The Innocence of Children
Remember when you
were a little kid; how the world seemed different than it does now? A big
part of that difference was defined by your innocence as a child. As
adults, we look back on childhood innocence with older, more mature eyes,
and when we do, we see something almost magical in contrast to our
work-a-day world of adult living. What is it that makes childlike innocence
so attractive and ultimately inspiring?
We were all children at some point, complete with the requisite innocence
of childhood and before the experiences of life turned us into knowing
adults. While most of us have trouble remembering the innocence of our own
early lives, there is no denying that the innocence we observe in today's
small children inspires in us a faint recollection and a distant longing
for whatever feeling that was, way back when. Innocence is attractive to us
precisely because it is something we have largely lost and cannot regain.
We really have little choice in the loss of our innocence. We value
experience as a necessary part of being functional adults, so we allow our
innocence to die at its hands. That makes observed innocence all that much
more attractive to us.
We still see flashes of that inherent goodness in adults, but it is usually
reserved for times of emergency and imminent danger. Earthquakes,
hurricanes, and volcanoes have brought out the best in heroic bravery. We
honored the dedication of first-responders to the 9/11 disaster. We see
images and videos on Internet social media, depicting the work of
individuals who rise to specific occasions helping others in need, from
mining disasters to oil spill clean-ups. But for adults, this is the
exception, and not the rule. Only in the innocence of children can goodness
still be displayed as the norm, as the way children simply are.
We adults chuckle at innocence, but deep down inside we respect it. Few
things can be more deeply inspiring than innocence as French philosopher
Jean Baudrillard said, "There is no aphrodisiac like innocence."
What is it we see in the eyes of a young child? We see untainted belief in
the goodness of human beings. We see the belief in the goodness of
ourselves, vicariously re-lived in our young counterparts. We see a
willingness to embrace the irrational and an ignorance of the concept of
death. The eyes of the innocent are a deep well of remembered truths and
valued feelings. What can be more inspiring than the look of a child who
sees into your own soul with a clarity that you, yourself, can no longer
muster? Innocence, it seems, can be far more powerful than experience.
Founder of the Hilton hotel chain Conrad Hilton once said, "Be ever
watchful for the opportunity to shelter little children with the umbrella
of your charity; …[They are] in their innocence the repositories of our
hopes for the upward progress of humanity."
We never completely outlive our innocence, but as adults, we need to spend
the time to view its full force in the eyes of our children.
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