Strollerderby

Kids Need the Outdoors

Posted by Kelly Mills

kids in natureWondering why so many kids nowadays are obese, play video games nonstop, and squint when every time they get in real sunlight? According to Richard Louv, we are cloistering our children inside, robbing them of communion with nature. The pressure to get kids to succeed academically so they can get into Hah-vard, lack of big fields and other spaces for kids to run around, and to a certain extent T.V. and iPods are all fingered in his book, Last Child in the Woods. And he also looks at the way we parent today. "'The underbelly of this issue is that parents are scared to death,' Louv said. 'Parents are terrified that some stranger is going to take their kids at the corner.' He blamed the national media for taking a handful of terrible crimes against children, magnifying and repeating them over and over, to create a national state of fear."

Amen to that! So many of us are completely freaked about "stranger danger" and restrict our kids' freedom. I know I was allowed to walk the few blocks to the store by the time I was seven, and I still can't imagine my child doing the same, even though I grew up in an urban environment too. As for camping, hiking, and fishing...Well, with so much of our beautiful outdoor space being destroyed, we'll be lucky if we can take the kids to a crowded campsite in a few years. Louv has some great thoughts on all these issues. It's hard to let your kid roam freely when you know he or she will be the only kid out there without a grown-up following right behind, chattering about adult supervision and the next scheduled activity.


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Comments

 

Mom2Two said:

Have you heard of letterboxing?  I just read about it recently and it sounds like a great way to get the entire family outside.  I plan on trying it when my kids are older.

June 26, 2007 3:35 PM
 

amylee said:

Geocaching is fun, too. Sort of the same idea but using GPS (http://www.geocaching.com/).

I have the same childhood memories and am trying to give my young child breathing room, but I'm finding that I've got pressure to hover over her. If she's more than 6 feet from me (I keep her in view), a stranger will try to rescue her. I find that I have to make sort of a show of watching her just to appease the other adults around me. Has anyone else had that experience?

June 26, 2007 5:12 PM
 

K said:

I remember being unable to cross the street I lived on because it was a busy street. This was true until I was about 13 or 14, when I had no choice but to walk home from hanging out at a city park. My mother's reaction was "omg, you did it by yourself?"

Recently, the 8 year old in my home admitted that he's walked home after missing his school bus a few times. He does it with friends, without prior permission, and without incident despite having to cross two moderately busy streets.

Overprotection is bad. It reduces your child's self-confidence and prevents them from preparing for the real world.

PS: Metoo on geocaching.

June 26, 2007 5:21 PM
 

carfree childhood said:

amylee, that happens to me too.

It makes me feel like a bad parent but I think my kids are better off experiencing some independence (and sometimes falling) than never experiencing independence and never falling.

Unfortunately, when you try to explain this to some people they think that you are neglectful.

June 27, 2007 10:09 AM

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