Photo by: Foilman

The Socratic Method of 5 Year Olds

Photo by: Foilman

Every day I buckle my kids into their car seats, walk to the driver’s seat of my minivan and prepare for an intense round of questions. The inquisitor is my five year old daughter, Heidi, positioned diagonally behind me, able to watch my profile, hands, and most important, my eyes in the rear view mirror. She needs no lie detector, no fact checker. Her barrage begins as I back the car out of the driveway when she’s certain that it’s just her, the open road, and a captive adult yearning to drive free.

Did you use your blinker? Is that car speeding? Why are we going this way? How fast can we go on this street? Why can we only go 25 miles per hour? Why aren’t there sidewalks? Would it be dark now if it were December? Why is that car green? Why does the driver like the color green?

Heidi can toss out five to seven questions a minute, depending on the length of my answers and/or pleas for mercy. If a typical drive is fifteen minutes, we’re talking 75 to 105 questions just trying to pick up a gallon of milk. But, let’s say she’s tired and is only able to ask three a minute, it still means I’ve formulated 45 answers in fifteen minutes, scoring more in a quarter than LeBron James does in an entire game, though, obviously, I am compensated far less for my work.

The only other people I know who deal with this kind of bombardment of questions are press secretaries. But, even they, at some point, have the luxury of saying, “that’s all for now, folks,” and walking off stage to be met by an aide, and perhaps, an ice cold Fresca.

In our car, the questions don’t stop until something forces me to yell, usually rather loudly, that a Mack truck is going ram our minivan into oblivion if she doesn’t cool it and, “let me concentrate on the road.”

That wins me two minutes (6-21 questions) of relief.

So, I feel no guilt or hidden fear that I am an inadequate parent when I say that when it comes to my five year old’s minivan inquisitions: I’ve cracked under pressure.

Example A:

“What is the name of the boy singing this song?”

You’d like to think this was an easy question, wouldn’t you?

But, let me first say that the song we were listing to was one we’d heard at least 107 times, the first on a mix-CD given out as a party favor. The mother of the birthday child asked each five year old to submit his or her favorite song, which leads me to the song in question.

Apparently five year olds are really into Coldplay. This fact depresses me because I am, only now, discovering that they are a band I should have known about five years ago.

What is the name of the lead singer in Coldplay?

“Ah….Chris?” I said, knowing this was only the beginning.

“Why did his parents name him Chris?”

I’d like you to now stand up, do five jumping jacks, hop on one leg and recite the first two lines of the Gettysburg address while trying to speculate why the parents of a British born rock star chose, on March 2, 1977 to name their son Christopher Anthony John Martin.

If only Heidi had asked me why Chris Martin and his wife Gwyneth Paltrow had named their daughter Apple, I’d have had a shot.

When you name your child after a piece of fruit you eventually have to share your thought-process, but most parents who name their sons Chris can go entire decades before ever being asked “for the record—why?”

“I….I really have absolutely no idea,” I said.

I should have referred her to chapter seven, article three of the handbook, “Questions I’ve Already Asked my Mom When She’s Going 60mph” but I felt compelled to rehash our previous discussion on the naming prerogative of parents.

“Maybe his parents liked the name. Maybe it’s a family name.”

Silence, tantamount to skepticism coming from back row.

“Do you like the name Chris?” I asked her.

It’s a classic move, to ask the interrogator a question in an effort to deflect attention, and it got me out of the hot seat on the Chris Martin issue.

But there would be others. Several hundred more that day, culminating in the ones asked during the second most popular time ask questions of mom: bedtime. Specifically, when we read books.

Catching me when I am weak is a key component to my daughter’s strategy. She smells fatigue and pounces.

Usually when we’re on the title page.

We can easily spend ten minutes and never get past the ISBN.

What is the name of the author? Where did they live? When did they live? Are they dead now? Why did they write this book? Did you read this book when you were little? Who gave me this? Why? Why did they think I’d like it?

I once invented what I thought was a brilliant, ripped from the parenting magazines, solution. I gave my daughter ten cards and said each one earned her the ability to ask one question. When she’d used up all ten cards, no more questions.

She loved the process of raising her hand, saying, “excuse me mom,”, asking a question, and placing each card in the growing stack of used up credits. But, when she got to the last card and realized her supply would not be replenished she had an uncharacteristic melt down.

“I don’t like this game!”

I’d have given it another go the next night, but I felt mean—I was “rationing” thought and that just seemed wrong.

But, answering questions all day is hard work. There’s the physical strain—actually speaking, using oxygen, using the voice, articulating ideas, all this done at times times when most people regroup or replenish. Do you drink a glass of water at lunch, or use that time to answer why you put mayonnaise instead of mustard on your turkey sandwich?

There is also the mental energy it requires. I recently drove to the dentist by myself and realized when I arrived how relaxing the ten minutes without answering questions had been. I was free to be alone with my thoughts and daydream about the imminent removal of tartar from my gum line. It was so peaceful.

But, there is something else that explains the absolute exhaustion I feel at the end of a day of questioning.

A five year old shaves ideas down to their very core, asking why… followed by why… followed by… why.

Eventually, I feel a philosophical and somewhat emotional depletion.

How did she learn the Socratic Method while watching “Curious George”?

W.K.C. Guthrie is quoted as saying this in his book The Greek Philosophers, quoted on Wikipedia:

“Socrates was accustomed to say that he did not himself know anything, and that the only way in which he was wiser than other men was that he was conscious of his own ignorance, while they were not. The essence of the Socratic Method is to convince the interlocutor that whereas he thought he knew something, in fact he does not.”

Whereas I thought I knew something… in fact… I do not. I am reminded of my ignorance on a daily, hourly basis.

But, that, as they say, is the first step to knowledge.

No wonder these five year olds ask so many questions…

Sarah Vander Schaaff writes the weekly blog about parenthood, Lunch Box Mom, when she is not fielding questions from her two inquisitive children.

Like This Article

Like Mamapedia

Learn From Moms Like You

Get answers, tips, deals, and amazing advice from other Moms.

57 Comments

My three year old son has been a non-stop question machine for the last 9 months and I wouldn't change it for the world. His questions let me know so much about him that I might not know otherwise - what he is thinking about, how his mind works, how analytical he is, what he notices, what he is experiencing, and it lets me know he is doing ok cognitively and intellectually. I am in awe and amazement of him and his questions and love it!

My 4 year old has started this game. I've already become a pro at "You know, Boo, I don't know." Her favorite is to ask about things she knows the answer to. "Mommy it's wet outside, why is it wet outside?" After we just finished watching it rain. Silly thing.

My daughter, now 38, went though this stage at age 4. My theory since then has been that God makes them their VERY cutest at that age on purpose. When they're sleeping they're so angelic that we wipe their slate clean for another day.
I love your description of the barrage of questions! It took me back to that time in an instant.

Yup this is my oldest, who just turned 4. We tried the "who can be quiet the longest" game and after 4.7 seconds she happily said "I lose" and continued asking questions! Now we have a rule that you are only allowed 3 "whys" to every question, then you have to ask another one...

See entire comment

Both of my kids are question machines. Thank goodness once they hit the teen years they stopped asking so many questions. The up side is they are very smart and now know to go look it up on Google.

My husband and I both read this and laughed ourselves silly. We have TWO daughters who both have done or currently do this. As I type I'm asked: How does Santa come down the chimney? Is it magic? Does her live up there? Can I go to the North Pole? If I go to the North Pole, can I live with Santa? When is Christmas? How many days is that? When is Halloween? Of course each question first starts with Mom, Mom, MOM!!!! Because I'm also trying to type. I try to remember that one day I WILL miss this...

See entire comment

Treasure these times of driving in the car being able to pour your values into your child. You'll blink your eyes and your child will be a teenager who once thought you were brilliant and knew something about almost everything - but now thinks you're over-protective, old-fashioned and, in reality, knows close to nothing. My 14 year old, who just began high school, is either mad at me, trying to get something out of me, or secretive and just not telling me anything...

See entire comment

Most children go through this phase. I certainly remember it with mine, low those many years ago. I think that we sometimes think we have to answer every question they ask or we will somehow stunt their natural curiosity. But the question barrage can also present an opportunity to ignite their thinking and observation skills while giving parents a break. Sometimes it is better to let them wonder, think and ponder on the whys and wherefores of life...

See entire comment

I haven't laughed so hard in a while! I live this all day every day from sun up to sun down with my 4 yr old son. He started it at 3 and i am not sure the questions will ever really end! His new response to me instead of 'why' is 'tell me the whole answer'...as if i am somehow hold back really life changing information that will effect the direction of his life! I feel your exhaustion!

You are hysterical! Your daughter has received some of your best qualities!

OMG! It's definitely not a boy/girl thing. My son just turned 7 and still does this. Of course he did it more when he was younger, but he still does it. I have to definitely think about my answers before I respond to his trillion questions because he also has an elephant memory and absorbs all his mommy tells him. What ever my answer is he then turns around and tells someone else so I definitely have to be careful with my responses...

See entire comment

Loved this article. This is my 5 1/2 year old exactly. It's good to hear other moms feel the same as I do. It is SO exhausting. & I feel terrible but sometimes I just have to say "honey, mom needs quiet time right now, no more questions." & that works for only about 5 minutes! & now recently she has turned the tables on me! When she doesn't want to answer my questions (usually about school, etc) she says "mom, I'm very tired and don't feel like talking right now." LOL

Oh, this was 5. Now at ten she peeks over my shoulder as I glance through this and says, "Who was Socrates?" The other day in the car she said "Who was Pythagorous?" "Why do roosters get saddle feathers when the hens are the ones who need them?" "What do you mean when you said that's not what I meant?"

Sigh. I am grateful for the existence of google. "You should go look that up yourself!" One of my favorite come backs...

See entire comment

I too enjoyed this, because it reminds me of all the "why" questions my oldest child used to ask. I used to feel bad about telling her she had to stop asking why all day long, but I too was exhausted by it. Thanks for putting it so well!

Boy do I know how you feel! It is definitely NOT just a girl thing. Our son has been asking the why questions since he turned three and there's no end in sight. On my good days, I learn from his questions...we explore the answers on the web or wherever we can find them. On my bad days, I end up asking him to stop. A person can only handle so many questions!

Leave a Comment

Required
Required (will not be published)
Required (to prove you're human)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on topic and not abusive
For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us
Want to become a contributor?
Want to become a contributor?

If you'd like to contribute to the Wisdom of Moms on Mamapedia, please sign up here to learn more: Sign Up

Recent Voices Posts

See all