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TEACHING CHILDREN TO BOW
I watched a grandmother teach her grandson something.Hands together. Head down. A full bow.Not once. Not twice. She made him practice fifty times. At first, he giggled. Then he got tired. But she didn't stop. "Again," she said quietly. "Lower."You know what I noticed? Each time he bowed, something in his posture changed.
Not just his body. Something deeper.We think bowing is just… a gesture. A polite formality. But watch a child who's learned to bow— really bow, with their whole body—and you'll see something else.They stop first. They pause before speaking. They make space for the other person. A child who bows learns early: the world doesn't start with me. And here's what happens over time. When you spend years lowering your head to others, when you practice making yourself smaller in respect, something opens.
Not weakness. The opposite. You learn to see people clearly. You learn to listen before you speak.You stop needing to be the loudest voice in the room. I've seen kids who bow grow into adults who don't need to prove anything. They walk in. People notice. Not because they demand it. Because they already know how to give it.
And the strange thing? The respect comes back. Not from the bow itself. From what the bow taught them— how to carry themselves in the world. THE LOWER YOU LEARN TO BOW, THE TALLER YOU STAND LATER.
Not someday. It starts now.In the small practice of stopping, hands together, head down.
#Religions, #Buddhism, #Meditation, #Question #Answers, #DialogueBuddhismReligions, #Religious, #Buddhist, #Truedharma, #Enlightement, #Buddhatemple, #TheLawofKarma, #BuddhismforBeginners, #Janna #Monastery, #JannaOrderMonastery.
By Janna Order MonasteryTEACHING CHILDREN TO BOW
I watched a grandmother teach her grandson something.Hands together. Head down. A full bow.Not once. Not twice. She made him practice fifty times. At first, he giggled. Then he got tired. But she didn't stop. "Again," she said quietly. "Lower."You know what I noticed? Each time he bowed, something in his posture changed.
Not just his body. Something deeper.We think bowing is just… a gesture. A polite formality. But watch a child who's learned to bow— really bow, with their whole body—and you'll see something else.They stop first. They pause before speaking. They make space for the other person. A child who bows learns early: the world doesn't start with me. And here's what happens over time. When you spend years lowering your head to others, when you practice making yourself smaller in respect, something opens.
Not weakness. The opposite. You learn to see people clearly. You learn to listen before you speak.You stop needing to be the loudest voice in the room. I've seen kids who bow grow into adults who don't need to prove anything. They walk in. People notice. Not because they demand it. Because they already know how to give it.
And the strange thing? The respect comes back. Not from the bow itself. From what the bow taught them— how to carry themselves in the world. THE LOWER YOU LEARN TO BOW, THE TALLER YOU STAND LATER.
Not someday. It starts now.In the small practice of stopping, hands together, head down.
#Religions, #Buddhism, #Meditation, #Question #Answers, #DialogueBuddhismReligions, #Religious, #Buddhist, #Truedharma, #Enlightement, #Buddhatemple, #TheLawofKarma, #BuddhismforBeginners, #Janna #Monastery, #JannaOrderMonastery.