The Innate Kid

Once a kid always a kid

Shubham Goel
4 min readMay 10, 2022
Photo by Jessica Rockowitz on Unsplash

Yesterday during one of my saunters I saw a young girl strolling along with her mother.

There was a conspicuous difference in the body language of our two companions.

The girl was scurrying as if chasing an imaginary unicorn while her mother was trudging along, lost in her thoughts.

Suddenly, the girl came to a halt. She looked down, and the smile on her face grew exponentially.

Out of curiosity, I stopped, eager to uncover the findings of the life-vibrant soul. Because what could trounce an imaginary unicorn?

She started bouncing while shouting “MOM! It’s a circle! Circle, circle!!

On receiving no response, she turned around and gestured to her mother that she was standing on a circular manhole.

Probably even Newton wasn’t as thrilled as her after discovering Gravity.

However, her mother wasn’t so keen and gestured for the little one to move ahead.

Obediently, our little angel went back to her Utopia and skittered along.

The incident left me with a smile but also with an interesting question.

Does the child within us die as we grow up?

After pondering on this for a while, I conclude the answer is a NO.

Yes, we turn taciturn with time, living by the socially acceptable norms, and rarely expressing our authentic emotions.

But there are instances where the inner child makes an appearance in the real world.

Let’s have a look.

Alone Time

Solitude isn’t everyone’s cup of beverage, yet it’s inevitable. We all end up alone for at least a few moments in our day.

No one to judge. No rules to abide by.

One can say or do anything a.k.a freedom.

That’s when our inner child takes over.

Taking weird selfies, imitating Michael Jackson’s Moon Walk, pretending to be an Avenger, or perfecting John Cena’s You Can’t See Me.

The inner child lives a brief, colorful life before crawling back into the rabbit hole.

Theme Parks

Theme parks are crazy. With all the bedlam, it’s hard to know who is the kid.

Toddlers act more civilly compared to adults.

People screaming on flying roller coasters, savoring mammoth cotton candies, posing with human incarnations of cartoons — this world is made for the inner child.

Adults don’t do well here.

Just hearing about Disneyworld brings a big smile to any face (doesn’t it?).

Sports

There’s a running joke among my friends when we play badminton, while hitting the birdie we pretend to be tennis players, yelling with each shot (lame, I know).

Sport is a great example where the inner kid comes alive.

“My Ball My Rules” is the universal rule followed throughout the world.

You will expect people to play with grace and honor, but that’s not how the inner kid functions.

I have been part of football matches where people scored goals using their hands, and both parties accepted it. Imagine ten guys in their mid-twenties playing football and no one questions goals being scored by hands (I probably need some new friends).

Rules make things boring, and the inner kid is anything but a bore.

Movies

Watching a Pixar movie has a higher chance of curing my ailments than that a drug.

What is it about animated movies that get us going?

Buzz Lightyear saying “To infinity and beyond!” or Lightning McQueen yelling “Ka-Chow!” is like music to the ears.

Like sports, it is a portal to our childhoods.

Horror movies too, bring back our inner child although against their will (funny, how the adult us flees when it’s needed the most).

Alcohol

The most embarrassing stories have one thing in common — alcohol.

Drunk people do stupid stuff.

Do you know who else does stupid stuff?

Children.

Alcohol is like an elixir for the inner child. Booze doesn’t only rejuvenate but also amplifies its powers.

Hit a pub on a weekend to witness uptight corporate flaunts acting all giddy and dancing like penguins.

Infants

Here is the last one.

Have you seen how adults act around infants?

It’s as if someone flips their spiritual switch.

They behave goofily, make faces, dance fanatically, and a few eerie ones even hold conversations.

I have seen the strident ones turn to Jim Carrey while handling kids.

It seems the inner kid can’t run from the real one.

Final Words

In the end, I would just like to leave you all with this little reminder,

We all are growing up but that doesn’t mean we should stop having fun :)

Allow the innate kid to make more appearances in the real world.

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Shubham Goel

25 | Driven by kindness & curiosity | Ex-Software Engineer | Writer | Bibliophile | Newsletter: soulletter.substack.com