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Devon Corneal

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Mirror, Mirror

Posted: 12/27/11 10:03 AM ET

"Mommy, you don't look happy."

Turning around to take a look at my four-year old in the backseat, I wondered what prompted him to tell me that.

I felt like I do most mornings -- a bit harried, not as rested as I might like, focused on making sure everyone is comfortable, fed and launched toward their various destinations. Although this routine often leaves me discombobulated, on most days I feel optimistic. After all, this is what I signed up for, and, routine ups-and-downs aside, I love my home life and that little kid in my backseat.

So, why did my son think I looked sad? Or, more accurately, not happy? I did a quick check in the rear-view mirror. Was it the bags under my eyes? As a woman closing in on forty (and by closing in, I speak of days, not years), I spend more time than I should looking at my reflection. My mirror helps me decide if it's time for another visit to the salon to cover those grays (it is), if I should get bangs to hide the wrinkles on my forehead (I could, but I won't), or if I put on too much blush in my haste to get out the door (Ringling Brothers audition perhaps?).

I rely on my bit of polished glass to identify and then camouflage any imperfections I find staring back at me. What I didn't expect before becoming a mother was that my little boy would be an entire mirror unto himself. He is at once a reflection of me and a reflection of his own (disarmingly sensitive) thoughts about me.

When I became a parent, my ability to judge myself (and everyone else) went into overdrive. I question the choices I make, the lessons I teach, the things I let slide. If life were like The Truman Show, I'd be watching re-runs to dissect my every decision. And, woe be to you if you are involved in my son's life in any meaningful way, because I'm probably judging you too.

My son, however, hasn't yet learned to be that critical. He has his (little) opinions and isn't shy about sharing them. Sometimes what he says can be a tad painful to hear, but it's never malicious. When he tells me I don't look happy, he's not judging me. He's observing. He's reflecting back whatever comes his way, in the way that only young children can. Even if it is surprising, or sometimes throws me off balance, I find this incredibly cool. I revel in it because it is utterly innocent, unadulterated, and one of the hallmarks of his curiosity about the world around him and about me.

I'd seen this honest observation in action before. When she was about five, my cousin told me I was beautiful. I was a twenty-something in the midst of a dating dry spell, so her compliment thrilled me. Clearly, this kid was a person of discerning tastes. A minute later, she pointed to a woman who looked to be in her late 70's with slightly blue hair and sagging skin that had seen a lifetime of pre-sunscreen Florida tanning -- and my cousin said, "She's beautiful too." Everyone, to my lovely cousin (a beauty in her own right), was beautiful.

Now in college, she's grown more like the rest of us and certainly doesn't see everyone around her as beautiful. But, that open, appreciative, and fleeting part of her childhood was magical. It's a magical part of my son, too.

Young children come at the world without preconceived notions of "how things should be." They haven't bought into limited ideas of beauty or appropriate conversation. They don't censor their thoughts to fit in. They call it like they see it and invite us along for the ride. This does, of course, also lead to candid conversations about poop, boogers, farts, and vomit, but that's the price of admission to a world unfettered by convention.

I wish I could remember what that feels like and right now, I desperately want to keep my son from ever forgetting -- even if that means I receive a daily and completely honest assessment of my mood.

As parents, we're supposed to help our children learn to be discerning about the world. Without a critical intellect, kids can't identify what is good or bad, or what is just or unjust. How can you be passionate about something if you don't have an opinion about its value? Who speaks up to tyrants or dictators if everyone just accepts the way things are? Our goal can't be to go through life without categorizing, rating or judging, right?

There's a difference, though, between being discerning and being judgmental, and between thinking critically and being critical. Being discerning means kids have the tools to make good choices. Being judgmental means you waste precious time in front a mirror cataloging gray hair.

So after years of living around mirrors, I've discovered that the most honest and revealing one is the four-year old boy sitting in the back seat of my car.


 

Follow Devon Corneal on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dcorneal

"Mommy, you don't look happy." Turning around to take a look at my four-year old in the backseat, I wondered what prompted him to tell me that. I felt like I do most mornings -- a bit harried, not ...
"Mommy, you don't look happy." Turning around to take a look at my four-year old in the backseat, I wondered what prompted him to tell me that. I felt like I do most mornings -- a bit harried, not ...
 
 
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LarryDoyle
Word Trafficker
10:20 PM on 01/03/2012
He said you didn't look happy. He wasn't commenting on your appearance.
09:21 AM on 01/02/2012
lucky little boy. i wish mine would have been like that. instead of gearing every interaction we ever had towards ensuring that i dont forget her. what a difference.
09:18 AM on 01/02/2012
Interesting eh!
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ShakeYourComplacency
Commonsense Progressive
09:03 AM on 01/02/2012
Devon, I laughed when I saw your bi-line. I didn't notice it up front, but after I read the last 3 paragraphs, (which were great, btw), I thought, oh...she has a lawyer mind. Then I saw you ARE one, lol.

He's sensing your worries, and thoughts, and critical nature, and it doesn't necessarily have to do with how many tasks you have to complete that day. But balance is certainly key. So spend some "smell the roses" time with him, too, so he can absorb that side of you.

And btw, there's also nothing wrong with sharing your thoughts with him, so he's not baffled. Children don't know why adults sometimes have serious faces, and they may worry about it or internalize it. Tell him age-appropriate things, like "mommy is thinking about grandma, who was hurting today with a bad knee." Since there are 100 thoughts in your head at any given time ranging from womens oppression to poor customer service at Kmart, there is likely something you can share with him. He'll understand, you are human, you feel things and it's ok. His next question might be, how can we help grandma? Then you can say, draw her a picture, or give her a hug. He'll have a great foundation for when he's married and his wife is upset and instead of trying to "fix" her, he'll just hug her and say honey I love you, you look beautiful. (See how those things work? lol).
08:09 AM on 01/02/2012
Wow! This author has written this in such a compelling and endearing way, I just had to say "thanks for putting me right back in the days of young parenthood, and if Irma Bombeck would've been sweet and adorable.....the whole picture would be complete, I'd be the author's age once again instead of, as she says "pushing" 62.
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rpokeytruck
08:05 AM on 01/02/2012
And thats why I love the KISS princible. Reduce every motive, every emotion to its simplest form. Looking at humans that way, we arnt so complicated.
07:57 AM on 01/02/2012
As the little fellow gets older he will understand that every single day cannot be 'happy'. There are times that things happen, you think of someone else less for fortnate, things you think you missed, too busy sometimes, getting older, etc... But that doesn't mean you aren't unhappy with your life. We have moods that show up at different times. Just show him that no matter what mood you're in, you will always love him and make him happy.
07:38 AM on 01/02/2012
Innocence. The time in life before becoming aware of evil, pain and suffering.
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celloprofundo
07:34 AM on 01/02/2012
Faster and easier isn't always better and more rewarding...slow and deliberate wastes less energy and causes less stress...all you have to do is go to bed earlier and get up ealier...like Ben Franklin said...and they named a BUNCHA stuff after HIM....
07:27 AM on 01/02/2012
That's exactly why I love teaching the preschool age. They are always honest and say exactly what they mean. That was a great story.
07:20 AM on 01/02/2012
Sounds like Motherhood. The Mama bear, ever diligently focused on the welfare of her cubs. There is no happiness or sadness in a Mama bear. Only the perseverance of the critical task at hand. Happiness will come when that Cub you are raising becomes a man and happines will come with all of his triumphs along the way. Cudos to all the Mama bears out there.
12:23 PM on 01/04/2012
Sorry, the 1950s are over and were not as great as depicted on TV anyway.
07:18 AM on 01/02/2012
Maybe everything's fine and the kid just picked it up from one of the many great TV shows out there.
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Michelle Male
Everything happens for a reason.
07:18 AM on 01/02/2012
@ Devon Corneal - Bravo! You wrote a very insightful article. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it because it took me back when my own daughter was 4 yrs old (she's now 29 and married.) Just like the ol' saying goes "Out of the mouths of babes." Sometimes all it takes is just a few words out of our childrens' mouths to make us stop and listen and realize what life is really all about, eh? I always said that my favorite age for my daughter was 4 yrs old. I wish I could have freezed her at that age! (lol) Happy New Year.
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Vanderbil Covington
It is better to be wise than just knowledgeable
07:15 AM on 01/02/2012
One of the worse and most damning aspects of this or any culture is diminishing the value of women to no more than a marketing niche for the gullible. Far too many young women have risked their lives while spending $billions trying to diet themselves into an un-natural image that is neither attractive or necessary. As a man myself, I find the womanly curves of a voluptuous female far more alluring than one that looks like an emaciated boy. It seems most women are competing among themselves as to who can slim the most rather than actual attractivness. Women should to happy with themselves as their genetics intended -- with ever inch and pound un-mistakably female
07:40 AM on 01/02/2012
You make a valid point. However, I would add to that women (and men!) should respect their health, eat right, avoid overindulgence, and thus avoid the need for those fad diets! "Voluptuous" is one thing..Dangeroulsly overweight carrying too much fat is another! The "fat" you see on the outside is also effecting the "inside", and the heart cannot function effectively in a "voluptuous" state! "Every inch and pound" can also be "un-mistakenly" deadly!
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Vanderbil Covington
It is better to be wise than just knowledgeable
08:18 AM on 01/02/2012
I agree with some of what you say, but until the diet industry reared its ugly, greedy head people now think the thinner you are the better you are. For many, this is not true. Being voluptuous is now equated with being "dangerously overweight", which is a myth if ever there was one. People have widely different metabolisms and body proportions. You cannot have everyone fit into the same mold
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dawns6
mustang52
07:13 AM on 01/02/2012
Its amzing the things our little ones will say or do and also can be so uplifting and inspiring at the same time. This was a great story that brought a tear to my eyes.