The education of a human being should
begin at birth and continue throughout his life.
Indeed, if we want this education to
have its maximum result, it should begin even before birth; in this case it is
the mother herself who proceeds with this education by means of a twofold
action: first, upon herself for her own improvement, and secondly, upon the
child whom she is forming physically. For it is certain that the nature of the
child to be born depends very much upon the mother who forms it, upon her
aspiration and will as well as upon the material surroundings in which she
lives. To see that her thoughts are always beautiful and pure, her feelings
always noble and fine, her material surroundings as harmonious as possible and
full of a great simplicity - this is the part of education which should apply
to the mother herself. And if she has in addition a conscious and definite will
to form the child according to the highest ideal she can conceive, then the
very best conditions will be realised so that the child can come into the world
with his utmost potentialities. How many difficult efforts and useless
complications would be avoided in this way?
Education to be complete must have five
principal aspects corresponding to the five principal activities of the human
being; the physical, the vital, the mental, the psychic and the spiritual.
Usually, these phases of education follow chronologically the growth of the
individual; this, however, does not mean that one of them should replace
another, but that all must continue, completing one another until the end of
his life.
We propose to study these five aspects
of education one by one and also their interrelationships. But before we enter
into the details of the subject, I wish to make a recommendation to parents. Most parents, for various reasons, give very little
thought to the true education which should be imparted to children. When they
have brought a child into the world, provided him with food, satisfied his
various material needs and looked after his health more or less carefully, they
think they have fully discharged their duty. Later on, they will send him to
school and hand over to the teachers the responsibility for his education.
There are other parents who know their
children must be educated and who try to do what they can. But very few, even
among those who are most serious and sincere, know that the first thing to do,
in order to be able to educate a child, is to educate oneself, to become
conscious and master of oneself so that one never sets a bad example to one's
child. For it is above all through example that education becomes effective. To
speak good words and to give wise advice to a child has very little effect if
one does not oneself give him an example of what one teaches. Sincerity,
honesty, straightforwardness, courage, disinterestedness, unselfishness,
patience, endurance, perseverance, peace, calm, self-control are all things
that are taught infinitely better by example than by beautiful speeches.
Parents, have a high ideal and always act in accordance with it and you will
see that little by little your child will reflect this ideal in himself and
spontaneously manifest the qualities you would like to see expressed in his
nature. Quite naturally a child has respect and admiration for his parents;
unless they are quite unworthy, they will always appear to their child as
demi-gods whom he will try to imitate as best he can.
With very few exceptions, parents are
not aware of the disastrous influence that their own defects, impulses,
weaknesses and lack of self-control have on their children. If you wish to be
respected by a child, have respect for yourself and be worthy of respect at
every moment. Never be authoritarian, despotic, impatient or ill-tempered. When
your child asks you a question, do not give him a stupid or silly answer under
the pretext that he cannot understand you. You can always make yourself
understood if you take enough trouble; and in spite of the popular saying that
it is not always good to tell the truth, I affirm that it is always good to
tell the truth, but that the art consists in telling it in such a way as to
make it accessible to the mind of the hearer. In early life, until he is twelve
or fourteen, the child's mind is hardly open to abstract notions and general
ideas. And yet you can train it to understand these things by using concrete
images, symbols or parables. Up to quite an advanced age and for some who
mentally always remain children, a narrative, a story, a tale well told teaches
much more than any number of theoretical explanations.
Another pitfall to avoid: do not scold
your child without good reason and only when it is quite indispensable. A child
who is too often scolded gets hardened to rebuke and no longer attaches much
importance to words or severity of tone. And above all, take good care never to
scold him for a fault which you yourself commit. Children are very keen and
clear-sighted observers; they soon find out your weaknesses and note them
without pity.
When a child has done something wrong,
see that he confesses it to you spontaneously and frankly; and when he has
confessed, with kindness and affection make him understand what was wrong in
his movement so that he will not repeat it, but never scold him; a fault
confessed must always be forgiven. You should not allow any fear to come
between you and your child; fear is a pernicious means of education : it
invariably gives birth to deceit and lying. Only a discerning affection that is
firm yet gentle and an adequate practical knowledge will create the bonds of
trust that are indispensable for you to be able to educate your child
effectively. And do not forget that you have to control yourself constantly in
order to be equal to your task and truly fulfil the duty which you owe your
child by the mere fact of having brought him into the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment