Monday, August 29, 2005

Where's the Joy in Joysticks?

A couple Sundays ago, I found myself in the rotation to teach children's church. We had more kids than usual, many of which were just visiting our church for the Sunday. As we delved into the lesson about the different ways God answers prayer, I found myself wanting to curl up in a stained-glass window nook for awhile and pray God would answer my prayer for the kids to pay attention!

My biggest frustration with the kids that evening wasn't that my feelings were hurt when the kids didn't listen. I admitted I felt somewhat unprepared, and I am also not the best disciplinarian out there (I think Mom-dom is when you learn that for real) But the biggest thing that broke my heart about children's church was the content of the conversation that kept the kids from listening to the Bible lesson. The culprit? VIDEO GAMES.

I stink at video games. I remember struggling through Atari games when I was little, and then as a teen getting beat by my little brother at any game imaginable on the Play Station, errr, whatever it was. I'm one of those people who moves the controls when they play: if I want my character to jump, I make my hands jump. I'm a big goober. So maybe that's why I disliked the kids talking about video games the whole time. I know they're small. I know they have a lot of learning to do. They are not the holiest little suckers ever, and no one should expect that of them. But I could see how in their world of wizards, ninjas, gnomes, and dragons, praying to God just didn't seem to thrill them much. They rattled on, talking as if they were actually the characters in the games, like "I killed the dragon with my magic purple laser gun" and stuff like that.

Today, it seems that the latest entertainment is focused on sedentary things that take place indoors. Sure, it may promote eye/hand coordination, problem solving, quick thinking, and the like. But what children are losing out on is HUGE. A true sense of adventure, where they themselves are catching frogs, jumping off boulders into cool rivers, and swinging from vines in the forest. A true sense of imagination, where they narrate their own stories of far away lands, instead of letting someone else's imagined lands keep them from dreaming of their own.

Only a couple days after the children's church incident, as I still was mulling things over in my head, Dr. Mohler had an interesting topic on his radio show. Please read the following excerpt, and if nothing else, consider how to raise your own children so they still find wonder in the simple things: like talking to a supernatural God, and making mud pies. You can read the rest at Dr. Mohler's Blog.

Have Children Forgotten How to Play Outdoors?

Author Richard Louv believes that America's children are now suffering from a syndrome he identifies as "nature-deficit disorder." In his new book, Last Child in the Woods, Louv suggests that the current generation of American children knows the Discovery Channel better than their own backyards--and that this loss of contact with nature leads to impoverished lives and stunted imagination.


"In reality, many children have almost no contact with nature. They play indoors, focusing on electronic screens that produce an artificial experience. They are surrounded by creature comforts and watched over by anxious parents who are afraid that violent criminals are lurking behind every green tree. "Our society is teaching young people to avoid direct experience in nature," Louv observes. "That lesson is delivered in schools, families, even organizations devoted to the outdoors, and codified into the legal and regulatory structures of many of our communities."

6 comments:

Kate McDonald said...

britt

loved this blog! shawn and i don't have TV for the same reason and also we don't want our kids to play video games

some of them are so violent...geesh...plus i want my kids to be able to engage with nature so its a connection point to God for them, you know?

awesome thoughts...thanks for sharing

Kathy said...

My kids grew up playing in a sandbox, swingset, and riding their hotwheels around and around the back patio. Saturday morning was library day. We would go as a family, get lots of books, story tapes,etc. We would come home and most of the afternoon was spent reading books, etc. I miss those days.

Jennifer said...

Britt, I can't agree with you more. I have such a hard time getting my students engaged in the classroom and if we do anything too 'sciencey' they get really grossed out. What happened to getting a little dirty?!?! We've been talking about God's creation and I asked them for times when they've seen God's awesome power in something in nature and I got a lot of blank stares. I forget, too, that many have grown up in the suburbs and not in the country where we enjoyed watching the stars and playing in cornfields. It's sad how things have taken such a nose-dive. I think this is our problem with child obesity too. Kids stay inside WAY too much!!

Laura said...

I may have met you once, Brittany, if that, but I've often enjoyed your blog (linking from Nikki's). I appreciate your sincerity and skill in writing, and this post particularly resonated with me. As a girl whose knees bear the scars of many a gnarly tumble off a bike or my swingset, I'm frustrated that most of the kids I babysit spend all their time inside staring at a computer or TV screen -- even toddlers!

My favorite gift as a child was a little standard-size envelope I got one birthday from my dad. Inside the envelope, carefully typed (yes, on a typewriter) on pink slips of paper, were "coupons" that I could "redeem" at any time. I just had to take one to my dad, and he would drop everything to focus just on me. The coupons said things like, "One long snuggle on Daddy's lap," and "A walk around the block with Daddy," and "Read a book with Daddy." Those slips of paper were so precious to me that I still have a few today, in that same little envelope! Of course, my dad prioritized time with me even without a coupon, but it was so wonderful to have a way to tell him I needed some quality time, and to know that he loved me so much that I was never an interruption to him.

All that is just to say that I wonder if parents can foresee the truly tragic consequences of letting their kids spend hours a day playing video games and watching TV. Doesn't it teach them that they can't find any delight in sitting in Mom's lap reading a book or throwing a ball around with Dad in the backyard, but only with a controller, getting to a hidden level? I, for one, am so glad that my fond memories of growing up involve spending time with my parents and my brother, and not hour upon endless hour of cartoons and pixellated dragon-slayers.

Kristin said...

Brittany- you have been blog-tagged! You have ot write 5 things you miss and tag 5 other people. Look @ Nikki or Cheryl's blog for more details.. :)

Lisa said...

I was browsing the SBTS blogs and found this interesting entry. Funny thing is, I almost blogged about the very same thing a couple days ago.

Whatever happened to making mud pies, hide and seek, tree forts, and riding bikes until you were dirty enough to actually need a bath! I miss those days.

I've worked with children a lot and I got to say that I have actually seen children's attention spans and attitudes change after being engrossed in video games. It is one thing to play occasionally (perhaps on rainy days), but another thing to spend ever free moment as a child glued to an electronic game device and think that they will develop well-rounded socially. Not completely bashing it, but I have seen enough evidence to be more than apprehensive.