I love spring for a host of reason, not the least of those being baseball season starts again. March fills me with anticipation of this happy event, though I don't pay too much attention to pre-season ball. Around April 2 or 3, however, I set my radio to the local ESPN station, make the New York Yankees game schedule my homepage and settle in for six months-plus of the greatest sport known to humankind.
That's just my opinion, of course, but I know there are millions of people who share it. There are probably even more millions who do not. I have heard the criticisms - baseball's so slow, it's so boring, how can you waste three hours on that stuff?
Obviously I don't consider it a waste. In our frantic, chaotic society, baseball recalls a simpler time. Sometimes it is so nice to just sit and watch a game, to relax and forget about all of life's other demands. Baseball is pure escape and we all need to escape now and then.
That being said, rarely do I just sit and listen to or watch a Yankee game. Sometimes my kids and I play a game of Phase Ten, which is the perfect game to accompany a baseball game. It's not fast-paced so you can stop play to watch an exciting catch or great hit (thank goodness for replays). And it can last about three hours, just like a baseball game.
But more often I have some project to keep my hands busy while the game is on - folding laundry, ironing, clipping coupons, making out my grocery list for the next week, that sort of thing. When I listen to a game, something I do more often, I can keep busy in any of a number of ways. Since my best radio is in the kitchen I can use that time to make cookies or bake muffins for breakfast, start the next day's lunches, clean the kitchen counters, straighten out the pantry, or even catch up on magazines and newspapers. One of baseball's virtues is that it doesn't require one's undivided attention.
In this day of HDTV and cable sports channels it might seem a little strange that I actually enjoy listening to a sport rather than watching it, but I do. Not that I don't love to watch when I have the chance but, except when the Yankees play the Red Sox and we can watch them on the New England Sports Channel, I don't have that many opportunities. Occasionally Fox, ESPN or TBS will feature a game so between the three of them I average about one televised game a week (though last weekend all three featured Yankee games so I was treated to three glorious telecasts in a row!). But baseball is actually the perfect sport to listen to because the pace is slow and you have plenty of time to form pictures in you mind to follow along with the action. Yankee radio announcers John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman know the sport and the team inside out and I learn a lot from their chatter. And, as I said before, I can do a lot of other things in the time it takes to listen to a game.
Besides, I grew up listening to Yankee baseball. Though we could count on WPIX out of New York City for weekend games, many games were not televised and so, fanatic that I was, I was forced to use my radio. In those days, the early and mid-seventies, the announcers were Phil Rizzuto, Bill White and Frank Messer. I remember liking Messer's voice best - it was pleasant and professional - but Rizzuto was definitely the voice of the Yankees. I can still hear the Scooter's famous "Holy Cow!" echoing in my head whenever a Yankee player hits a homerun or makes a great catch.
Most games I listened to at night while I was supposed to be sleeping. Rarely could I sleep until the final score was in. The Yankees of my youth included players like Bobby Murcer, Roy White, Graig Nettles, Lou Pinella, Willie Randolph and, my favorite, Thurman Munson. In the early seventies they were not a winning team and many nights my heart ached as I turned of my radio. But another great thing about baseball is that it is such a long season. With more than 160 games to play, hope springs eternal for a baseball fan. Every game is a blank slate, a new opportunity. League championships are often up for grabs until late September, sometimes right up to the last game. As Yogi Berra once famously said, it ain't over till it's over. Baseball fans know how much wisdom that little Yogiism contains.
For now, however, this post is over. Tomorrow I will continue to wax philosphical about the sport that ranks right up there with Mom and Apple Pie in the American value system. Right now, however, I'm going to have some lunch. Maybe a hot dog.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Sister, Sister
A few weeks ago I had just about had it with my life.
Not that my life is all that bad - it really isn't. But I do have a twenty-year old son and two teenage daughters and sometimes they just wear me out. Not physically anymore, not like when they were little and I spent three quarters of the day with one or the other of them in my arms or on my lap. I never will understand why I didn't develop more upper body strength back then.
Now the toll they take on me is more emotional. They are at a point in their lives when they are pushing against the chrysallis and getting ready to emerge as butterflies (my son probably wouldn't appreciate that analogy but, as he likes to say, oh well). For some reason part of the chrysallis breakdown requires an almost complete lack of patience with anything parents do or say. Even when we think we've done good it turns out we haven't. Even when we think we've said something fairly intelligent or at least mild enough not to provoke a rebuke we're wrong.
I remember the conversation that drove me over the edge. Our family likes to watch American Idol together and it was just after the two weeks during which the contestants had performed songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. I commented at dinner that one of the things I liked about AI is that it introduces the kids to music they might not otherwise hear or appreciate, like the Beatles.
I expected a couple of nodding heads, at least, and maybe even an acknowledgement that some of the music of yesteryear was great. Instead, I received the usual looks that I realize now mean they are thinking about how they can disagree with my statement. Finally Emily said she likes it better when they perform contemporary songs on AI and Elizabeth said she had downloaded Beatles music to her Ipod long before the AI performances.
I'll admit I finished dinner in a sulk and wasn't the most chipper and cheerful mom that night. It is wearying living with teenagers, those creatures who always have to be right and, more importantly, show you that you're not. I needed a break and I knew just who to call.
My sister Deb lives about an hour and a quarter from me, just the perfect distance for a Saturday afternoon shopping trip. The next morning I called her and, after a few minutes of venting asked if she could get her husband to watch the kids on Saturday and have a Mom's Day Out. Since Deb's daughters (she has three) range in age from nine to three and therefore are a combination of physically and emotionally demanding, she was more than willing. More importantly, Steve was willing to play Mr. Mom. So Saturday afternoon found us meeting in the parking lot of a shopping plaza with nothing to do but shop, talk and eat.
The details of that afternoon are unimportant - suffice it to say we looked at some things, bought very little and talked incessantly. The luxury of uninterrupted conversation never goes unappreciated by a mom and we took full advantage of every minute available. We ran out of shopping long before we ran out of stories to tell and laughs to share so we made our way over to the Macaroni Grill around 4:30 before the Saturday evening rush started.
And there we sat for the next three hours, bless our understanding waitress (we tipped her well, I promise!) We talked about husbands, kids, friends, dreams, hopes, worries, in-laws, childhood issues, American Idol, simplifying our lives, complicating our lives, etc., etc., etc.
And we could have gone on longer. That's the way it is when I'm with my sisters (Karen lives almost five hours away so she could not make it to this particular Mom's Day Out, but if she had the only difference it would have made might have been in restaurant choice). We can talk about just about anything and with the sweetest feeling of being secure and understood because we know we get each other. We are all as different as can be in personalities and styles yet that just makes it more fun. With no one do I feel more free to totally be myself that I do with Karen and Deb. It's such a relief to take off the mask that I often wear and just be me, warts and all.
When I started having babies I wanted a girl first - I had a boy. That was scary because I didn't know much about boys, not having had brothers myself. But I fell instantly in love with him, so much so that by the time I was about to deliver my second child I kind of hoped for a boy so Dan would have a brother. Again, the chromosomes decided otherwise and Emily was born. My disappointment lasted about a millisecond because I was thrilled with her. And then pregnancy number three - this time I wanted a girl, not just for myself but for Emily and the baby itself. Because I knew they would be sisters and that was the greatest gift. The cosmos cooperated this time and Elizabeth was born. Sisters.
If I could never give my girls another thing they would be okay because they have what they need most - each other. Some day, I tell them when they are in an argument, she will be your best friend. Sometimes they find that hard to believe but more and more I think they can see how that might possibly come to pass.
Carol Saline said "Sisters function as safety nets in a chaotic world simply by being there for each other." Amen, and amen.
I dedicate this post to my safety nets, Karen and Deb - I love you guys, always have, always will.
Not that my life is all that bad - it really isn't. But I do have a twenty-year old son and two teenage daughters and sometimes they just wear me out. Not physically anymore, not like when they were little and I spent three quarters of the day with one or the other of them in my arms or on my lap. I never will understand why I didn't develop more upper body strength back then.
Now the toll they take on me is more emotional. They are at a point in their lives when they are pushing against the chrysallis and getting ready to emerge as butterflies (my son probably wouldn't appreciate that analogy but, as he likes to say, oh well). For some reason part of the chrysallis breakdown requires an almost complete lack of patience with anything parents do or say. Even when we think we've done good it turns out we haven't. Even when we think we've said something fairly intelligent or at least mild enough not to provoke a rebuke we're wrong.
I remember the conversation that drove me over the edge. Our family likes to watch American Idol together and it was just after the two weeks during which the contestants had performed songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. I commented at dinner that one of the things I liked about AI is that it introduces the kids to music they might not otherwise hear or appreciate, like the Beatles.
I expected a couple of nodding heads, at least, and maybe even an acknowledgement that some of the music of yesteryear was great. Instead, I received the usual looks that I realize now mean they are thinking about how they can disagree with my statement. Finally Emily said she likes it better when they perform contemporary songs on AI and Elizabeth said she had downloaded Beatles music to her Ipod long before the AI performances.
I'll admit I finished dinner in a sulk and wasn't the most chipper and cheerful mom that night. It is wearying living with teenagers, those creatures who always have to be right and, more importantly, show you that you're not. I needed a break and I knew just who to call.
My sister Deb lives about an hour and a quarter from me, just the perfect distance for a Saturday afternoon shopping trip. The next morning I called her and, after a few minutes of venting asked if she could get her husband to watch the kids on Saturday and have a Mom's Day Out. Since Deb's daughters (she has three) range in age from nine to three and therefore are a combination of physically and emotionally demanding, she was more than willing. More importantly, Steve was willing to play Mr. Mom. So Saturday afternoon found us meeting in the parking lot of a shopping plaza with nothing to do but shop, talk and eat.
The details of that afternoon are unimportant - suffice it to say we looked at some things, bought very little and talked incessantly. The luxury of uninterrupted conversation never goes unappreciated by a mom and we took full advantage of every minute available. We ran out of shopping long before we ran out of stories to tell and laughs to share so we made our way over to the Macaroni Grill around 4:30 before the Saturday evening rush started.
And there we sat for the next three hours, bless our understanding waitress (we tipped her well, I promise!) We talked about husbands, kids, friends, dreams, hopes, worries, in-laws, childhood issues, American Idol, simplifying our lives, complicating our lives, etc., etc., etc.
And we could have gone on longer. That's the way it is when I'm with my sisters (Karen lives almost five hours away so she could not make it to this particular Mom's Day Out, but if she had the only difference it would have made might have been in restaurant choice). We can talk about just about anything and with the sweetest feeling of being secure and understood because we know we get each other. We are all as different as can be in personalities and styles yet that just makes it more fun. With no one do I feel more free to totally be myself that I do with Karen and Deb. It's such a relief to take off the mask that I often wear and just be me, warts and all.
When I started having babies I wanted a girl first - I had a boy. That was scary because I didn't know much about boys, not having had brothers myself. But I fell instantly in love with him, so much so that by the time I was about to deliver my second child I kind of hoped for a boy so Dan would have a brother. Again, the chromosomes decided otherwise and Emily was born. My disappointment lasted about a millisecond because I was thrilled with her. And then pregnancy number three - this time I wanted a girl, not just for myself but for Emily and the baby itself. Because I knew they would be sisters and that was the greatest gift. The cosmos cooperated this time and Elizabeth was born. Sisters.
If I could never give my girls another thing they would be okay because they have what they need most - each other. Some day, I tell them when they are in an argument, she will be your best friend. Sometimes they find that hard to believe but more and more I think they can see how that might possibly come to pass.
Carol Saline said "Sisters function as safety nets in a chaotic world simply by being there for each other." Amen, and amen.
I dedicate this post to my safety nets, Karen and Deb - I love you guys, always have, always will.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Cycling Wars
Yesterday afternoon's weather turned out much nicer than originally forecast so my husband and I couldn't resist a short bike ride. We had spend a lazy afternoon watching a Yankee baseball game while the girls flitted in and out of the house so we were ready for a little physical activity. My husband hasn't ridden much this year and was content to ease himself in with a short ride. I, having ridden quite a bit this past week and still a little sore from Friday's challenging ride, agreed and we decided to take a leisurely turn on what we call "the airport loop," a six-mile course that begins abour three miles from our house. Altogether 12 miles - a fine hour's work.
And so we began. Larry hasn't checked out his road bike yet this spring so he opted to ride his mountain bike. He often does that when he rides with me anyway since I ride a hybrid and the mountain bike evens us up a bit. My female quads really can't compete with his male ones - that's just biological fact.
Larry actually took off before me, needing the head start, but we met at the beginning of the airport loop and from there my lighter bike and better conditioning helped me to stay a bit ahead much of the first leg of the loop. Around here there is no such thing as a flat - even the sections of road that look flat are false flats - so the first part of this route consists of rolling uphills and downhills. After a couple of miles we enter a section where the hills are steeper and longer. It was near the entrance to this section where we spotted another cyclist. He was dogging it up the last not-too-steep but long uphill before the more challenging leg. I felt a little competitive surge and decided to shift into a higher gear so as to get more power from my pedaling. Behind me I sensed Larry do the same. Larry caught up to and passed me, then passed the other rider just after he had turned onto the road of which the rest of the loop consists.
That the other rider was surprised was clear - he obviously hadn't realized we were anywhere near him. Later Larry told me the other cyclist had passed him while he was waiting for me at the start of the route - I'm sure that provided much of Larry's incentive.
Then I passed The Foe. In hindsight we think this was the insult that demanded a response. The poor guy probably could accept Larry's passing him - they were both riding mountain bikes and he was a taller, sturdier guy than Larry, who is of average height and wiry. But a woman! At that point I was just trying to prove to myself that I could take this guy without too much effort and also not fall too far behind Larry. After all, I was out riding with my husband so I didn't want this other guy between us the whole way. As far as I was concerned, the contest was over after I passed him and settled back into a leisurely ride.
It was not to be. About half a mile up the road Larry and I were the ones surprised when The Foe caught up to us and passed. I could almost hear the war drums beating in Larry's ears. From his short distance behind me, where he usually rides, he shot out into the road and passed me. We were starting a downhill section so The Foe was already half a football field away. Larry poured it on while I decided to opt out of the competition. This was a guy thing, I told myself, a pissing match. I would watch in amusement from the safe perch of my girl's bike.
It didn't take Larry long to catch up to The Foe. My husband is in good shape even when he's not in great shape and he likes to let other guys know he can handle them on a bicycle. I grinned and silently cheered when he pulled out and passed on the left. They were beginning a steep uphill and I knew Larry had won this particular contest - as a Tour de France enthusiast he likes to say the hills are where you make your money. I wasn't sure when we would ride together again, since he obviously wasn't about to slow down any time soon, but that was okay. I'm a big girl and could ride by myself.
But soon my inner guy started to rear his handsome head. We were still climbing the hill and it was obvious that The Foe was dogging it again. As hills go this particular one was tough but not the toughest of the hills I climb regularly, not by a long shot. My inner guy was telling me I could take this guy too.
I did, of course - otherwise this story might not be so much worth telling. I smiled pleasantly as I passed, without a hint of the triumph I was feeling nor the pride that would propel me the rest of the route without stopping for so much as a sip of water. Larry was pleased when I caught up to him but informed me that The Foe was still coming on so we kept pushing hard. He was within sight as we started down a long hill which is followed by a long and steep uphill. It was here Larry declared us safe from the Foe's advances - this was the toughest hill on the route and we knew he couldn't handle it. We had won!
In fact, we never saw him again - he never even got close. Of course, the poor guy might not have even known we were racing, but I think he did. After all, he looked the part of serious cyclist in his cycling shorts and fancy jersey, a camelback supplying his water needs. We, wearing gym shorts and t-shirts, looked like a couple of amateurs. The Foe may have thought we had thrown down the gauntlet on that first pass. He took one look at us and decided we were upstarts who needed to be taught a lesson. He underestimated us - big mistake.
Still, he might just have been out for a leisurely ride. For that matter, so were we. Testosterone happens.
And so we began. Larry hasn't checked out his road bike yet this spring so he opted to ride his mountain bike. He often does that when he rides with me anyway since I ride a hybrid and the mountain bike evens us up a bit. My female quads really can't compete with his male ones - that's just biological fact.
Larry actually took off before me, needing the head start, but we met at the beginning of the airport loop and from there my lighter bike and better conditioning helped me to stay a bit ahead much of the first leg of the loop. Around here there is no such thing as a flat - even the sections of road that look flat are false flats - so the first part of this route consists of rolling uphills and downhills. After a couple of miles we enter a section where the hills are steeper and longer. It was near the entrance to this section where we spotted another cyclist. He was dogging it up the last not-too-steep but long uphill before the more challenging leg. I felt a little competitive surge and decided to shift into a higher gear so as to get more power from my pedaling. Behind me I sensed Larry do the same. Larry caught up to and passed me, then passed the other rider just after he had turned onto the road of which the rest of the loop consists.
That the other rider was surprised was clear - he obviously hadn't realized we were anywhere near him. Later Larry told me the other cyclist had passed him while he was waiting for me at the start of the route - I'm sure that provided much of Larry's incentive.
Then I passed The Foe. In hindsight we think this was the insult that demanded a response. The poor guy probably could accept Larry's passing him - they were both riding mountain bikes and he was a taller, sturdier guy than Larry, who is of average height and wiry. But a woman! At that point I was just trying to prove to myself that I could take this guy without too much effort and also not fall too far behind Larry. After all, I was out riding with my husband so I didn't want this other guy between us the whole way. As far as I was concerned, the contest was over after I passed him and settled back into a leisurely ride.
It was not to be. About half a mile up the road Larry and I were the ones surprised when The Foe caught up to us and passed. I could almost hear the war drums beating in Larry's ears. From his short distance behind me, where he usually rides, he shot out into the road and passed me. We were starting a downhill section so The Foe was already half a football field away. Larry poured it on while I decided to opt out of the competition. This was a guy thing, I told myself, a pissing match. I would watch in amusement from the safe perch of my girl's bike.
It didn't take Larry long to catch up to The Foe. My husband is in good shape even when he's not in great shape and he likes to let other guys know he can handle them on a bicycle. I grinned and silently cheered when he pulled out and passed on the left. They were beginning a steep uphill and I knew Larry had won this particular contest - as a Tour de France enthusiast he likes to say the hills are where you make your money. I wasn't sure when we would ride together again, since he obviously wasn't about to slow down any time soon, but that was okay. I'm a big girl and could ride by myself.
But soon my inner guy started to rear his handsome head. We were still climbing the hill and it was obvious that The Foe was dogging it again. As hills go this particular one was tough but not the toughest of the hills I climb regularly, not by a long shot. My inner guy was telling me I could take this guy too.
I did, of course - otherwise this story might not be so much worth telling. I smiled pleasantly as I passed, without a hint of the triumph I was feeling nor the pride that would propel me the rest of the route without stopping for so much as a sip of water. Larry was pleased when I caught up to him but informed me that The Foe was still coming on so we kept pushing hard. He was within sight as we started down a long hill which is followed by a long and steep uphill. It was here Larry declared us safe from the Foe's advances - this was the toughest hill on the route and we knew he couldn't handle it. We had won!
In fact, we never saw him again - he never even got close. Of course, the poor guy might not have even known we were racing, but I think he did. After all, he looked the part of serious cyclist in his cycling shorts and fancy jersey, a camelback supplying his water needs. We, wearing gym shorts and t-shirts, looked like a couple of amateurs. The Foe may have thought we had thrown down the gauntlet on that first pass. He took one look at us and decided we were upstarts who needed to be taught a lesson. He underestimated us - big mistake.
Still, he might just have been out for a leisurely ride. For that matter, so were we. Testosterone happens.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Play's the Thing
Ask just about any kid what his or her favorite school subject is and almost every one will give the same answer - recess. Some might say gym but only because they associate it with the same ultimate feeling - that of playing. Even excellent students who enjoy learning will answer the same, much to the chagrin of their more academically oriented parents. To those parents I say "Come on - when you were a kid wasn't playing your favorite thing to do?"
We do seem to lose our ability to play as we age. Certainly our concept of play changes. I remember when I was around eleven or twelve losing my interest in dolls. My sister and our best friend acquired a couple of new dolls, Velvet and Cricket (they had hair that could be styled in short bobs or, when you pushed a button in their tummies, you could pull the hair out so it came to their waists). I was given a Chrissy doll of the same variety but found little pleasure in her. While Karen and Kathy happily styled their dolls' hair and made up stories and games to go along, I realized I didn't like to play with dolls anymore. Instinctively I knew I was growing up and getting too old for dolls and this knowledge saddened and excited me at the same time. It was right and natural that I move beyond dolls and childhood games but bittersweet just the same.
The good news is grown-ups still play, just diffferently. I recently listened to a podcast entitled "Play, Spirit and Character," in which Krista Tippett of "Speaking of Faith" interviewed Dr. Stuart Brown, who founded the Intitute of Play at the age of 63. He actually studies the science of play and has found great value to play behavior in animals and humans. Children, of course, benefit tremendously from play - it teaches them empathy, trust and problem solving, all the while developing their imaginations and their bodies. But as adults we still need play, perhaps especially so based on one of Dr. Brown's definitions of adult play - it takes us out of the moment and temporarily suspends our sense of time.
We grown-ups definitely are enslaved by the clock so anything that breaks that bond, even for just a little while, is something worth pursuing. Dr. Brown says there are consequences for adults who do not experience play, one of those being depression. I remember that I did not get enough play time as a young mother and I certainly missed it. I wasn't really depressed, but I was certainly more irritable and anxious. "Mom's night out" was invented for women, like me, who take motherhood a little too seriously sometimes.
As the kids have grown, however, play has re-entered my life, and none too soon. While I played with my kids when they were younger, some of it felt more like work for me. Older kids, though, enjoy more of the same things adults enjoy so their play becomes more like that of mom's and dad's. Games, for instance, have long been mutually enjoyed by our family. Board and card games are especially helpful in breaking the ice and becoming reacquainted with aunts, uncles and grandparents, many of whom are only visited with occasionally. Games of Uno, Checkers and Trouble alway warmed things up quickly. Today Phase 10, Scattergories and Apples to Apples fit the bill. No matter what the game, it accomplishes the same worthy goal - we drop our guard and becomes friends, competitors, playmates.
Recognized play, such as games, is only one source of fun and pleasure for adults, of course, so our play can be as intense as building miniatures or as simiple as reading a book. Anything that takes us "outside of time," Dr. Brown said, qaulifies as play.
With such a wide definition available, I decided to look at my life and see just how much playing I do. Happily, my playtime has definitely increased in recent years as the kids have become independent and I have had some extra time on my hands. Certainly reading is a crucial play activity for me, though since much of my reading is non-fiction I'm afraid it seems a little more intense than playing should. But since my non-fiction selections reflect some of my passions and interests - history, culture, biography and memoir - it still feels like play to me.
Playing computer Scrabble has become a passion of mine, one I have to limit or I could easily spend way more time than is good trying to beat "Maven," my computer opponent.
Listening to Yankees games on the radio can be fun, depending on who's pitching, lol.
Watching movies based on Jane Austen books is definitely high on my play list.
Walking with Madison, especially on the mountain trails near our house, is a good way to play. When she looks back at me with her tongue hanging out, her ears up and her eyes begging the question "Isn't this a blast?" I have to agree that it is.
Any time I spend with my sisters, either in person or over the phone, usually qualifies as play time.
And then there is my very favorite form of recreation: riding my bicycle. That is one thing that has not changed a bit since I was a kid. Put me on my bike and point me toward my favorite route and I am just about as happy as is possible. In fact, my bicycle rides are such an important part of my play life they deserve an entire blog - which they will get.
One last play activity I'll mention is that of watching my kids play. Now, my kids are getting up there in age - My son Dan is 20, Emily just turned 18 and Elizabeth will be 16 in July - but they still play and I love that they do. This past week the girls had a break from school and during the second part of the week, when the weather turned sunny and warm, they spent more time outdoors than indoors (which always does a mom's heart good). They have a nice group of neighborhood friends with whom they played kickball, knockout, and soccer, as well as taking walks to the ice cream store and riding up and down the street on scooters and bikes. I took a turn on the scooter myself a couple of times and it was just as fun as it was when I was a kid.
May they never get too old to play. May none of us either.
We do seem to lose our ability to play as we age. Certainly our concept of play changes. I remember when I was around eleven or twelve losing my interest in dolls. My sister and our best friend acquired a couple of new dolls, Velvet and Cricket (they had hair that could be styled in short bobs or, when you pushed a button in their tummies, you could pull the hair out so it came to their waists). I was given a Chrissy doll of the same variety but found little pleasure in her. While Karen and Kathy happily styled their dolls' hair and made up stories and games to go along, I realized I didn't like to play with dolls anymore. Instinctively I knew I was growing up and getting too old for dolls and this knowledge saddened and excited me at the same time. It was right and natural that I move beyond dolls and childhood games but bittersweet just the same.
The good news is grown-ups still play, just diffferently. I recently listened to a podcast entitled "Play, Spirit and Character," in which Krista Tippett of "Speaking of Faith" interviewed Dr. Stuart Brown, who founded the Intitute of Play at the age of 63. He actually studies the science of play and has found great value to play behavior in animals and humans. Children, of course, benefit tremendously from play - it teaches them empathy, trust and problem solving, all the while developing their imaginations and their bodies. But as adults we still need play, perhaps especially so based on one of Dr. Brown's definitions of adult play - it takes us out of the moment and temporarily suspends our sense of time.
We grown-ups definitely are enslaved by the clock so anything that breaks that bond, even for just a little while, is something worth pursuing. Dr. Brown says there are consequences for adults who do not experience play, one of those being depression. I remember that I did not get enough play time as a young mother and I certainly missed it. I wasn't really depressed, but I was certainly more irritable and anxious. "Mom's night out" was invented for women, like me, who take motherhood a little too seriously sometimes.
As the kids have grown, however, play has re-entered my life, and none too soon. While I played with my kids when they were younger, some of it felt more like work for me. Older kids, though, enjoy more of the same things adults enjoy so their play becomes more like that of mom's and dad's. Games, for instance, have long been mutually enjoyed by our family. Board and card games are especially helpful in breaking the ice and becoming reacquainted with aunts, uncles and grandparents, many of whom are only visited with occasionally. Games of Uno, Checkers and Trouble alway warmed things up quickly. Today Phase 10, Scattergories and Apples to Apples fit the bill. No matter what the game, it accomplishes the same worthy goal - we drop our guard and becomes friends, competitors, playmates.
Recognized play, such as games, is only one source of fun and pleasure for adults, of course, so our play can be as intense as building miniatures or as simiple as reading a book. Anything that takes us "outside of time," Dr. Brown said, qaulifies as play.
With such a wide definition available, I decided to look at my life and see just how much playing I do. Happily, my playtime has definitely increased in recent years as the kids have become independent and I have had some extra time on my hands. Certainly reading is a crucial play activity for me, though since much of my reading is non-fiction I'm afraid it seems a little more intense than playing should. But since my non-fiction selections reflect some of my passions and interests - history, culture, biography and memoir - it still feels like play to me.
Playing computer Scrabble has become a passion of mine, one I have to limit or I could easily spend way more time than is good trying to beat "Maven," my computer opponent.
Listening to Yankees games on the radio can be fun, depending on who's pitching, lol.
Watching movies based on Jane Austen books is definitely high on my play list.
Walking with Madison, especially on the mountain trails near our house, is a good way to play. When she looks back at me with her tongue hanging out, her ears up and her eyes begging the question "Isn't this a blast?" I have to agree that it is.
Any time I spend with my sisters, either in person or over the phone, usually qualifies as play time.
And then there is my very favorite form of recreation: riding my bicycle. That is one thing that has not changed a bit since I was a kid. Put me on my bike and point me toward my favorite route and I am just about as happy as is possible. In fact, my bicycle rides are such an important part of my play life they deserve an entire blog - which they will get.
One last play activity I'll mention is that of watching my kids play. Now, my kids are getting up there in age - My son Dan is 20, Emily just turned 18 and Elizabeth will be 16 in July - but they still play and I love that they do. This past week the girls had a break from school and during the second part of the week, when the weather turned sunny and warm, they spent more time outdoors than indoors (which always does a mom's heart good). They have a nice group of neighborhood friends with whom they played kickball, knockout, and soccer, as well as taking walks to the ice cream store and riding up and down the street on scooters and bikes. I took a turn on the scooter myself a couple of times and it was just as fun as it was when I was a kid.
May they never get too old to play. May none of us either.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Spoiled Childhood, part three - Less IS More
One of the biggest mistakes I made as a parent to young children was buying my daughters their second American Girl Dolls. Not the first ones, mind you, though they did cost over $80 apiece. But the second ones. I'll explain.
When Emily was five, almost six, she discovered American Girl dolls and books. Unfortunately for her, it was right after Christmas and I don't believe in giving children something just because they want it. In our home we wait for a special occasion, partly because it adds to the magic of that occasion and partly because I have a great respect for the value of anticipation. I know that makes me somewhat of an oddity in today's "I want it when I want it" culture but I think I've already established that I'm in rebellion against that culture, haven't I?
So Emily and her younger sister Elizabeth, who immediately caught the American Girl bug also, had eleven months to anticipate the possibility that Santa would bring these lovely dolls to them. In the meantime we read all the books and pored over the catalogs which appeared in our mailbox monthly. At the time there were five dolls available and it was tough to decide which ones the girls liked most but eventually choices were made - Emily wanted Kirsten, the Swedish immigrant pioneer girl, and Elizabeth want Felicity, the colonial girl who was caught up in the events of the American Revolution.
Christmas finally came and it was a delight to watch my girls hug their Kirsten and Felicity dolls for the first time. From then on the girls and their dolls were inseparable - they played, they ate and they slept together. The dolls even looked like their human friends - Elizabeth and Felicity both had long red hair and Emily started wearing her long blond hair in looped braids like Kirsten's. I made Emily a pioneer outfit just like Kirsten's so she could portray her for a special book event at school. It was the kind of special girl/doll relationship that many a mom remembers having with her own Raggedy Ann or Wetsy Betsy or, in my case, Miss Peep.
But then we succumbed to the siren song of a society that is fueled by consumerism - if one American Girl doll is good, two will be even better!
Oh how wrong we were. Samantha and Molly joined the family and things were never the same, between them and their girls or between the girls and their first dolls. Suddenly Emily's and Elizabeth's attention was divided between two dolls and rather than try to make a choice or bring both along, both started being left behind. Four dolls were okay when it was time for some make-believe play with the doll furniture and wardrobes we had acquired but when it comes to love it seems little girls have only enough space in their hearts for one special doll. I wonder now if girls and dolls are more about learning to be wives than mothers.
I'm embarrassed to admit that the American Girl collection did not stop there - eventually Josefina and Kit also joined the family. Today, of course, they sit on shelves in teenage girls' room, decorations and reminders of girlhood past. The only comfort in having so many of these dolls is that both girls hope to have little girls of their own someday to whom they can give these dolls. I've already shared with them these observation of which I now write and hope they take them to heart. One American Girl per American girl, please!
We've all done it though, haven't we? We get caught up in the thinking that if one is good, two is better and three or four is great! Then we spend the rest of our lives reading articles in women's magazine about organizing our homes and getting rid of clutter. The more I read these articles the more I think the most important piece of advice is too often absent. That is: Don't buy so much stuff in the first place!
If I could go back and do parenting again, a theme I often return to in my mental ramblings, I would concentrate on quality over quantity when it comes to toys and even books. I once saw a family of kids have so much fun with a set of big wooden blocks - they created stores and houses and really used their imaginations. My own kids loved their smaller blocks and built many a wonderful structure with them, so I wish that instead of buying the latest cheap plastic robot or other trendy piece of junk we had put our money into a couple of sets of those big blocks. They were expensive but we would still have them because they are the kind of toy you save for your grandkids. Meanwhile, Megatron and the Barbie makeover head found their way to the dump many years hence.
As for books, I would not buy so many cheap paperbacks, especially of silly series like Goosebumps or The Babysitter's Club. Those are the kinds of books that should only be borrowed, or maybe acquired for ten cents apiece at garage sales. My book money would go into hardcover editions of classics like the Little House books, the Chronicles of Narnia and the Anne of Green Gables series. Those are the books we can read over and over, together and apart. And they're the books that I'll someday enjoy reading to my grandkids. I certainly can't say that for any of the Goosebumps books.
Our affluent society would do well to remember that when it comes to material items, less really is more. If nothing else, the time we save in cleaning up and organizing all this stuff is time we can spend talking to and teaching and loving our kids. And when it comes to talking, teaching and loving children, more IS more.
When Emily was five, almost six, she discovered American Girl dolls and books. Unfortunately for her, it was right after Christmas and I don't believe in giving children something just because they want it. In our home we wait for a special occasion, partly because it adds to the magic of that occasion and partly because I have a great respect for the value of anticipation. I know that makes me somewhat of an oddity in today's "I want it when I want it" culture but I think I've already established that I'm in rebellion against that culture, haven't I?
So Emily and her younger sister Elizabeth, who immediately caught the American Girl bug also, had eleven months to anticipate the possibility that Santa would bring these lovely dolls to them. In the meantime we read all the books and pored over the catalogs which appeared in our mailbox monthly. At the time there were five dolls available and it was tough to decide which ones the girls liked most but eventually choices were made - Emily wanted Kirsten, the Swedish immigrant pioneer girl, and Elizabeth want Felicity, the colonial girl who was caught up in the events of the American Revolution.
Christmas finally came and it was a delight to watch my girls hug their Kirsten and Felicity dolls for the first time. From then on the girls and their dolls were inseparable - they played, they ate and they slept together. The dolls even looked like their human friends - Elizabeth and Felicity both had long red hair and Emily started wearing her long blond hair in looped braids like Kirsten's. I made Emily a pioneer outfit just like Kirsten's so she could portray her for a special book event at school. It was the kind of special girl/doll relationship that many a mom remembers having with her own Raggedy Ann or Wetsy Betsy or, in my case, Miss Peep.
But then we succumbed to the siren song of a society that is fueled by consumerism - if one American Girl doll is good, two will be even better!
Oh how wrong we were. Samantha and Molly joined the family and things were never the same, between them and their girls or between the girls and their first dolls. Suddenly Emily's and Elizabeth's attention was divided between two dolls and rather than try to make a choice or bring both along, both started being left behind. Four dolls were okay when it was time for some make-believe play with the doll furniture and wardrobes we had acquired but when it comes to love it seems little girls have only enough space in their hearts for one special doll. I wonder now if girls and dolls are more about learning to be wives than mothers.
I'm embarrassed to admit that the American Girl collection did not stop there - eventually Josefina and Kit also joined the family. Today, of course, they sit on shelves in teenage girls' room, decorations and reminders of girlhood past. The only comfort in having so many of these dolls is that both girls hope to have little girls of their own someday to whom they can give these dolls. I've already shared with them these observation of which I now write and hope they take them to heart. One American Girl per American girl, please!
We've all done it though, haven't we? We get caught up in the thinking that if one is good, two is better and three or four is great! Then we spend the rest of our lives reading articles in women's magazine about organizing our homes and getting rid of clutter. The more I read these articles the more I think the most important piece of advice is too often absent. That is: Don't buy so much stuff in the first place!
If I could go back and do parenting again, a theme I often return to in my mental ramblings, I would concentrate on quality over quantity when it comes to toys and even books. I once saw a family of kids have so much fun with a set of big wooden blocks - they created stores and houses and really used their imaginations. My own kids loved their smaller blocks and built many a wonderful structure with them, so I wish that instead of buying the latest cheap plastic robot or other trendy piece of junk we had put our money into a couple of sets of those big blocks. They were expensive but we would still have them because they are the kind of toy you save for your grandkids. Meanwhile, Megatron and the Barbie makeover head found their way to the dump many years hence.
As for books, I would not buy so many cheap paperbacks, especially of silly series like Goosebumps or The Babysitter's Club. Those are the kinds of books that should only be borrowed, or maybe acquired for ten cents apiece at garage sales. My book money would go into hardcover editions of classics like the Little House books, the Chronicles of Narnia and the Anne of Green Gables series. Those are the books we can read over and over, together and apart. And they're the books that I'll someday enjoy reading to my grandkids. I certainly can't say that for any of the Goosebumps books.
Our affluent society would do well to remember that when it comes to material items, less really is more. If nothing else, the time we save in cleaning up and organizing all this stuff is time we can spend talking to and teaching and loving our kids. And when it comes to talking, teaching and loving children, more IS more.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Spoiled Childhood, part two - Where does love grow best?
There can be no doubt that as a people we have embraced the maxim "bigger is better." We see it in cars - or trucks and vans rather - which have enough space for more than half a dozen people though they are often only transporting one or two. We see it in restaurant meals which, for me at least, easily provide dinner one night and lunch for the next two days. And we see it in houses - boy, do we see it in houses.
Not only the houses but their accoutrements as well. In the neighborhood next to ours, arguably the nicest one in town, the homes are large and well-kept. In one of these homes lives a family of three - mom, dad and little girl of about seven. The house is huge, of course, with probably four times as many rooms as people living in them, and toward the back of the manicured two-acre lot sits a large, empty play set.
I'm always a little incredulous as I stare at this play set. Situated on a 40x25, wood chip-filled plot, it has several slides, a couple of towers, swings, a sliding pole and more. It occurs to me that there is actually more equipment there than there is on the playground at the small parochial school where I substitute teach. And it exists for only one child, at least in theory - I'm not sure I've ever actually seen this little girl playing on it.
Now when I was a kid we had a swing set - it was metal with a short slide that burned your butt in the summer but was great for climbing, all four feet of it. There were also two swings and a glider, which my mother used to sit in with my baby sister.
My other sister, our best friend and I spent many hours on this swingset, only some of them using the equipment as it was meant to be used. The metal bars between the legs were great for practicing front and back flips, in preparation for our future Olympic appearances. Often we took the swings down and went back and forth, hand over hand, across the entire six-foot expanse of the set. We also liked to just swing, sometimes singing as we sailed up and down. We hatched an elaborate scheme to stay on the swings for as many hours as it would take to break a Guiness World Record. When our mothers wouldn't cooperate in that plan by bringing our dinners out to us we set out to create the world's longest gum wrapper chain. It got pretty long - seven or eight feet, I'd say - before we got bored and went looking for another way to get our names in the record books.
Our swing set was not firmly anchored in the ground - the legs would come up as we went higher and higher - and it was on ordinary grass rather than a layer of wood chips over black plastic. But we survived with nothing but minor scrapes and bruises, plus a few fingers pinched in the metal swing chains (no plastic sleeves to prevent that back then). My friend did break her ankle once, but that was while playing Spud.
But while the playset I see in the yard of this little girl puts the one of my own childhood to shame, I do not envy her, neither do I feel shame for providing my own children when they were small with just a modern version of my own modest play set. As I said, I don't see the little girl playing on this elaborate setup. There's probably not much time in between all the lessons and sports practices we feel are necessary for children's development today. And when she does manage to find a minute to just sit on a swing, it's probably not much fun without a friend. It's hard to find overlapping play time when your friends are as busy attending sports practices and learning to dance and meeting with private tutors as you are.
And there is one of today's biggest ironies. We have such large, lovely homes and such so many entertaining toys - yet we're never around to enjoy them. It's like our homes are just a place at which to stop off, change our clothes, catch a few zzzs and then take off again. A big part of that is because mom and dad are working their tails off trying to keep the family in big homes and toys.
My favorite comic when I was a kid was the Archie series and my favorite character was Veronica (the rich girl with the killer bod, of course). But I always felt a little sad for Veronica, too, especially after one particular comic ran. In the story, Veronica was wandering around her mansion comparing it to the "crackerboxes" her friends lived in. Neither parent was around - they were probably at the opera or some such millionaire activity - and Veronica was going from room to room congratulating herself on the blessings of living with her own bowling alley, movie theater, etc. Finally she looked a little sad and lonely then grabbed the phone to call her friend Betty and ask if she could spend the night at Betty's house. Once they were snuggled in Betty's cozy bedroom Veronica exclaimed "People who live in crackerboxes are the luckiest people in the world!"
Strange that a comic book story should have such an influence on me but all these years later I still remember that one and believe in its message. For a good portion of my grown-up family life we lived in a "crackerbox," at least as compared to the homes of our friends. My two girls had to - prepare yourself to be shocked - share a room (does that qualify as child abuse these days?) and the rooms were small enough to make the kitchen table seem a more attractive setting for doing homework. There were just two bathrooms (one more than my family had when I was growing up!) and I became an expert at getting rid of clutter because we just didn't have a lot of extra storage space.
About four years ago we moved to our present home, which has twice the living space. I'm glad we did - I really love our house and yard and the neighborhood in which they sit - but sometimes I am a little wistful for the old crackerbox. These days everyone separates after dinner to bedrooms or sitting areas - we can easily each have a room to ourself. Part of that is a function of having teenagers instead of small children but part of it is that we're not as good at sharing space as we used to be. No one wants to wait for a bathroom. The girls tell me having the computer and the piano in the same room is not such a good plan because they distract each other. Patience, longsuffering, doing without - not so much a part of life as we know it anymore. And it is amazing how STUFF expands to fill empty space (more on that in my next post).
I wonder how many important life lessons our children lose when homes are designed more for show and convenience and less for cooperation. Just the simple act of sharing a room teaches volumes about courtesy, patience and just getting along. It can also actually be kind of fun to have someone to talk to while you're trying to fall asleep at night. My own daughter who is leaving for college in the fall is currently bunking with her sister while we repaint and recarpet her room. She's having so much fun, she said, she wants to continue (her sister, however, is missing her privacy). Unfortunately, I believe there are many college-aged kids whose first experience with sharing a room is in the dorm. Kind of a rude awakening, I expect.
If they can suffer through that year of torture, however, paradise awaits in their off campus apartment. Gone are the days of ramen noodles and peanut butter sandwiches for dinner. Today's college crowd regularly hits the local restaurants even though their apartment kitchens provide all the modern kitchen conveniences, like dishwashers and microwaves. And that roommate thing - so yesterday! Whereas my college apartment involved six twin bed in three bedroom, my son moved into his apartment to his own room with a full size bed. The twin bed accessories I had bought for him showed my ignorance of the plush lifestyle young people can expect today.
As a society we are pretty focused on convenience and comfort. Not terrible things to enjoy, of course, yet I think the overemphasis on them compromises another important c-word - character. As our economy shows more and more signs of weakening I can't help but wonder how the current generations of both adults and children will handle scaling back their lifestyles. I don't think it will be our finest moment.
Not only the houses but their accoutrements as well. In the neighborhood next to ours, arguably the nicest one in town, the homes are large and well-kept. In one of these homes lives a family of three - mom, dad and little girl of about seven. The house is huge, of course, with probably four times as many rooms as people living in them, and toward the back of the manicured two-acre lot sits a large, empty play set.
I'm always a little incredulous as I stare at this play set. Situated on a 40x25, wood chip-filled plot, it has several slides, a couple of towers, swings, a sliding pole and more. It occurs to me that there is actually more equipment there than there is on the playground at the small parochial school where I substitute teach. And it exists for only one child, at least in theory - I'm not sure I've ever actually seen this little girl playing on it.
Now when I was a kid we had a swing set - it was metal with a short slide that burned your butt in the summer but was great for climbing, all four feet of it. There were also two swings and a glider, which my mother used to sit in with my baby sister.
My other sister, our best friend and I spent many hours on this swingset, only some of them using the equipment as it was meant to be used. The metal bars between the legs were great for practicing front and back flips, in preparation for our future Olympic appearances. Often we took the swings down and went back and forth, hand over hand, across the entire six-foot expanse of the set. We also liked to just swing, sometimes singing as we sailed up and down. We hatched an elaborate scheme to stay on the swings for as many hours as it would take to break a Guiness World Record. When our mothers wouldn't cooperate in that plan by bringing our dinners out to us we set out to create the world's longest gum wrapper chain. It got pretty long - seven or eight feet, I'd say - before we got bored and went looking for another way to get our names in the record books.
Our swing set was not firmly anchored in the ground - the legs would come up as we went higher and higher - and it was on ordinary grass rather than a layer of wood chips over black plastic. But we survived with nothing but minor scrapes and bruises, plus a few fingers pinched in the metal swing chains (no plastic sleeves to prevent that back then). My friend did break her ankle once, but that was while playing Spud.
But while the playset I see in the yard of this little girl puts the one of my own childhood to shame, I do not envy her, neither do I feel shame for providing my own children when they were small with just a modern version of my own modest play set. As I said, I don't see the little girl playing on this elaborate setup. There's probably not much time in between all the lessons and sports practices we feel are necessary for children's development today. And when she does manage to find a minute to just sit on a swing, it's probably not much fun without a friend. It's hard to find overlapping play time when your friends are as busy attending sports practices and learning to dance and meeting with private tutors as you are.
And there is one of today's biggest ironies. We have such large, lovely homes and such so many entertaining toys - yet we're never around to enjoy them. It's like our homes are just a place at which to stop off, change our clothes, catch a few zzzs and then take off again. A big part of that is because mom and dad are working their tails off trying to keep the family in big homes and toys.
My favorite comic when I was a kid was the Archie series and my favorite character was Veronica (the rich girl with the killer bod, of course). But I always felt a little sad for Veronica, too, especially after one particular comic ran. In the story, Veronica was wandering around her mansion comparing it to the "crackerboxes" her friends lived in. Neither parent was around - they were probably at the opera or some such millionaire activity - and Veronica was going from room to room congratulating herself on the blessings of living with her own bowling alley, movie theater, etc. Finally she looked a little sad and lonely then grabbed the phone to call her friend Betty and ask if she could spend the night at Betty's house. Once they were snuggled in Betty's cozy bedroom Veronica exclaimed "People who live in crackerboxes are the luckiest people in the world!"
Strange that a comic book story should have such an influence on me but all these years later I still remember that one and believe in its message. For a good portion of my grown-up family life we lived in a "crackerbox," at least as compared to the homes of our friends. My two girls had to - prepare yourself to be shocked - share a room (does that qualify as child abuse these days?) and the rooms were small enough to make the kitchen table seem a more attractive setting for doing homework. There were just two bathrooms (one more than my family had when I was growing up!) and I became an expert at getting rid of clutter because we just didn't have a lot of extra storage space.
About four years ago we moved to our present home, which has twice the living space. I'm glad we did - I really love our house and yard and the neighborhood in which they sit - but sometimes I am a little wistful for the old crackerbox. These days everyone separates after dinner to bedrooms or sitting areas - we can easily each have a room to ourself. Part of that is a function of having teenagers instead of small children but part of it is that we're not as good at sharing space as we used to be. No one wants to wait for a bathroom. The girls tell me having the computer and the piano in the same room is not such a good plan because they distract each other. Patience, longsuffering, doing without - not so much a part of life as we know it anymore. And it is amazing how STUFF expands to fill empty space (more on that in my next post).
I wonder how many important life lessons our children lose when homes are designed more for show and convenience and less for cooperation. Just the simple act of sharing a room teaches volumes about courtesy, patience and just getting along. It can also actually be kind of fun to have someone to talk to while you're trying to fall asleep at night. My own daughter who is leaving for college in the fall is currently bunking with her sister while we repaint and recarpet her room. She's having so much fun, she said, she wants to continue (her sister, however, is missing her privacy). Unfortunately, I believe there are many college-aged kids whose first experience with sharing a room is in the dorm. Kind of a rude awakening, I expect.
If they can suffer through that year of torture, however, paradise awaits in their off campus apartment. Gone are the days of ramen noodles and peanut butter sandwiches for dinner. Today's college crowd regularly hits the local restaurants even though their apartment kitchens provide all the modern kitchen conveniences, like dishwashers and microwaves. And that roommate thing - so yesterday! Whereas my college apartment involved six twin bed in three bedroom, my son moved into his apartment to his own room with a full size bed. The twin bed accessories I had bought for him showed my ignorance of the plush lifestyle young people can expect today.
As a society we are pretty focused on convenience and comfort. Not terrible things to enjoy, of course, yet I think the overemphasis on them compromises another important c-word - character. As our economy shows more and more signs of weakening I can't help but wonder how the current generations of both adults and children will handle scaling back their lifestyles. I don't think it will be our finest moment.
Monday, February 11, 2008
Spoiled Childhood, part one
Madison and I head into the hills and mountains near our home whenever possible, but sometimes time and/or energy are in short supply and we content ourselves with walks through a couple of adjacent neighborhoods. One in particular is quite affluent - the homes are all large and well-kept on manicured two-acre lots. The other is nice but with smaller and older homes. No matter - both neighborhoods hold examples of one of the great tragedies of modern childhood: playthings that discourage imagination and social interaction and cooperation.
Today's example is from the older neighborhood. That is where I saw a great tree house in the design of a castle. It was big - probably the size of a small bedroom. I know that as a kid I would have been green with envy, which only goes to show that as a kid I didn't know much. Because as cool as this castle looked even to my adult eyes, I knew not much fun would ever be had there. For one thing, its design was so elaborate that it was not yet finished being built and I doubt it will be before its future occupants are in middle school (at which time they will definitely not want to occupy it.) For another, I've discovered as I matured that most of the fun in life is found in doing, not having.
My own childhood fort was just about as non-castlelike as you could possibly get. My best friend Kathy's family had a woodpile in the back of their yard. It was neatly stacked between two trees and came up about three feet. I don't know why but structures like this are irresistable to kids and before long it morphed into a kitchen in what became our pioneer cabin.
The two trees that bordered the woodpile were on the edge of a small woods which went down to a creek. We spent hours scavanging the creek for discarded objects - okay, we were picking trash. There wasn't as much plastic packaging then (we're talking late 1960s here) so a margerine tub was a valuable find. Mostly we found rusting cans that served as pots and pans. Sticks became forks and knives, pine cones, acorns and rocks were food. After a good meal in our rustic kitchen we could retire to the bedroom - a large, flat pile of mostly small rocks surrounded by trees behind the kitchen. A couple of larger rocks made great beds, perfect for sleeping off our imaginary pork and beans. Life was good on prairie.
Our cabin was never completely finished - we were always adding new household utensils and clearing new rooms. After month-long hiatus from trash picking one never knew what new treasure she might find so we'd head back to the creek to explore. The longer the game went the better it was.
It was the same when we played with our Barbies. For one thing, Barbie was pretty generic back then - she didn't come with a profession and all the accessories necessary to run a veterinary hospital or be a rock star. Barbie was just Barbie and we had accumulated a few of her and her friends, as well as a couple of cases and a smattering of outfits. We spent whole afternoons building and furnishing a gignatic house made from cases turned on their sides. Old boxes became beds, washcloths made great blankets and sock hangers held homemade Barbie dresses. The Barbies busied themselves moving into and arranging their new digs and it was during this activity that the drama unfolded. A couple of Barbies might have a fight over who got which bedroom, or who got Ken. There were various kid dolls of non-Barbie origin (and unknown parentage) who needed tending. And someone had to deal with the telephone company!
We would spend entire rainy afternoons setting up this communal Barbie residence (all the cases were placed end to end - no separate homes in this family compound). Just as the last dress was hung and the Barbies were ready to really do something someone's mother would call and tell her it was time to come home for dinner. The house would have to be disassembled, everything was put away and we promised ourselves that next time we would put things together faster so we could really play.
Thank goodness that never happened. The Barbie house-raising project always occupied our full play time and now I know what a blessing that was because if we had actually gotten to the point when the Barbies could relax, the fun would have been over for us. I mean, really, what is there to do with a bunch of stiff-legged dolls who already have their house in order?
I understand now that play is all about the journey because once you've arrived at your destination the game is over. And that's why castle tree houses disturb me. The destination has already been furnished and there is no need to play. Play involves imagination and creativity. It's a chance to practice being a grown-up, to invent, to innovate. When a kid is plopped in the middle of a complete playhouse furnished with a plastic kitchen brimming with plastic food, what's left to do? The fun part has already been done.
Childhood is something that should be enjoyed, not managed. We all know of kids who need their own palm pilots to keep their schedules straight - horseback riding at 3:00, ballet at 5:30, Swim practice at 7:15. Kids today sure don't have a lot of free time so maybe parents think that by providing ready-made play areas they are helping their kids get straight to the business of playing. No time to waste on making stuff up, let's get to work - PLAY, darn it!
But maybe what kids really need is free time. Undoubtedly that is one of the few things affluent parents no longer provide. What a waste.
Today's example is from the older neighborhood. That is where I saw a great tree house in the design of a castle. It was big - probably the size of a small bedroom. I know that as a kid I would have been green with envy, which only goes to show that as a kid I didn't know much. Because as cool as this castle looked even to my adult eyes, I knew not much fun would ever be had there. For one thing, its design was so elaborate that it was not yet finished being built and I doubt it will be before its future occupants are in middle school (at which time they will definitely not want to occupy it.) For another, I've discovered as I matured that most of the fun in life is found in doing, not having.
My own childhood fort was just about as non-castlelike as you could possibly get. My best friend Kathy's family had a woodpile in the back of their yard. It was neatly stacked between two trees and came up about three feet. I don't know why but structures like this are irresistable to kids and before long it morphed into a kitchen in what became our pioneer cabin.
The two trees that bordered the woodpile were on the edge of a small woods which went down to a creek. We spent hours scavanging the creek for discarded objects - okay, we were picking trash. There wasn't as much plastic packaging then (we're talking late 1960s here) so a margerine tub was a valuable find. Mostly we found rusting cans that served as pots and pans. Sticks became forks and knives, pine cones, acorns and rocks were food. After a good meal in our rustic kitchen we could retire to the bedroom - a large, flat pile of mostly small rocks surrounded by trees behind the kitchen. A couple of larger rocks made great beds, perfect for sleeping off our imaginary pork and beans. Life was good on prairie.
Our cabin was never completely finished - we were always adding new household utensils and clearing new rooms. After month-long hiatus from trash picking one never knew what new treasure she might find so we'd head back to the creek to explore. The longer the game went the better it was.
It was the same when we played with our Barbies. For one thing, Barbie was pretty generic back then - she didn't come with a profession and all the accessories necessary to run a veterinary hospital or be a rock star. Barbie was just Barbie and we had accumulated a few of her and her friends, as well as a couple of cases and a smattering of outfits. We spent whole afternoons building and furnishing a gignatic house made from cases turned on their sides. Old boxes became beds, washcloths made great blankets and sock hangers held homemade Barbie dresses. The Barbies busied themselves moving into and arranging their new digs and it was during this activity that the drama unfolded. A couple of Barbies might have a fight over who got which bedroom, or who got Ken. There were various kid dolls of non-Barbie origin (and unknown parentage) who needed tending. And someone had to deal with the telephone company!
We would spend entire rainy afternoons setting up this communal Barbie residence (all the cases were placed end to end - no separate homes in this family compound). Just as the last dress was hung and the Barbies were ready to really do something someone's mother would call and tell her it was time to come home for dinner. The house would have to be disassembled, everything was put away and we promised ourselves that next time we would put things together faster so we could really play.
Thank goodness that never happened. The Barbie house-raising project always occupied our full play time and now I know what a blessing that was because if we had actually gotten to the point when the Barbies could relax, the fun would have been over for us. I mean, really, what is there to do with a bunch of stiff-legged dolls who already have their house in order?
I understand now that play is all about the journey because once you've arrived at your destination the game is over. And that's why castle tree houses disturb me. The destination has already been furnished and there is no need to play. Play involves imagination and creativity. It's a chance to practice being a grown-up, to invent, to innovate. When a kid is plopped in the middle of a complete playhouse furnished with a plastic kitchen brimming with plastic food, what's left to do? The fun part has already been done.
Childhood is something that should be enjoyed, not managed. We all know of kids who need their own palm pilots to keep their schedules straight - horseback riding at 3:00, ballet at 5:30, Swim practice at 7:15. Kids today sure don't have a lot of free time so maybe parents think that by providing ready-made play areas they are helping their kids get straight to the business of playing. No time to waste on making stuff up, let's get to work - PLAY, darn it!
But maybe what kids really need is free time. Undoubtedly that is one of the few things affluent parents no longer provide. What a waste.
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