It was also a most
life-enhancing one for me.
Money was
tight with us. We were still renting and although both of us were working, our
responsibilities extended beyond our household. My baby
girl was in prep school at the time and that was a fee we also had to cover.
Her birth father was to help with that but as with many other things he was to
assist us with, it fell by the wayside.
Stretched
to the fray, when she told us about the all-day fair and concert at school, we
knew the budget would have to be adjusted. Thinking that a 6/7 year old could
eat and ride so much, we gave Princess Chulumba (our nickname for her), J$500.
That would have been about US$12 or so at the time.
We were
trying to teach my daughter about budgetting and accountability, even at that
age. Actually, it was more my partner who had taken on the challenge and every
evening as we were driving home from work and school, she would have to say how
she spent her lunch money.
That
evening was no different. As we drove home, Princess Chulumba recounted the
excitement of the fair, all that she ate and the rides she went on. Little did
this sweet, tired but deliciously happy child realize that her expenditure was
being tallied.
She had
spent well over J$500 and a recount was definitely in order!
The
following day was a Saturday so we were home and the Princess was at her desk
with pencil and paper explaining her previous day's expenditure. What followed
was nothing short of high drama!
It took
all day, adding and subtracting, then finally the confession that floored and
changed how I related to my daughter on money matters and truth telling in general.
I never
lied to my baby girl but I was careful about some of the details - either
because she did not need to know yet or for effect. Well, when she finally
confessed that day it caused me to rethink my truth telling with her.
My
daughter confessed that she had stolen money from my partner's mother's purse.
Another J$500. That was how she afforded all those rides and food not just for
herself but for her friends as well. She was of the opinion that what we had
given her would not have been enough. My six year old said that she did not
want to ask for more because "We are poor."
Shocked,
flipping mad and yet brokenhearted, I cried and cried. The next day, we drove
her to my in-laws and had her confess to them what she had done and made a
promise to pay the money back through chores.
Over the
six years of her life, I made no bones about our financial situation and that
we could not spend on unnecessary items simply because my daughter wanted or
liked them. I was also open with her
about aspects of my relationship with her father, not all and certainly not the
abuse.
What that
experience taught me was how to exercise "wise counsel," meaning know
my audience and how much to disclose based on their capacity to understand.
Filter became important. I did not begin to lie to her but became more
discerning about what she was ready to handle.
A firm
believer in honesty and straight talk, I have learned that not everyone is
ready or prepared to handle your truth. My favourite example of this is when
you pass say a coworker in the hallway and they ask, "How are you?"
Do they really want to know? Or is it just a common courtesy?
Now, if
you ask me a question about myself I will gauge my response based on:
- The nature of our relationship and whether I feel you are just asking for the gossip
- How well you have handled my truth in the past
- How ready you are for a straight answer
For sure
you will get a truth-filled answer from me but depending on who you are some
details might be filtered. More so, you will see my truth if you are really
looking and listening to me.
"Honesty is more than not lying. It is truth telling, truth speaking, truth living, and truth loving." James E. Faust
How
honest are you? Do you practice truth-telling? Are you speaking your truth
first and foremost to yourself? Do you know who can handle your truth?
Continue
to have a #TruthFilledThursday!