Parents tend
to have a lot of different opinions on what qualifies as the best way to raise
our children. We may not all see eye to eye on the foods we feed our kids, the schools
we attend or the sports they should or should not play, but I think it’s safe to say that we all have one
thing that we can agree on. We all want to raise kind children. No one walks around arguing that they are
really hoping to raise a giant jerk. No
one wants their child to grow up to be an adult who isn’t kind. Knowing what we
want as parents and ensuring that we are doing it though are two different
things.
On any given
day when we turn on the news or scroll through Facebook we are inundated with
people behaving in ways that are anything but kind. We have become so used to
this behavior that when someone does do something kind we share it and talk
about it as if we just saw a real live unicorn. When did kindness become so
shocking? Don’t get me wrong I love a good story about kindness but part of me
just wishes these stories didn’t surprise us.
Raising
children is no easy task, especially if you want to raise those children to be
good people. We are raising two boys and I am often told how lucky I am to have
boys. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard boys are so much easier to
raise than girls. Really. Are they? I don’t think they are. I don’t think
raising children in a world where kindness is not the norm is easy for anyone
whether you have a gaggle of girls or an army of boys. We are doing the best we
can to teach our boys right from wrong. We talk to them about leading instead
of following. We talk to them about treating people the way they themselves
want to be treated. We talk and we talk and we talk. We hope that they hear us but it’s not always
easy to tell if they are really listening.
The other
day we were in New York City for the day. We live in New Jersey so my boys love
taking in the sights of New York whenever we get the chance to go. New York is
known for its busy streets. At any given time on any given day the streets are
full of cars, buses, people walking, people on bikes, and people running.
Everyone is always in a rush. Most of the time people can be seen crossing the
street while looking at their phone or while wearing headphones. I used to work
in the city every day before having children and I was one of those people. Now
when we go into the city it can be pretty obvious at times that we are not in
fact New Yorkers. We know our way around but we forget sometimes how fast you
have to move to keep up with the herd.
We had to
take the subway uptown and when we got down onto the platform we were unsure if
we were in the right place. We tried
looking for a map but couldn’t find one. Everyone around us was rushing around
and it started to feel really chaotic. The last thing we wanted to do was get
on the wrong train. All of a sudden out of nowhere a woman walked up to me and
asked where we were trying to go. I told her and she smiled and said, “You are
in the right place. This is your train. I am going to the same spot. You have
five stops.” I couldn’t thank her enough. There we were out of our element and
slightly panicked and this woman decided to approach me to help. She did this
for no other reason than seeing someone who needed help and offering it. At
that moment I smiled. It really made me happy. When we got onto the train I
smiled at her and she smiled back. She knew how grateful I was. My oldest son
smiled at her too. He knew that she had helped his mom and that made him happy.
When we got
to our stop we made our way back up to the street and that’s when I realized I
no longer had my cell phone. Did I drop it? Did I leave it at the museum when
we were leaving? We stood at the top of the subway stairs while my husband
called it and I dug frantically through my purse. It wasn’t there and I was
really upset. It had the address of the place we were supposed to be arriving
at next and it has so many pictures. I started to get really upset about all
the pictures. It was almost 5pm so the streets were really busy. All of a
sudden a man who was rushing to catch his train stopped and approached us. He
asked if we were ok and if we needed any help. I quickly told him we were fine
and thanked him for stopping. It had happened again. Another person had noticed
we looked like we needed help and had stopped out of kindness. I stopped
worrying about my phone and decided I would check at our next stop with the museum.
Luckily it turned out to be there.
As we made
our way into the movie theater my youngest son looked up at me with his
innocent four year old eyes and said “Mommy people in New York sure are nice.”
I realized he was right. Not just about people in New York. People for the most
part are nice. We are so used to seeing and hearing the negative things that we
forget that kindness is all around us. I realized that day that the best way
for me to teach my boys about kindness is to show them kindness. I can talk to
them until I’m blue in the face about them being kind, but it’s when they see
us acting kind that they really understand it.
For the first time in a long time I was without my cell phone. It made
me have to see people, really see them and it made me realize I want my boys to
see me like that more often. I want them to see me being present. I want them
to see me noticing things around us instead of the things in my phone. The man
and woman who separately helped us that day had two things in common. They were
present. Neither of them had their heads buried in a phone so they were really
able to see us and they were kind.
Being kind
is a quality but it’s also an action. In order for my children to grow up to be
kind and do kind things I need to be present. I need to look at people. I need
to be human. It’s when we take time to really see the people around us that we
wind up being kind in our everyday lives.
This post was also featured on The Today Parenting Team
Thanks for talking a bit about New Yorkers. I've never been and have always been intimidated about going because it is out of my element! I agree that kids should know that kindness is the norm, not the exception!
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