Last week a friend told me the story of how her daughter learned to swim. She refused at first, terrified that she would sink to the bottom and drown.
The fear of drowning is such an intelligent fear.
The instructor asked her how old she was.
“Five,” the girl answered.
“Five-year-olds don’t drown,” the instructor told her. And thus she learned to swim.
The story struck me for the brute genius with which it obliterated fear. But, of course, it was a lie.
Sometimes we lie a little. Sometimes we lie a lot.
We tell our children little lies for most of their young lives, because the lies are in service of a greater good. We tell our children lies because we tell ourselves lies. They make us feel safe and capable. Confident in the face of staggering uncertainty. We tell lies about effort, desire and glory, about time, dreams and possibilities, success and achievement. Then we come together and celebrate rituals of competition and prowess, pageants of pride and invincibility. You can do it! You can do anything! You can win! You deserve it! The excitement over, spectators leave the stands, plumped on inspiration and daring. Maybe they’ll jog the block in the morning. read more