06-14-2009, 05:18 PM
Last night, I attended a dance concert for a young family member (not my children) so being me, I psycho analyze these events, cant help myself, this dance school is massive, there must have been at least 150 girls, yes no boys! Ranging from age 3 to around 17.
So the little ones forgot their steps but were having great fun, and the older kids were much more serious, consciously aware of the very large crowd watching, parents and family there to support, and I just wondered to myself ââ¬Ëhow many of these girls really appreciate the supportââ¬â¢ the taxi to and from, the money, the time and how many parents were not there?
I also wondered how many of these girls would soon be at an age where the negative outweighs the positive, the percentage that are going to enter adulthood and have nothing good to say about their life?
Programming always makes us focus on the bad of our childhood, the negative always stands out, its just life, so when we become adults how many of us can say that there were times of support, even if it was minimal?
I watched these young girls thinking that in a short few years, their life will be so complex, so mixed up and this moment will be gone, and it will also be gone for the parents because the negative will overlay any positive that ever occurred in the raising of that child.
So my reaction was to hug the young future dancer, tell her how fantastic she was, she stood out, and that I could see how much effort she put in, her response ââ¬Å no I stuffed up, I missed steps, my costume did not sit right, it mad me look fat.
This age is a turning point and maybe none of you are interested in this story, but I find it imperative that anyone who is programmed look back at this transitioning age of self sentencing.
After trying to get out of the car park, I drove past the theater and one girl is waiting there on the steps for her parents that gave no support, and she had my empathy, because she was the stand out of the nightââ¬Â¦.
So the little ones forgot their steps but were having great fun, and the older kids were much more serious, consciously aware of the very large crowd watching, parents and family there to support, and I just wondered to myself ââ¬Ëhow many of these girls really appreciate the supportââ¬â¢ the taxi to and from, the money, the time and how many parents were not there?
I also wondered how many of these girls would soon be at an age where the negative outweighs the positive, the percentage that are going to enter adulthood and have nothing good to say about their life?
Programming always makes us focus on the bad of our childhood, the negative always stands out, its just life, so when we become adults how many of us can say that there were times of support, even if it was minimal?
I watched these young girls thinking that in a short few years, their life will be so complex, so mixed up and this moment will be gone, and it will also be gone for the parents because the negative will overlay any positive that ever occurred in the raising of that child.
So my reaction was to hug the young future dancer, tell her how fantastic she was, she stood out, and that I could see how much effort she put in, her response ââ¬Å no I stuffed up, I missed steps, my costume did not sit right, it mad me look fat.
This age is a turning point and maybe none of you are interested in this story, but I find it imperative that anyone who is programmed look back at this transitioning age of self sentencing.
After trying to get out of the car park, I drove past the theater and one girl is waiting there on the steps for her parents that gave no support, and she had my empathy, because she was the stand out of the nightââ¬Â¦.