My daughter was appalled when she learned
that C.S. Lewis is no longer alive. She
pulled herself up to her full ten-year-old
height and wailed, "He's dead? I thought he was
going to write more books!"
That is merely by way of pointing out that my
kids are not cultural philistines. I have done what
we small-town dwellers can do to expose them to
well crafted art that speaks Truth with a capital T.
We are not overly given to mawkish sentimentality.
So, I knew right away that one book in
the recent Amazon shipment -- which I
think shall remain nameless -- was a
loser. The subject matter, adoption, is
dear to our hearts, and I thought the
alphabet format would reinforce the
English acquisition that is my kids'
ongoing task.
But the writing was bad, for one
thing. "We couldn't wait to hold you in
our hands: immediately we made a
plan," was about as good as the
poetry got. (It got
far worse.) And the
illustrations were
frankly a little
frightening. Cartoon
babies with
enormous round
heads were being
dangled by their
diapers. When my
five-year-old found the
book, he brought it to
me and asked, "What's
wrong with these
babies?" His sisters
joined us as we giggled
at the pictures -- how the desire to be inclusive
led to a strict rota of variously ethnic kids who
were exaggerated to the point of stereotype. Then,
"Read it," somebody said, and I did. And we laughed
at the bad rhymes.
But as we worked our way through the snappy/sappy snippets about the birth mommies making
plans (not the experience of any of my kids, by the
way), they started to lean closer. By the time we
were at E for "excited," they were quiet. When we
reached M -- Mommy, of course -- they were
draped all over me. When we made it to "yahoo, a
silly word that means great joy ... for every adopted
girl and boy," they were ready for a little release.
We snuggled and giggled a while and they went
on their varied ways.
I haven't gotten rid of the book yet. Once in a
while someone will pick it up and chuckle a little
bit.
Rita Mae Brown once said you can't get into bed
with your ideology, and I can attest that one cannot
always snuggle one's aesthetic, either. Sometimes
we need some silliness -- and let us not forget that
word's Anglo-Saxon root, salig, which meant blessed
and innocent, among other things. None of us are
fully realized adults, and let's face it, bad taste is
simply developmentally appropriate at some stages.
My respect for a dignified father I know grew
immensely when I saw him painting his small
daughter's room the most astoundingly lurid shade
of pink, because that was what her soul craved.
What your institution looks like does matter.
It's fine to be stark and simple if that is a reflection
of your school's spirituality; lush and rich is
appropriate for some. And it's glorious to have some
really odd bits. They're honest. They speak to souls
that do not belong to ascended masters. That'd be
all of us. It might be best not to have
them front and center -- unless, of
course, that is the truest thing about
your school.
But we are complex beings, called
to and growing toward the beauty of
truth, but not having arrived at a full
appreciation thereof. If our lives --
and our schools -- make that
obvious, there is room for God's
grace. |