floppit wrote:Letting children off the leash
Complaints that a risk-averse culture of health and safety damages childhood have become familiar. But what steps do parents actually take to remove the cotton wool?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/8789014.stm
I'm all for this, it's long overdue and I can only hope in gains momentum! My avatar about sums up my POV but I take flack for it, sometimes a little, mostly well meant genuine fear, but even to allow her risks on soft ground parks, even that I let her jump in the swimming pool, even those small things rarely go without any comment.
I think those of us who were little kids in the 70s were possibly the last generation of that were allowed to really play. After that, we saw the advent of "play dates" and all sorts of "organized activities."
When I was in grammar school, I'd run through the yards and play with friends "down the street." We made our own fun. Mud-ball wars, bike riding, tag, sports, etc. We learned to fall and get scraped up and come home and get cleaned up. Sure it hurt. Sure we cried every now and again. But, that's part of growing up, or at least I think it should be. A child learns that there is consequences to actions, and when there isn't a net, nobody is going to be there to catch you.
Nowadays, I see my friends' kids and they are the videogame culture, and there is a reticence to behave in an unstructured manner.
I find that kids aren't taught things like they used to be either. I mean, I saw my friends' kid the other day - 12 years old - had no clue how to put the bike chain back on his bike. The parents took care of it, without requiring the kid to learn that simple task. And, it's not just the task, but the training in HOW to figure things out - HOW to do things on their own.
Keep letting your kid climb those rope ladders - one, he or she is not going to get hurt, and two, if there are any scrapes or bruises, that's part of growing up. And, there are essential lessons to be learned there - how high can I climb? How can I hold on? How do I get down? How do I modify this situation to where I can do what I want or have some fun?
In the 70s, we had "monkey bars" in the school playgrounds - metal bars formed into shapes that you could climb on and hang from and otherwise play on. Of course, you could also fall. I think by the mid-late 80s, they were all gone from playgrounds because of the occasional accident.