by Matt Mattson
Our daughters (1 and 4 years old) got this Berenstain Bears book that taught the age old mantra, "Don’t Talk to Strangers" a while ago. As a teacher of Social Excellence, and as someone who derides this piece of childhood advice as one of the root causes for the chronic epidemic of anti-social behavior among young adults (see pg. 84 of Social Excellence: We Dare You ), I was not thrilled with this fear-mongering book featuring Brother and Sister bear, and I refused to read it to the girls for several weeks. My daughters are very persuasive, however, with their little puppy dog eyes that they liberally deploy as a convincing weapon. Eventually I caved and begrudgingly added it to the pile of books we read together every day. You win some, you lose some.
I remain a very active encourager of social interaction between my daughters and all the nice "strangers" we pass by on any give day though. I gently nudge the eldest often with a "say hi to that nice man," and a "it’s nice to wave and share your smile with others." I want them to grow up to be confident young women who are able to easily engage anyone they encounter with social grace.
But then something terrible happened in our Colorado community. Jessica Ridgeway was murdered in a gruesome way. This happened in a nice, upscale suburb where my daughters’ Grandparents happen to live. Jessica was 10. She was walking a short distance to school in a very safe area.
To be vulnerable, this horrible event gave me serious pause. Obviously I grieve deeply for her family and those that love her, and can’t imagine myself in their shoes. A loss like that is unbearable and incomprehensible.
But it gave me pause in a different way too. Are the Berenstain Bears right? Should I be instilling my kids with a greater level of fear in the people they encounter every day? Should I lean heavily toward "Don’t talk to strangers" as a mantra for them to recite on their way out the door every morning?
Genuinely, I haven’t yet discovered the answer. This parenting stuff is not always a piece of cake. I’m guessing we’re not the only parents challenged by this conundrum. I’m sure the "right" answer is somewhere in between.
What I do know is that for us grown ups, the question of "Do I talk to that person or not?" is at the heart of our condition as social animals. Whether we engage with others determines so much about the richness of our lives, the depth of our insight into others’ experiences, and the potential we have to make an impact in our world.
As followers of our Social Excellence message know, we believe that HANDSHAKES CAN CHANGE THE WORLD. We believe that the distance between you and the change you wish to see in the world, is only a handshake away. We know that organizations change the world — that’s why we do what we do. We also know that handshakes lead to conversations, conversations lead to relationships, relationships lead to collaboration, collaboration leads to organizations, and as was mentioned, organizations change the world. This is at the heart of our Social Excellence message. So instilling any unnecessary level of social fear in a child could keep them from shaking a hand someday… and eventually prevent them from becoming the leader our world needs.
Perhaps that last line was a bit melodramatic — I’ll grant you that. But so is teaching kids to avoid and fear all strangers when kidnappings and crimes committed against children by people they don’t know are REALLY rare.
So the question remains for my family (and for many families).
But for us grown ups, we don’t need to carry around all that fear of strangers stuff anymore (or not as much). Particularly as we’re passing by co-workers, doing community service, sitting next to people on a plane, passing fellow students on campus, or walking through our neighborhoods. Your answer to the question, "Do I talk to that person or not?" will determine your human experience, your organization’s/cause’s success, and your potential to change the world. For us grown ups, our advice remains — BE MORE SOCIAL. DO TALK TO STRANGERS.
And when you see a little kid walking by… wave, smile, say hi, ask their parents a curious question, be generous, be authentic, and make their day — you might just be the "stranger" they remember as an example of Social Excellence for years to come. Counteract the terrible stuff in the world that floods people’s minds and creates social fears — shake more hands, give more smiles away, connect with more people on a Heart-to-Heart level. Our society has enough scary stuff in it — it needs to be balanced out with your Social Excellence.