On Children
Kahlil Gibran
Gibran speaks to the tension between parenthood and possession. In the early 20th century, parenting often meant molding children into replicas of their parents. Gibran, however, sees children as independent travelers on life's journey. They are not extensions of parental ambition but manifestations of life's own relentless impulse to thrive and evolve. The metaphor of the bow and arrow captures the parent's role: to launch, not direct.