Exercise and Play:
What Do We Learn?
Quite
often, when our children return from afternoon play, they look exhausted, and
ready for a nap. That is the most
accurate description, and quite the truth.
Play is hard work. It is
exhausting to the mind and body of the young person, and plays an extremely
important role in helping them to become productive, healthy citizens
.
The role of
exercise and play in a young child’s life provides them with many
benefits. Exercise of the body is an
important part of keeping the young body fit as it grows into an adult
body. When we reach adulthood, if we
have had the benefit of exercise and play, we tend to continue that habit into
our adult years
.
What else
is to be gained from the opportunities that play affords? We often participate in organized sports,
coordinated play times, and are a member of a large group during all of these
activities. Play on this level teaches
us how to interact with our peers, develop camaraderie and perform as a team
with other players. These skills are
absolute necessities in today’s business world.
But what else is happening here, during this time of play and exercise
?
What we
learn in body language, coping skills, and the interaction of the mind and body
during our interaction with others, is invaluable. When we learn these skills well, we not only
learn how to interact with others, we learn how to interact with our self. Interact with our self? That seems like a pointless exercise, but it
is an all important part of maintaining our health and wellness. There are times that our bodies try to tell
us things about our physical or mental condition, and we simply refuse to
listen. If we have learned how to listen
to others around us when they attempt to point out a need or desire, we have a
useful tool in listening to ourselves.
This often can mean the difference between optimal health, and creating
an unhealthy situation.
What else
do we learn? We learn what our physical
and mental limitations are. During play,
you see children and young adolescents push themselves to the very limit. But as children, we are better able to distinguish
between a real limit versus what society deems our limits. As a child, or young adult, the pressures of
the world do not weigh on us as they do when we are adults. We are better keepers of the temple at ten,
than we are at twenty. We are still very
in tune to what our body tells us, because it is our true master as a
child. As an adult, we have let outside
influences master our body and mind, and dominate our time.
As you can
see, the benefits to be gained during our exercise and play time as children,
is a benefit to us for the remainder of our lives. Too often, we adults forget the importance of
exercise and play and the principles that are to be learned from time spent in
these activities. We want to rush our
children into their daily responsibilities, forgetting that their chief
responsibility during the younger years is the play and interaction of young
minds.
.
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