EP 375 - Alexander Kopelman on Raising Whole Children: Why “Tell Me About You” Changes Everything | Paper Napkin Wisdom
- Govindh Jayaraman
- 2 hours ago
- 4 min read

We ask children what they want to be when they grow up.
It sounds harmless. Loving, even. We think we are opening a door to possibility. But buried inside that question is an assumption that childhood is preparation, not life. That the child in front of us is unfinished. That their value is somewhere in the future, waiting to arrive once they become useful, productive, impressive, or clear.
The question Alexander Kopelman brought to Paper Napkin Wisdom was different.
“Let’s stop asking children, ‘What do you want to be when you grow up?’ And instead ask, ‘Please tell me about you.’”
In Episode 375 of Paper Napkin Wisdom, Govindh Jayaraman sits down with Alexander Kopelman, writer, social entrepreneur, advocate, coach, and founding President and CEO of Children’s Arts Guild, to explore children, identity, self-knowledge, and what adults must learn before they can help young people stay connected to who they are. Kopelman has spent decades working at the intersection of personal agency, social justice, and childhood development, including his leadership with Children’s Arts Guild and his new book, For Real: Helping Children
Remain Their Authentic Selves in a Limiting World.
The core insight of the conversation is deceptively simple. Children are not raw material. They are people.
Kopelman described how, as a child, he often felt like “a piece of clay to be shaped.” The adults around him exposed him to culture, education, opportunity, and standards. On the outside, it may have looked like care. On the inside, he felt invisible as a person.
That distinction matters for parents. It matters for educators. It matters for leaders.
A proven entrepreneur knows this pattern well. People can be surrounded by support and still feel unseen. A team member can be trained, managed, coached, and given opportunity while never being asked the question that changes the whole relationship: who are you becoming, and what is actually alive in you?
Alexander Kopelman’s work around children and identity is not only about parenting. It is about the way adults pass along their unexamined stories. The pressure to shape children often comes from the same place as the pressure to shape teams, cultures, and families. We inherit a model. We repeat it. Then we wonder why people lose energy, creativity, and self-trust.
Why Children Need to Be Seen as People, Not Projects
The phrase “what do you want to be?” quietly points children away from the present. It tells them that the important version of themselves is still coming.
Kopelman’s alternate question, “please tell me about you,” brings the child back into the room. It does not demand performance. It does not require a career answer. It creates room for self-knowledge.
For entrepreneurs and leaders, the implication is direct. Where are you asking people to become something before you have taken the time to see who they already are?
Self-Knowledge Starts Before Strategy
Kopelman’s work points to a truth many leaders resist. You cannot guide someone toward wholeness from behind your own mask.
He shared that educators often want to begin with tools for children. They want to help, teach, and serve. But the work begins with the adult. Children can feel when the words and the energy do not match.
The same is true in leadership. A founder who has not examined their own inherited expectations will often pass them on as culture.
Silence Can Be a Form of Respect
Before the interview began, Kopelman told Govindh that he may pause, look away, and take time before answering. He was not disconnected. He was composing himself.
That moment became a powerful part of the conversation. Many adults rush to fill silence because silence makes them uncomfortable. Parents do it. Teachers do it. Leaders do it.
A leader in a chapter transition may need to ask: where am I answering too quickly because I am uncomfortable waiting for the real answer?
Small Shifts Can Change the System
When the conversation turned to education, the weight of the system could have made the whole issue feel too large to touch. Kopelman did not frame change as pushing an elephant uphill.
His answer was smaller and more demanding. Each adult can change one interaction with one child. Ask a better question. Share a real story. Pause before correcting. Let the child’s inner world matter.
Systemic change often begins as a repeated private choice.
The Parent Is Still Learning Too
One of the strongest moments came when Govindh shared a story from home. After cooking a spicy Indian dish, some comments from his children about the lingering smell brought back a childhood memory of being the only brown kid in school.
He realized later that he had reacted to more than the moment. Kopelman did not tell him he got it wrong. He simply said he had noticed it now, and he could go home and tell them.
That is the work. Not perfection. Repair. Not performance. Honesty after the fact.
The Napkin Moment
If Alexander Kopelman had to write this on a napkin, it might read: “Stop asking children what they want to become. Ask them who they are.”
That idea lingers because it asks more of the adult than the child. It asks parents, educators, and leaders to stop treating the future as the only place where someone’s value lives.
For the proven entrepreneur, this conversation lands in a familiar place. The identity that built the business may have been shaped by old expectations. The next chapter may require a quieter question. Not “what do I need to become?” Maybe, “what have I stopped asking myself about who I already am?”
🎙️ Listen to Episode 375 of Paper Napkin Wisdom:
▶ Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paper-napkin-wisdom-leadership-entrepreneurship-insights/id735345903
▶ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@papernapkinwisdom
🔗 Connect with Alexander Kopelman:
▶ Website: https://forrealbook.org/
▶ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alexanderkopelman/

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