|
Teaching Children by Example
by Venerable Thubten Chodron©
...Dharma practice isn't just coming to
the temple; it's not simply reading a Buddhist scripture or chanting
the Buddha's name. Practice is how we live our lives, how we live
with our family, how we work together with our colleagues, how we
relate to the other people in the country and on the planet. We need to bring the Buddha's
teachings on loving-kindness into our workplace, into our family,
even into the grocery store and the gym. We do this not by handing
out leaflets on a street corner, but by practicing and living the
Dharma ourselves. When we do, automatically we will have a positive
influence on the people around us. For example,
you teach your children loving-kindness, forgiveness, and patience
not only by telling them, but by showing it in your own behavior.
If you tell your children one thing, but act in the opposite way,
they are going to follow what we do, not what we say.
If we're not careful, it is easy to teach our
children to hate and never to forgive when others harm them. Look
at the situation in the former Yugoslavia: it is a good example
of how, both in the family and in the schools, adults taught children
to hate. When those children grew up, they taught their children
to hate. Generation after generation, this went on, and look what
happened. There is so much suffering there; it's very sad. Sometimes
you may teach children to hate another part of the family. Maybe
your grandparents quarreled with their brothers and sisters, and
since then the different sides of the family didn't speak to each
other. Something happened years before you were born -- you don't
even know what the event was -- but because of it, you're not supposed
to speak to certain relatives. Then you teach that to your children
and grandchildren. They learn that the solution to quarreling with
someone is never to speak to them again. Is that going to help them
to be happy and kind people? You should think deeply about this
and make sure you teach your children only what is valuable.
This is why it's so important that you
exemplify in your behavior what you want your children to learn. When you find resentment, anger,
grudges, or belligerence in your heart, you have to work on those,
not only for your own inner peace but so you don't teach your children
to have those harmful emotions.
Because you love your children, try to also love yourself as well.
Loving yourself and wanting yourself to be happy means you develop
a kind heart for the benefit of everybody in the family.
Bringing Loving-Kindness to the School
We need to bring loving-kindness not
only into the family but also into the schools. Before I became
a nun, I was a schoolteacher, so I have especially strong feelings
about this. The most important thing for children to learn is not
a lot of information, but how to be kind human beings and how to
resolve their conflicts with others in a constructive way.
Parents and teachers put a lot of time and
money into teaching children science, arithmetic, literature, geography,
geology, and computers. But do we ever spend any time teaching them
how to be kind? Do we have any courses in kindness? Do we teach
kids how to work with their own negative emotions and how to resolve
conflicts with others? I think this is much more important than
the academic subjects. Why? Children may know a lot, but if they
grow up to be unkind, resentful, or greedy adults, their lives will
not be happy.
Parents want their children to have a
good future and thus think their children need to make a lot of
money. They teach their children academic and technical skills so
that they can get a good job and make lots of money -- as if money
were the cause of happiness. But when
people are on their deathbed, you never hear anybody wishfully say,
"I should have spent more time in the office. I should have
made more money." When people
have regrets about how they lived their life, usually they regret
not communicating better with other people, not being kinder, not
letting the people that they care about know that they care. If
you want your kids to have a good future don't teach them just how
to make money, but how to live a healthy life, how to be a happy
person, how to contribute to society in a productive way.
Teaching Children to Share with Others
As parents you have to model this. Let's say
your children come home and say, "Mom and Dad, I want designer
jeans, I want new rollerblades, I want this and I want that because
all the other kids have it." You say to your children, "Those
things won't make you happy. You don't need them. It won't make
you happy to keep up with the Lee's." But then you go out and
buy all the things that everybody else has, even though your house
is already filled with things you don't use. In this case, what
you are saying and what you are doing are contradictory. You tell
your children to share with other children, you don't give things
to charities for the poor and needy. Look at the homes in this country:
they are filled with things we don't use but can't give away. Why
not? We're afraid that if we give something away we might need it
in the future. We find it difficult to share our things, but we
teach children that they should share. A simple way to teach your
children generosity is to give away all the things you haven't used
in the last year. If all four seasons have gone by and we haven't
used something, we probably won't use it the next year either. There
are many people who are poor and can use those things, and it would
help ourselves, our children, and the other people if we gave those
things away.
Another way to teach your children kindness
is to not buy everything that you want. Instead, save the money
and give it to a charity or to somebody who is in need. You
can show your children through your own example that accumulating
more and more material things doesn't bring happiness, and that
it's more important to share with others.
Teaching Children About the Environment and
Recycling
Along this line, we need to teach children
about the environment and recycling. Taking
care of the environment that we share with other living beings is
part of the practice of loving kindness.
If we destroy the environment, we harm others. For example, if we
use a lot of disposable things and don't recycle them but just throw
them away, what are we giving to future generations? They will inherit
from us bigger garbage dumps. I'm very happy to see more people
reusing and recycling things. It is an important part of our Buddhist
practice and an activity that temples and Dharma centers should
take the lead in.
|