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Articles
Earth-friendly kids: instilling reverence for our planet Earth-friendly kids: instilling reverence for our planet - Family Living
Mothering, March-April, 2003 by Heather Rader
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"Mom, why don't people love the Earf?" asks my son, Jamin. He holds a bag bulging with the trash that he and his dad have picked up from our street.
"Because we don't teach our children about reverence," I reply. I smile as he tries the word out for the first time, forming his mouth carefully around the sounds. Reverence doesn't just easily roll off his tongue--it sounds instead like wevewence--but the meaning still holds true. I respect Jamin's questions by answering with genuine explanations, even if they are difficult to comprehend or pronounce.
In his thought-provoking book Seat of the Soul (Simon & Schuster, 1990), Gary Zukav writes, "Reverence is an attitude of honoring Life.... Reverence is also simply the experience of accepting that all Life is, in and of itself, of value." Ah-ha! Reverence was the word I needed to articulate to my son our roles as stewards and caretakers of the Earth.
"Why don't people love the Earf?" My four year old is asking me to explain a confusing and sad reality. I share with him my belief that we let our daily lives become so busy that we are ignorant about where our food comes from, take for granted the aquifers beneath our feet, and ignore the alarming buildup of waste. Useless gadgets intended to make our lives easier merely isolate us further. We trade doing the "right thing" for the easy way out. Back to Articles
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