The Wisdom of Children
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
I'll be down in North Philadelphia today with the children of Centro Nueva, taking photographs as the children take photographs—as they document their world. We'll be inside a neo-natal ward, down on the courts of SquashSmarts, at dinner with those families temporarily living inside a Ronald McDonald House. Children (my son included) have always taught me the most important things about how to see and what to think, which conclusions not to draw.
The world is a slippery place, and these days we're all sliding. We're watching the green and mostly red arrows on Wall Street, the confidence polls, the housing starts. We're studying the houses themselves—the seemingly permanent posting of For Sale signs, the half-built homes that now stand naked and incomplete in roaring weather. We're waking up to the news that Doubleday has laid off 10% of its staff, that publishing houses can't much afford to invest in new books, that Barnes and Noble, which fought so hard to dominate the bookselling market, is once more clamping down, so thoroughly diminishing its orders of new books that many titles are guaranteed oblivion right directly out of the gates. Monopolizing bookselling was never—but we all knew this—a good idea.
We writers understand that our futures, like all futures, have changed. That it's going to be a whole lot harder to sell the books we love—to editors, to the book-buying public. The choice I'm making, in these difficult times, is to keep working. To read better. To think harder. To go out into the world with children, for example, and see the world as children see it.
We cannot control the forces about us. We can control how we live through this, who we are through this, how we emerge. I need the wisdom of children more than ever. I need that kind of courage.
3 comments:
I need the determination of my daughter. That nothing will get in my way. That if I want candy all I need to do is ask for it over and over until it's handed to me. That if I want something, I better know to do it myself (why we keep the candy jar far, far away).
Hope you had a great day!
Oh, yes. Children are such fearless truth-seers and strength-radiators. Sometimes I will hold one of my kids and tell them they are my charging cradle, as if I'm a cell phone with a dangerously low battery. Works every time...
BTW, the word verification below for this comment in "ingentio," which sounds to me like a rather swanky European-ish compliment.
Therefore, I say to you: I found this post to be very ingentio.
:^) Anna
P.S. - Feel free to bandy that word around at work tomorrow. Five bucks says people will act like they know what it means.
PJ and Anna,
I am rather stunned by my travels yesterday. I am grateful for your understanding.
For your words.
I am going to use ingentio. It must be real. I insist.
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