An Open Letter to the Makers of The Lorax
Dear folks who made The Lorax,
Thanks.
Seriously, thanks.
As I walked my son out from the cinema, he started talking. He said how sad it was that the boy lived in a place where a few people were rich and happy while the rest of the world was dead and grey. He thought it was stupid that everyone listened to the rich man and blindly bought his bottles of air. He asked me if something like that could ever happen in the real world.
“It is happening, Joe,” I said.
That made him sad. He asked how he could fix it. I asked him what the boy did in the movie.
“He planted the tree, even when the boss told him not to,” Joe said.
It led to a great talk about how we can be responsible for the planet and the resources we have. It led to a great series of questions that most kids don’t get to deal with.
“What should you do when someone in charge tells you to do something that you think is evil or wrong?” I asked.
“Don’t listen.”
“What do you do if I tell you to do something wrong?”
He paused. “I’m not going to listen to you.”
That’s my boy.
So thank you, folks who made The Lorax. Thank you for showing the dark future my son will inherit unless my generation starts caring and making changes. Thank you for encouraging my son to care. And thank you, most of all, for fostering a holy rebellious spirit in his heart. He’ll need it.
Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,
nothing is going to get better. It’s not.