Letting your child take risks may be the best thing you ever do for them.
Most parents want the same things for their children. To be happy. To be safe. To have opportunities in life. To be loved. But sometimes I lie awake worried my children have missed out on something equally important — adventure.
This week in Britain a parliamentary group found children should be participating in more risky play. It found children’s lives — especially at school — were being engulfed by work instead of what is actually more beneficial to their development — good old fashioned, rough-and-tumble play. It recommended that children have more opportunities to play near cliffs and water.
In our hearts, we know this is true. Children’s play these days — especially in urban areas — is safe and boring. Most playgrounds are designed with a view to minimising legal liability; the result being children are prevented from doing anything challenging at all.
The British report said: “Risky play involving perhaps rough and tumble, height, speed, playing near potentially dangerous elements such as water, cliffs and exploring alone with the possibility of getting lost gives children a feeling of thrill and excitement.
“Learning when feelings of fear indicates that behaviour is unsafe and learning to balance feelings of fear and excitement are the foundation of healthy self-esteem, self-reliance and resilience in the face of life’s stressors.”
Top Comments
I'm excited that playgrounds around here are adding so called adventure. Flying foxes, rock walls, etc.
My beautiful 1yo is always covered in bruises and scratches. I wonder if people think I'm a bad mum and not watching her. But she has an adventurous spirit and I'm not going to stop that just because others are cautious. I will teach her right from wrong and dangerous from safe... But if she wants to climb the foot rest and fall off the other side 15 times today then so be it. It isn't going to break her and if it does then adventure learnt hopefully. But she fell off it 30 times yesterday so I doubt it. She is a go hard or die trying sort of girl and I LOVE IT!! They'll be broken bones but hopefully she'll be more proud of what she tried and/or achieved. I want a daughter that isn't afraid to try, willing to explore, to imagine and to conquer.
Let's see if she makes me regret let the adventurer out!
I think there is a gradual swing back to this philosophy, however I do notice that the places I take my kids to experience like this a generally pretty vacant.