The very best thing about being a grandparent is
that you get to relive the amazing journey through childhood, without being
distracted by exhaustion or overburdened with responsibility.
And what fascinating creatures two-year-olds
are!
“How
does she do that without throwing her back out?”
“How
does she fall down like that and not break something?”
“How
does she SLEEP like that!?”
What has really captured me about all my
grandchildren, though, is their limitless curiosity.
“What’s
THAT SOUND?” “That’s the furnace coming on, Nina.”
“What’s
THAT THING?” “That’s a dust bunny, Nina.”
"What's Grandma DOING?" "She's going to the washroom, Nina."
Everything, from a candle snuffer to a
cracker crumb creates a moment of joyous discovery.
That capacity for curiosity seems to diminish, though, with age. It’s easy, over time, to acquire a “Been there done
that” attitude. We live near Niagara Falls. I’m always taken aback at how
awestruck visitors are when they see the Falls for the first time. I shouldn’t
be. The Falls are amazing. But for locals, it’s kind of ho hum.
Betty Pries is a well-known mediator and
conflict management specialist who is known to many churches in Waterloo
Presbytery. I heard Betty say something at a workshop that really stuck with
me.
She said that, in high stress or conflicted
situations, we should strive to “move from judgment to curiosity.”
Moving from judgment to curiosity.
Judgment is essential. It’s one of the key
components of a moral life. Every time we choose right over wrong, or better
over worse, we exercise judgment.
But judgment can harden into a shell that
locks us and others into one place, ridgid and immovable. Judgment can make us
lazy. Rather than making the effort to truly know and understand someone, we
make a snap judgment. “Oh, she’s (fill in the blanks.) What do you expect?” We
make snap judgments that close down our sense of curiosity about the other, and
the potential for creating a relationship.
Curiosity comes naturally to Nina. I need to work at it. We need to work to maintain that sense of curiosity about
one another:
“I
wonder what he meant by that?”
“I
wonder what made her react in that way?”
“I
wonder what’s going on in his life right now?”
“I
wonder what it would be like to be in her place?”
Curiosity can move us past the fixed certainties
of judgment to a place of openness and wonder.
Christians have spent two thousand years
pondering the meaning of Jesus’ cryptic saying that his followers must “become
like little children.” Jesus’ words could mean many things, but one thing I
believe they mean is that we need to continue cultivating a sense of curiosity
about the world around us, and the people who cross our paths.
Thanks Paul. I think you have caught an important feature in community -- to ask more about how this might be. Too often we do just stop asking the questions. Very helpful to me just now. Peace and care.
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