Spending a time with a child is a real gift. This is certainly true for many reasons, but the one that really jumps out to me today is the curiosity they spark, and actually regenerate. There was a time, I think, when we all held this same curiosity. When we first became aware of the leaves changing colors in the fall, and wondered, why? When we would see clouds move in the sky and wonder, how? When we knew how little we actually knew, and when we weren’t embarrassed to admit it, but rather used it as a launching pad to learn more.
It was after becoming a parent that I recaptured this childlike curiosity. When I say childlike here, I don’t mean it in a pejorative sense, but in the best possible meaning of the word. Children’s brains are far more plastic than adults, far more capable of learning. Part of this is biology, but I have to believe a big part is also psychology.
As we advance in school, it becomes less acceptable to admit you don’t know something. In fact, your grades are based on what you do know. As you climb up the slope of accumulating more and more knowledge, your perception of what you know and understand climbs even more steeply. By our teenage years many of us (myself included) think we “know it all,” and right as we have access to some of the best resources for learning, and the time to do such learning, our minds are often at their least receptive.
Eventually we move to a job, and there is no doubt a learning curve there, but again, this is relatively narrow. Once established we can, if we don’t look too far, get this mistaken perception that we know far more than we do.
This is not true for everyone. There are some who admit that the more they learn, the more they realize they do not know. Every summit of knowledge they reach just makes more obviously visible the peak beyond that one. This is far closer to reality. Even on some of the most basic questions, how much do any of us really know?
Think of things we use every day, like an internal combustion engine (for those of us without electric cars, yet). How well could you explain the detailed mechanics of how it works, and how it is powered, and how it in turn is able to propel the car forward while generating the energy required to provide air conditioning and power the radio all at the same time? How many could actually go recreate the engine if we woke up in a world where it no longer existed?
Or how about something we see or feel around us at all times? Take the wind for instance. How many of us can explain why it is sometimes warm, sometimes cold, sometimes light, sometimes gale force? It is one of those things I at least think I know, that is until asked the question by a child and then put in a position where I actually have to explain it in detail. Then I realize just how little I actually know or understand.
Maybe you agree with all of this, but you still are asking why any of it matters? If we are able to get by day to day without knowing all of these things, then why should we care? The answer for me is that we lose a great deal when we move away from childlike curiosity. We lose the hunger to learn and grow. If we are to grow as individuals, and as a society, we have to be openminded enough to recognize what we don’t yet know and understand, and at the same time desire and work to fill those gaps. We must have a child’s lack of self-consciousness about what we don’t know, and about appearing foolish when we try something new that we aren’t (yet) good at. Curiosity is way too powerful and beneficial to be wasted on children alone.
So how do we do it? The first step I think is to regain that humility required to embrace what we don’t know. We don’t even have it when we are young because no one expects us to know much, and thus we don’t place those unrealistic burdens on ourselves. As we get further in school, those expectations grow. As we move along in our career, they increase ever further. As we become parents ourselves and are the ones on the receiving end of the incessant “why,” we feel we must be the source of the answers. But what if instead we were ok saying, “That’s a great question! Let’s go learn that together.” What if we could have the humility to embrace our ignorance?
If we can, that makes the next step that much easier: stimulating our curiosity. Once you release the expectation that you already know, once asked about something you are more likely to also be curious as to the answer. Even next level, you might start asking these questions on your own, no sidekick child required! Rather than just seeing something and taking it for granted, you might get curious about the underlying mechanics, about who came up with the invention or idea, when, and why. You might get excited enough to pursue your own learning journey without any idea or limitation on where it can lead you.
The third and final step is to prioritize. Realizing how little you know can be overwhelming and daunting. Far easier to put your hands up and accept defeat than to start to tackle the infinite universe of things you do not understand (string theory anyone?). But if you do this, you are doing a disservice to yourself. Many of us have just assumed our cognitive abilities will and must decline as we age, but this may just be another area where we think we know and understand something without truly doing so.
Research has found that the more learning older people pursue, the faster they actually learn, and also the more they become like younger adults themselves. More and more studies of the brain’s anatomy have revealed: “that the adult brain is far more fertile than expected, and more than capable of sprouting the connections necessary for profound learning.” The point being that you don’t have to learn everything, but rather just the humility to admit to yourself that you don’t know everything so that you then will have the curiosity to go learn something. What that something is matters less than that it is new, fresh, and interesting to you. It is also important that this becomes a way of living, not a one-off exercise. Learning is not something that is just for one phase of our life. It is a lifetime sport.
Find what you want to learn more about and go get started. Your life will be richer for it.