“In an age that seems to be increasingly dehumanized, when people can be transformed into non-persons, and where a great deal of our adult art seems to diminish our lives rather than add to them, children's literature insists on the values of humanity and humaneness.”
I just finished a book. I've been reading it for a few days (something that was unfathomable in my life before kids, when it took 4-6 hours to finish a great book), using the precious few hours of me-time that fall between the kids' bedtime and my own.
When I was a few chapters from the end, I took a break, put the book on the floor, and stared up at the ceiling.
"What are you doing?" My husband is used to weird behaviour from me, but he still likes an explanation every now and then.
"Just feeling."
Just feeling.
I was partway through a particularly intense scene, nearing the climax, and my emotions, along with the characters', were running a little high. This doesn't always happen when I read something - only when I read something I really
love.
What book I was reading isn't really important. What was happening in the book isn't really important. After all, everyone connects to books in different ways, because our reading experiences are influenced by the way we live our lives. So it's not really the
why that's important in this case, it's the
how.
How amazing that someone's words could make my heart twist, make me feel so overcome that I just needed a quick breather. How amazing that the actions of this
fictional character could have such a profound impact. How amazing and how wonderful.
This is why I want to share my love of reading with my children. It's almost universally accepted that reading is "something your kids should do". There are foundations and ad campaigns targeted at getting children to love reading. This is inarguably a Great Thing, and I would never want to dispute that.
What I want to do is remind everyone
why introducing your children to reading is so important.
It's because reading is transformative. It's influential. It's powerful. Reading stretches the limits of a child's imagination. Reading allows children to experience things they may otherwise miss. Most importantly, reading fosters a burgeoning sense of empathy at a fundamental time in a young person's development.
Books - at least, the very best books - challenge our worldview. They make us consider alternate perspectives. They make us acknowledge the complexity of human emotions. They make us feel.
So when I read
Mr. Brown can Moo for the hundredth time, I'm happy. I'm happy because my daughter is engaged, enthusiastic, and frankly adorable when she
boom boom booms! along with Mr. Brown. But I'm also excited. I'm excited because even though today it's
Mr. Brown, soon it will be
Diary of a Part-Time Indian, or
Stargirl, or
George.
Someday I'll recommend the book I just finished. I'll recommend all my favourites. Some my kids will appreciate, others they won't. We'll debate, we'll commiserate, we'll laugh, we'll discuss. And don't get me wrong, I will be so happy if my children become "critical thinkers" and have "broad vocabularies", and demonstrate any of the oft-discussed benefits of being Readers. But what I'm looking forward to the most is that moment when one of them turns to me and says "Mom, I just
feel..."
Because I
know. I know, my babies, what it's like to
just feel. And whether that feeling is one of sadness, joy, anger, bitterness, hope, or excitement, the real magic is being able to feel it at all.
So for now I can find the joy in a fluffy dog or a pop-up tree, but I dream of the day when a book truly makes an imprint on their lives, as so many have for me.