The lies we tell our children
By jennifer
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The lies we tell our children
Jennifer Pickup, 05.09.2023
Honesty is the best policy,
Isn’t that what we teach?
Then why do parents find it so hard
To practice what they preach?
There are the lies we tell our children
To make them sleep at night:
There are no monsters under the bed,
The bed bugs will not bite.
Then we mix up our mythologies,
Religion bastardised:
Father Christmas, the Easter Bunny,
What happens when one dies.
Milk teeth hidden under pillows reap
A fairy cash reward,
And below rainbows, pots of gold are
Sat waiting to be scored.
Want to see in the dark? Eat carrots.
You can win if you’re slow…
Birthday candles will grant your wishes –
Just close your eyes and blow.
Cheese gets all of the blame for nightmares,
Eat crusts and your hair curls,
Bad luck’s in cracks and under ladders,
All oysters produce pearls.
So, throw salt over your left shoulder,
Peel apples in one piece,
Say your prayers before you go to bed,
Weave spells with your belief.
But the worst lie – has it left your lips?
We say it all the time:
‘Everything’s going to be alright.’
But telling it’s a crime.
All the lies we tell our children are
The same lies we were told,
For what goes around comes back around
To mock us when we’re old.
Please throw caution to the listening winds,
And simply tell the truth,
Or your kids will learn that people lie…
You know – you are the proof.
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Comments
Very perceptive. When I was
Very perceptive. When I was young, I remember saying to my sister, that well, if it wasn't really fairies bringing money with the teeth (which I'd been told, presumably), then maybe Mum and Dad were 'Father Christmas'. She said, Yes, and I felt shattered and disappointed and angry. So, I told my Mum the next day, that if what she'd told me about Father Christmas wasn't true, maybe what she'd told me about Jesus wasn't either. She felt awful, and ashamed, I think.
Children need answers about when things aren't alright, and sadly, if parents don't really know to pray and trust, they can't really give their children helpful guidance. Rhiannon
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I liked this very much.
I liked this very much.
I smugly believed for years that I had kept the belief of Father Christmas alive for my son, only to have him tell me he worked it out when he was tiny, but also worked out he should keep pretending he believed or I would stop buying Father Christmas's presents for him :0)
The question you raise is so interesting! Thinking about it, I wonder if the term white lies is why - they brighten the darkness of the real world, they are a soft nest of white feathers, before children fly the nest, to be remembered when they are in a dark dark storm
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Ah, yes, the white lies we
Ah, yes, the white lies we believe will keep kids on the straight and narrow. Nice to be reading your work again. Good one, this.
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