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Self Improvement for daily Life

Life lessons you can learn from children


May 8th, 2008 | life | Posted by Nirbhasa Magee -

It’s rather amazing that as children we perpetually look forward to the time when we grow up
and can do anything we want, but then once we grow up and become laden with responsibilities,
we wistfully look back to those carefree childhood days! Certainly we ‘miss’ out on some things
as we make the transition to adulthood; by looking at how children see the world, we can
certainly learn (or relearn) some things to introduce in our own lives….
Living in the moment

… The world began this morning,


God-dreamt and full of birds…

- Patrick Kavanagh

As we grow older, our thoughts become increasingly focused on either the past or the future
instead of the now; we seem to pick up the art of nursing grievances about things that happened
and worrying about things that may never happen. But for a child, everything is unfolding in real
time before his eyes; he has not yet learnt the art of being consumed by past or future. I
remember a very interesting experience about a year ago when I was playing badminton with
some young friends of mine. The four year old youngest brother wanted his older brother to give
him the badminton racket, and the older brother pushed him away, whereupon he promptly say
down and started to cry. However, out of the corner of his eye he spotted a spare shuttlecock
lying around – the tears soon dried up, and in no time he was totally absorbed in his new
plaything. I was totally amazed at how quickly his focus had switched from crying to playing
with the toy; if that happened between adults we’d be still feeling aggrieved about it days later!

A perpetual sense of discovery

I know not how I may seem to others, but to myself I am but a small child wandering upon the
vast shores of knowledge, every now and then finding a small bright pebble to content myself
with”

- Plato

For a child, the word ‘routine’ is pure anathema. Everything – even the most ordinary objects –
has to be investigated, touched, and experienced. Ordinary things like a dog barking in the street
or the postman delivering post through the letterbox often have children pointing in open-
mouthed wonder. And yet as little as thirty years later, as adults, this constant questioning and
discovery of children sometimes irritates us because we have ‘much more important’ things to
do! We have the privilege of living on such a beautiful planet, and one way of truly appreciating
that is seeing it through the eyes of someone who is discovering everything for the very first
time.

Living in the heart

To lose one’s child-heart


Is to lose everything.

- Sri Chinmoy

It is not until we reach early adolescence that our minds become fully developed. It is no
coincidence that with the mind’s ascendancy, negative qualities such as doubt, hesitation, and
feelings of inferiority or superiority also become ensconced in the human psyche, and our actions
are more likely to be determined by the pushes and pulls of society than our inner feelings.
However before the mind starts dominating, the heart is to the fore – the spontaneous, empathetic
part of our being that does not plan or calculate, but just spontaneously acts, creates and
discovers. Unlike the mind, the heart has no inhibitions. If you asked a bunch of six year old
children “who can paint?” all hands would shoot up; the same question asked to adults might not
raise any hands at all! As we grow up, we imbibe very fixed ideas and conventions about what
we can and cannot do, but children have no such restrictions – life for them is just one long play
session.

The secret of unconditional love

Give a little to love a child, and you get a great deal back.

-John Ruskin

When we give our love to someone, we often do it with the subtle expectations of what the other
person should do. Then when the other person doesn’t fulfill those expectations, there can be a
great deal of disappointment, hurt, and also increased cynicism about the whole business of love
in general. But when a child loves, his love is unconditional, and when he smiles at you can feel
it beaming from him like the rays of a sunbeam. It is a kind of love that comes straight from the
heart, without preconditions or expectations; it is a pure expression of who he is. This kind of
love is something that we can still access as adults – inside the deepest part of our being there is
an instinctive yearning to reach out to people, to empathize, and when we give this love to others
our own deepest part is fulfilled.

Photos by Prabhakar, Sri Chinmoy Centre galleries

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