Family Time -- Steve Smith
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Our recent baseball game started at 5:30 p.m., just when several local
school open houses were also to begin. One player didn’t show up for the
game, his parents opting instead to have him usher them around his school
to show off his handiwork.
Two other kids with open houses made it to the game, which was
fortunate for us because our team would have been reduced to eight
players and forced to forfeit.
As it was, we staged a late rally and beat our opponent. Scheduling is
about to become trickier for many parents as the end of the school year
nears. The Smiths are busy trying to fill the empty slots for the months
between the end of one school year and the beginning of another, but it’s
not easy.
Camps cost money. Some of them cost lots of money and parents are
forced to limit those. And if kids aren’t sent to a camp, they are
sometimes sent to visit Aunt Zelda, whose house smells of mothballs.
This summer, one of our “camps” includes a trip to New York and
Washington, D.C. We’ll be in Manhattan about three weeks before the
anniversary of the World Trade Center attack and, yes, we plan to visit
ground zero with our children.
If the last few days are any indication, our home is about to be
turned into Camp Smith this summer. On a couple of days in recent weeks,
Roy has had about half the neighborhood over for water balloon fights,
thanks in part to a bag of 200 water balloons he received from family
friends. Some friends.
And only three days ago, neighbor Ryan Christopher, the pitching
“closer” for our baseball Cardinals, showed up with another 200. Oh, joy.
Ryan was accompanied by his sister Caitlyn and neighbors Josh and Chris
Alexander and they all had a blast. The kids managed to keep the water
off nearby cars but not off their clothes, which were soaked by the time
they were done.
It was the kind of fun that was routine not so long ago. Unscheduled
but not completely unsupervised, there was no grown-up telling the kids
how to have fun and no uniforms to wear to signify the start of any fun
activity. Just kids playing without parents paying.
We’ve seen the same kind of play at friends Kathy and Dave Miller’s
house, which seems to be the base station for fun in their neighborhood.
For far too long, it has been harder for kids to enjoy the pure
ecstasy of free play. Parents today are much too concerned about harm
coming to their children. In terms of a stranger becoming the source of
such an event, the fear is unwarranted. Statistics prove that our streets
are safer now than when I was a kid in the Pleistocene era.
The other big reason kids no longer get much free play is because
their parents feel compelled to use every spare minute to help them get
ahead. It doesn’t really matter what it is they’re trying to help them
get ahead in, they just have to be supervised at something.
Whether it’s sports or academics, these kids are always monitored. One
soccer parent recently gave me his family’s schedule for their
involvement and I left the room with a headache. Yes, they enjoy soccer
as a family activity, that is true, but the dad also told me without a
prompt that the extensive soccer commitment kept his kids occupied.
Too often, that’s how it is. Kids cannot be left out of sight of a
parent for 20 minutes lest they become hooked on smack or get arrested
holding up a convenience store.
I’ve stated before that nearly 100% of the kids we see going through
the soccer, baseball and other organized sports will never play
professionally and not many more will play in college. Still, they are
pushed to excel. That’s not a bad thing unless there is far too much
emphasis on this in the child’s life.
Kids at free play broaden their imaginations. It’s is absolutely
amazing how resourceful and happy they can be with so little.
Last weekend, for example, our son Roy and his friend Kohl Jones had
two basketballs but no hoop. No problem. The boys took a cardboard box,
set it on the ground and started shooting the balls into it. Then they
made up a game in which one person can block a shot attempt but only by
throwing one basketball at the other.
No parents telling them what to do or making up rules. Kids in charge,
making fun their own way.
And in the case of Roy, Ryan, Josh and Chris, sometimes all they have
to do is just add water.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. His
columns appear Saturdays. Readers may leave a message for him on the
Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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