Tags
children, Family, grandparenting, inspiration, Kahlil Gibran, Parenting, personal, Philosophy, spirituality, The Prophet

Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of Life’s longing for itself.
They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not from you.
I first read these words from Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet when still in high school, a child myself, although I did not see myself that way. His words moved me then, even as they do now, so many years later, when I am raising a granddaughter.
Then I truly was “life” in its earliest stages “longing” for the life that was to be, that stretched out before me in what seemed an endless and exciting unknown potentiality.
I didn’t want to be hemmed in by the hopes and expectations of my parents, nor by their fears and warnings. I didn’t want to “learn from their mistakes,” as they cautioned me. I wanted to live my life as an adventure, learning from my own mistakes, not theirs. My life was my own and no one else’s. I wanted to risk all, moving at my own direction, and good or bad, I alone would take responsibility for the life I chose. Such were my longings then.
So I found Gibran’s parenting advice immensely inspiring, both for myself as I was moving beyond my parents into adulthood, and also for the kind of parent I wanted to be to my own children.
He goes on to say:
You may give them your love but not your thoughts,
For they have their own thoughts.
You may house their bodies but not their souls,
For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you.
For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.
You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth.
The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite, and He bends you with His might that His arrows may go swift and far.
Let your bending in the archer’s hand be for gladness;
For even as He loves the arrow that flies, so He loves also the bow that is stable.
Now, as the mother of a grown son and the guardian of his child, The Prophet’s words still move me . . . and admonish me.
How I wish now my son had heeded my warnings, and that they had been louder and clearer. How I wish he had chosen paths more safe and sane, had lived up to all the potential I saw in him then and see still.
But those are my fears, my regrets, not his. I must loose him and let him go, and see the direction in which he flew as his own choice. It was never mine to make or change or regret. I had longed when young to make and learn from my own mistakes, and so must he. But that learning is his alone to make or forsake in his own good time.
As for his child, my little granddaughter, she too is an arrow who will fly beyond my bending, beyond my ability to see or guide her life’s flight. Will my warnings to her be louder and clearer? No doubt. Will she heed them, or long to learn from her own mistakes, as I had, as her father must? We shall see.
She, as her father, is in the Archer’s hand. And I must trust, trust, trust that each will reach that mark upon the path of the infinite toward which the Archer aims with gladness. They are, after all, Life’s sweet longing for itself.
As am I.
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Well spoken. And we are here to guide them. They are never extensions of us or who we wish(ed) to be. Unique lives that we guide, they are never owned; nor are they our possessions! Great blog post💛
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Thank you. It had been so long since I’d read The Prophet. I need to return to it more often.
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Gibran is profound and I loved this post.
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He is, and thank you.
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Thank you, Deborah, for these important reminders that apply to all of our loved ones, not just to our descendants.
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That is true, thank you for that reminder as well.
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I too was moved by this passage of Gibran’s years ago. There is so much wisdom for parenting and living in general.
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I agree. It’s time to reread the whole book again. I loved the passages on marriage too.
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It’s been many years since I’ve read the book too.
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I saw my kids as beings unto themselves. I was molded to be like my parents and did not want that to happen to my kids. Today, they are all three fiercely independent and living lives of their choice. However, I am still developing into my true self.
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I tried to do the same thing, Elizabeth. I had no ambitions for them except to be happy and live full productive lines. I too feel like I’m still coming into my own. I love the fact that we never stop growing, spiritually, creatively.
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So satisfying to read words/wisdom written by someone from another time and place that make sense in the here and now.
I pray strength for you as you continue on in this time of your (and all those connected with you) life.
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Thank you Laura, I really appreciate that.
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Gibran’s words have been a fount of wisdm for me for many years, and we used his lines on Marriage at my second wedding..
His words about children,reaching me to givie up expectations and control, and leaving them space to grow in their own way and make their own choices were such an encouragement.
They supported me when people asked if I liked my new son-in-law, twenty years older than my daughter, so I was able to reply that it was none of my business, my only purpose was to support them both… and thirty years later, still doing it, over many rocky years for me, but not for them!!!.
Your little grand-daughter is a gift to you, I know, and what a gift you are to her, and what a bond you will always have. Grand children always seem more inclined to ‘hear’ their grand parents guidance – perhaps because in that relationship unconditional love is what they share.
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Thank you, Valarie for sharing that. Sometimes I wonder if I was too “loose” with my children, even as I wish I could be more “loose” with them now, at least in giving up that sense of responsibility to make up for how I may have failed them in the past. But this granddaughter is a precious gift and I aim to enjoy what time I have with her for as long as I have it.
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SO TRUE, WE MUST TAKE TIME OUT AND THINK ABOUT THE TRUE MEANING OF LIFE AND WHO WE ARE, GREAT POST, CHINA
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Thank you for that.
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