I mean that. Teach
them that it is perfectly acceptable and even healthy to feel hatred.
It is a GOOD thing to hate.
Just like it is a GOOD thing to feel sadness, fear,
resentment, anger, loneliness, regret, guilt, hate, etc…
When we teach our children to “hate” these feelings, to fear
them and reject them and deny them and suppress them – we are teaching our
children a lie. We are teaching them
that they should always be happy, always be pleasant, always like other people,
always be pleased with life and its outcomes.
Really? We should be happy with death, loss, hunger, abuse, disease, failure and rejection?
We shouldn’t hate anything? Really?
Any Christians out there?
- Proverbs 6:16 tells us that the Lord hates some things.
- Revelations 2:6 tells us Jesus hated as well.
Hate and love are the strongest emotions possible. They are not opposites. The opposite of love is apathy. The opposite of hate is also apathy.
Teaching kids to ignore their strongest “negative” emotions also
inevitably limits their “positive” emotions.
If you get rid of the strongest hate, you also get rid of
the strongest love.
Why do Christians believe
that Christ’s love is the ultimate love?
Why is it perfect?
Because he felt all our pain, all our sufferings, all of our
shortcomings, all of our hatred. He felt all those things - completely understands us, and he has the most perfect love and caring and concern for our eternal well-being.
Hate isn’t bad. Doing
hateful things is bad.
You may be tempted to say - "but hate can only lead to bad things - love leads to all good things."
Really? How many terrible things have been done in the name of "love" or in the pursuit of "happiness."
Telling kids not to hate is like telling Elsa in the movie Frozen
to “conceal don’t feel.”
Thoughts and emotions are neither good nor bad – they just
are. Thoughts and emotions happen whether we want them to or not. The question is what we DO with them. They are all useful and appropriate
at times.
Happiness/cheeriness can be a very bad thing. At a funeral, in the Emergency room, when
admitting your child to the psychiatric hospital after a suicide attempt - being
happy and cheery and full of bubbly hope and peter pan advice like “think a
happy thought” - is not "good" in these situations. It is not appropriate, it is not helpful, it is bad.
Why do you think the happiest people usually seem to be the people
who have suffered the most? Why do the
most inspirational people, the ones who really touch us – usually have horrific
life histories of pain and suffering and hate.
Those emotions taught them how to feel true love and appreciation and
caring. They learned how to accept the fact that they feel hatred and anger, and how to use that emotion to live a happy life, according to their beliefs and values.
Don't teach kids to fear hatred. Teach them what to do when they feel it; what it means, and why it's good.
Teach your kids that it's okay to hate - it's the only way they'll ever learn to love.
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