hmpf: Cole and Ramse from the show not actually called "Splinter" (Default)
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Lies We Tell Kids

It's also interesting in the context of the kind of stuff I've been talking about here in the last couple of weeks or so. It explains, to some degree at least, why most people are so willing to disregard alarming truths.

An excerpt:

A few Thanksgivings ago, a friend of mine found himself in a situation that perfectly illustrates the complex motives we have when we lie to kids. As the roast turkey appeared on the table, his alarmingly perceptive 5 year old son suddenly asked if the turkey had wanted to die. Foreseeing disaster, my friend and his wife rapidly improvised: yes, the turkey had wanted to die, and in fact had lived its whole life with the aim of being their Thanksgiving dinner. And that (phew) was the end of that.

Whenever we lie to kids to protect them, we're usually also lying to keep the peace.

One consequence of this sort of calming lie is that we grow up thinking horrible things are normal. It's hard for us to feel a sense of urgency as adults over something we've literally been trained not to worry about. When I was about 10 I saw a documentary on pollution that put me into a panic. It seemed the planet was being irretrievably ruined. I went to my mother afterward to ask if this was so. I don't remember what she said, but she made me feel better, so I stopped worrying about it.

That was probably the best way to handle a frightened 10 year old. But we should understand the price. This sort of lie is one of the main reasons bad things persist: we're all trained to ignore them.

I will never understand this

Date: 2008-06-20 10:26 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
While these kinds of lies may come natural to most people, they don't for me. It would never have occurred to me to answer "yes" to the turkey question and in fact I find the answer of these parents surreal and disturbing. I have no idea if that means I'd be a bad parent and would traumatize my kids for life, but that's how it is. It's an interesting thought.

MSB

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