them and take their
questions very seriously. I think this is the most important learning
process kids will go thru.
Now if I could just convince them that smoker's are allowed rights too.
Boy do they get on my parent's case at every meeting. They are worse
than reformed smokers!!
-sandy
|
955.2 | Provide security and context | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:26 | 25 |
| re: -.1
I think that, on the whole, if a kid is old enough to ask questions
about something, he or she is old enough to be exposed to it. The
context of the exposure is important, and here you have considerable
influence.
If your fear is that some of this exposure will in some way harm your
child (whether by troubling him in a way he can't deal with yet, or by
influencing him toward thought or action which you consider harmful), I
would answer that growing up in a loving family is what gives him the
strength, security, and self-respect to deal with the troubling aspects
of society. Your ability to hide these things from is limited. Your
ability to help him cope with them is far greater.
Part of the context you provide is the simple explanation of the
differences you cite. At some point the child must also think about the
significance of those differences. What, for example, is the
significance of the difference in skin color versus the difference in
eye color? Or, why are there beggars and homeless people now (so you
ultimately get into political and economic issues)?
Kit
|
955.3 | someone beat me to a reply | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:30 | 1 |
| .2 was, of course, a reply to the base note.
|
955.4 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Tue Jun 11 1991 12:40 | 20 |
| .0 -
One of the reasons we continue to live in the city is to have these
realities be part of our everyday life. We live in an interracial
neighborhood and take public transportation regularly, so some of the
people and sights you mention have been part of our son's life as long
as he can remember (he's 3.5). He still asks the same questions as your
son.
I think at a certain age kids begin to notice differences and wonder
about them; I'm glad personally that our kid gets both information from
us and information from his own experience and observation.
I too have the urge to protect my son, but in sum I feel it is much,
much better for him to experience the diversity of life than to be
protected from it, even when it is upsetting (like the street person we
saw on Sunday verbally abusing passers-by, including us. I didn't enjoy
it, but I want him to know such people are part of our world.)
Lucy
|
955.5 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Thu Jun 27 1991 12:04 | 18 |
|
re .0
My daughter, almost 6, has been "exposed" to a lot of difference since
she was little. There is no other way - I am Chinese and my husband is
English. There are people in the grocery store with food stamps.
There are kids whose parents are divorce, etc. A lot of these
differences are just facts of time. I think, there should not be
this magic age concept. Kids are smart and the earlier the exposure
begins, the better. I would recommend not giving your child a big
dose all at once, but bring to his attention everyday occurrences and
encourage him to ask questions. Give him straightforward answers without
much judgement. When he can understand the concepts, when he is more
mature then you can tell him what you think of those experiences.
Eva
|
955.6 | Kid are perceptive! | JAWS::TRIPP | | Wed Jul 24 1991 16:40 | 14 |
| We (or at least I) don't give our kids the credit of insite they
deserve. AJ is 4-1/2 and understands the concept of some boys and girls
don't have two parents, even understands the meaning of divorce=going
away forever. The little oriental girl at daycare who had a tall
red-headed daddy (adopted), or the new boy in daycare who is mildly
mongoloid, and doesn't speak clearly. He too noticed when we visit
Boston that it's quite different, noisy, and busy compared to his
quiet, fairly rural home town. For that matter I'm still adjusting
after ten years in Central Mass, after spending the first 20+years of
my life in a suburb of Boston, where I truly believed that your
neighbors moved in and out at the begining or end of each college year!
Lyn
|