Thursday, April 19, 2018

Hakuna Matata, Espen



Espen just watched his first Disney movie at the beach this weekend. We were there celebrating my parent’s 40th wedding anniversary with all the immediate relatives under one roof. As we are the only ones who do not typically let Espen consume media, I decided that we could relax the line for an evening and watch The Lion King.

Before launching into the exegetical take-aways that Espen expounded on at bath-time, I will simply say this. I last watched The Lion King approximately 20+ years ago and I can basically sing every song, word perfect, on command when it plays. To this day.

Neuroplasticity be real, people, and you’re particularly primed when your younger. But enough said on that little glimpse into my personal parenting beliefs-I let down the spill-ways and the drama of Scar and Mufasa began.

Espen, as you might imagine, was riveted, as only a kid who never gets to watch media can be. He was blithely humming Hakuna Matata the rest of the weekend, as if it had been magically overlaid from the screen onto his brain. Part of me was delighted to be able to clown around with that song and refer to common characters that I loved in my youth. The other part of my brain was rapidly deconstructing the subtle messages being poured into the unsuspecting minds of today’s youth through the vehicle of innocuous seeming talking animals.

But I digress.

Tonite in the bathtub, Espen had some questions about Scar.

Scar, if you will recall, is the nefarious uncle of young Simba, who through cunning, greed, and homicidal inclinations, seizes the throne and gives his nephew a hefty dose of PTSD.

“Scar is bad and Simba is good, right?”

“Yep.”

“Why?”

That question has opened soo many doors, some exciting, some a bit disconcerting…and now, it’s back in the form of my 5 year old.

“Wellll….because Scar made certain choices and Simba made others.”

“What kind of choices?”

Parenting on the fly. Seize the lesson. Choices. Ok. Make good choices.

“Scar felt angry and jealous of Mufasa being king.”

“Why?”

“I’m not sure, maybe he thought he should have been king. Maybe he thought he would be a better king. There are always reasons, but we don’t always know them, ok?”

“Ok. I guess.”

“Stay with me. So because Scar felt those emotions, he chose to do some really mean and hurtful things.”

“Like killing Mufasa?”

“You got it. Now Simba, he felt hurt and sad and scared when his dad died and he chose to run far away because he didn’t want to make things worse. He could have chosen to get angry and yell at his mom or his friends, but he chose to go away. It’s all about what we choose to do about our feelings that makes us the bad guys or the good guys.”

His eyes are squinting, he’s considering this.
“Well, I feel angry sometimes.”

“Sure, we all do. We all have the same feelings at one time or another. Everyone feels angry sometimes. Or sad. Or confused. Or happy. Or jealous. Or brave. It’s how we choose to act that makes us get into more trouble or less trouble.”

“Ohhhhh. Ok. Look, I can fly Pip all around the bathtub!”

Having a deep conversation about making mindful choices and dualism with a 5 year old is like trying to sew with spaghetti. It goes great until you try to apply the noodle to make a cape instead of eating it. Still, I’m hoping that he’ll remember the “Everyone has feelings, make good choices on how you act on yours.”

We’ll see. Thanks, Lion King, for a provocative and utterly ridiculous bathtime object lesson. Hakuna Matata.