O
Other_Eric
Guest
One can admit that there are some parents who lack the gumption to tell their children how things really are and, for at least some of these phrases you use, there is a definite element of deception involved in order to avoid unpleasant truths. We must be careful lest we lapse into over-reach, however. In particular, I would like to address the following phrases:This comes up from time to time on here. If we are going to be that legalistic with lying to children, then we need to avoid the following phrases:
It seems that the level of involvement that you require of Mommy, once having used this phrase, is extraordinarily unreasonable, even to the mind of the three-year-old to whom it might be directed. If Mommy dies, happens to be at work or is somehow absent children tend to know that Mommy’s protection will not be forthcoming. That’s why they scream for their parents so desperately when they are missing. Children understand that Mommy would not intentionally allow harm to come to them if she is capable of preventing it. No child I know, nor adult, assumes that this phrase necessitates incorruptible health or omnipresence.
- “Mommy would never let anything happen to you” - not true. If mommy goes nuts, dies, or just happens to be at work, bad things can happen to you. Hard to know for sure.
No Christian ought to be so callous as to imagine that love dies with the body. Can you honestly look upon a crucifix and believe that God’s love for man died with Christ?
- “Mommy will always love you.” - not true, see mommy’s death again as an example.
A child who does not eat his vegetables will not grow up to be big and strong because he has glutted himself on meat. Indeed, the malnutritional ailments that could develop as a result of vitamin deficiency could prevent the child from “growing up big and strong.” It therefore seems obvious to me that encouraging the consumption of vegetables by the use of this phrase contains no deception.
- “Eat your vegetables and you’ll grow up to be big and strong.” - not true per se, the child could grow up to be weak, or frail. Besides, it takes protein and amino acids to build strong muscle, which aren’t as common in most vegetables.
Even if we were to allow that each of these phrases could not be true in some hyper-literal sense, we would still have to contend with the clear intent behind the use of each of these phrases. That it, they are meant to communicate something that is true. Mommy loves her child, which is why she will not let anything happen to him, always will love him, wishes him to eat his vegetables or believes him to be the most beautiful baby in the world. The Santa Clause story does not contain even this. It is a tale that actually obscures a parent’s love for his child by allowing the child to believe that his Christmas gifts came from some fantastical creature with supernatural powers instead of them.