[Daily OM]: As grown-ups, we often approach 
children with ideas about what we can teach them about this life to 
which they have so recently arrived. It's true that we have important 
information to convey, but children are here to teach us just as much as
 we are here to teach them. They are so new to the world and far less 
burdened with preconceived notions about the people, situations, and 
objects they encounter. They do not avoid people on the basis of 
appearance, nor do they regard shoes as having only one function. They 
can be fascinated for half an hour with a pot and a lid, and they are 
utterly unself-conscious in their emotional expressions. They live their
 lives fully immersed in the present moment, seeing everything with the 
open-mindedness born of unknowing. This enables them to inhabit a state 
of spontaneity, curiosity, and pure excitement about the world that we, 
as adults, have a hard time accessing. Yet almost every spiritual path 
calls us to rediscover this way of seeing. In this sense, children are 
truly our gurus.
When we approach children with the awareness that they are our teachers,
 we automatically become more present ourselves. We have to be more 
present when we follow, looking and listening, responding to their lead.
 We don't lapse so easily into the role of the director of activities, 
surrendering instead to having no agenda at all. As we allow our 
children to determine the flow of play, they pull us deeper into the 
mystery of the present moment. In this magical place, we become innocent
 again, not knowing what will happen next and remembering how to let go 
and flow.
Since we must also embody the role of loving guide to our children, they
 teach us how to transition gracefully from following to leading and 
back again. In doing so, we learn to dance with our children in the 
present moment, shifting and adjusting as we direct the flow from 
pretending to be kittens wearing shoes on our heads to making sure 
everyone is fed and bathed.
