Burbia Blogs

- added on 11/18/2009

  

Danger! Safety Rules Can Be Hazardous to Your Children

My kids don't listen to me. My mother might say this is because a) I am insufficiently consistent with my rules, b) I have insufficient rules and c) I generally let them get away with murder.


Karen Dukess, Editorial Director of Burbia, has been a newspaper and magazine reporter, editor, and...read more

Guilty as charged.

But lately I've begun to think that, at least when it comes to rules about safety, there's a more macro reason why my boys tend to question authority. It's from growing up in an increasingly fearful, paranoid, lawsuit-prone world that has dumped so many rules on them that they're learning to distrust all of them.

I saw this cynicism in action a few weeks ago, when I took the boys and our dog for a romp in the woods. All three had a great time bush-whacking through the thicket, scrambling up boulders, climbing on old stone walls, and sliding on their bellies across frozen puddles.

But when we came to a large frozen pond of an unknown depth, and I told them they could not, under any terms, walk out on the ice, they looked at me like I was insane, like I had just told them they had to put on helmets and elbow-pads before eating their breakfast cereal.

I know, I know - they should just listen, no questions asked. But jaded by years of listening to adults tell them not to run, climb and jump, not to forget their seat belts, bicycle helmets, sledding helmets, skating helmets, knee pads, elbow pads and shin guards, none of which were factors in my childhood, my boys didn't recognize a reasonable rule when it was staring them in the face.

The way they rolled their eyes and challenged this perfectly logical, potentially life-saving rule (don't walk on thin ice) reminded me of citizens of the erstwhile Soviet Union, who were so bombarded with illogical laws that they developed the habit of scoffing at all laws - even smart ones like wearing seat belts. The general approach was: if the Soviet government said it was good for you, it wasn't.

The general approach of my boys is: if grown-ups tell you that you can't do something, it's because they are neurotic worry-warts who are determined to suck the joy out of life.

Melodramatic? Yes. But listen to where they're coming from. Even in their short life times, they've seen safety-consciousness grow.

When my fourth-grader started elementary school, one of the highlights of the year was when the kids were allowed to climb the ropes in the gym. He still talks about a sprite of a classmate named Emma, who scooted right up the rope and touched the ceiling in kindergarten. But then came a new gym teacher, and a new edict: no climbing the ropes until fourth grade. And even then, no going more than half-way up.

From their perspective, it didn't make sense: how could something that was once considered safe no longer be safe?

They used to love playing on the monkey bars in the school playground, but after a boy slipped from the monkey bars and broke his wrist, the monkey bars were removed from the playground. Again, my kids didn't get it. How had one boy's accident made them less likely to navigate the monkey bars with their bones intact?

On an individual basis, the rules are not absurd. And of course the school has the best intentions. But the cumulative effect is leading to rebellion.

I hear the kids complain about the litany of playground rules: There's no climbing up the slide, no running down the slide, no hanging from the slide, no jumping off the slide. Dodge-ball, once allowed, is now forbidden. The other day during recess, my second-grader asked a teacher to toss a football with him and was told children younger than fourth-grade were not allowed to play football in the playground because it's too dangerous.

Have these kinds of rules made my children more safety-conscious? More rule-bound?

On the contrary. Listening to their arguments at the allegedly frozen pond, I started thinking that when it comes to determining safety and real danger, my children are developmentally-challenged.

My older son goes to a summer camp that offers a lot of the science stuff he loves. But what really excites him is that he is allowed - trusted -- to use a hot glue gun, a soldering iron, an exact-o knife and explosives for launching rockets. I have a pretty good hunch that none of these things would ever be allowed in his public elementary school.

I sympathize with my kids and don't want them to feel hemmed in, but I'm as guilty of worrying as the next parent, or as the school principal. I may not fear a lawsuit, but I genuinely don't want them to get hurt. Isn't it my job to keep them safe?

This is the challenge of parenting today -- to balance our desire to protect our children with our desire to encourage them to be bold and to explore and know how and when to take risks.

It certainly isn't easy to accept their yearning for danger. My boys find nothing more thrilling than riding without a seat belt, even for a few feet in the driveway. I can live with that. But I'm afraid worse is yet to come.

The other day my younger son, apropos of nothing, asked me what state cares the least about safety.

"I'm not sure, maybe Alaska? Texas?" I offered. "Why?"

"Because I want to go there!" he said....read more blogs

 
markbecker ??Wed, 11/18/2009 ?? 15:23
commentsleave us a comment

It's hard to find the right

- submitted by Calgurrl on 03/19/2008

It's hard to find the right balance. My kids are like this too. About the only things they're allowed to do at school is take tests and stare into space. Adventure is important, as is learning how to take risks. I think our kids are losing this. I agree there aren't clear answers but I think we need to let our kids explore more, make more decisions and get the experience they need to know what's reasonable to do and what's not.


I've never heard of no

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/19/2008

I've never heard of no football until 4th grade. That's crazy. What's next no sitting on the school lawn because of risk of chapped skin?


rules for the safety obsessed

- submitted by gb from mayberry on 03/19/2008

They took away the monkey bars because a child broke his wrist? I thought the DEFINITION of monkey bars is that some kids fall down and hurt themselves. My son broke his wrist on one last year; my neighbor's daughter broke her collarbone falling off the same set of monkey bars -- yet still they stand proudly, daring children to climb on up. Your sons can come on over and play on them. As you point out, we were not confined by the same set of rules as kids. Sometimes we fell, sometimes we didn't. Sometimes we were fine, sometimes our parents drove us to the ER.


kids and safety

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/19/2008

I remember being first shocked, then delighted, when my son's preschool offered at one of its "centers" a big block of wood with real nails sticking out of it. The kids could take real hammers and pound the nails in. (they did use goggles and were required to have an adult there.)

At a camp he attends now, they bring in penknives and learn to whittle (they also learn knife safety.) Again, at first I was surprised, but then realized how much better is was than banning all sharp implements.

How are they going to navigate the world if all the sharp corners have already been padded for them?


rules

- submitted by anonymous on 03/19/2008

You're so lucky that they're NOT afraid. Yes, they still have a lot to learn, but it's really hard to unlearn fear and trepidation. Tell your mother you've clearly done something right !


rules and more rules

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/19/2008

You are so right! Kids need to experience success and they also need to experience failure -- even if that means an occasional trip to the ER. Kids need the right to play, to explore, to conquer physical challenges. I don't blame them for looking at safety rules with skepticism. Based on their own very limited experience, they see overreaction as the adult norm that removes all the fun! Go ahead: try Texas!


Do you all know how many

- submitted by Principal of Middle School on 03/19/2008

Do you all know how many people have died from participating in dodge ball? 10s of 10,000s at least. Per week. And you challenge our school systems for banning such a barbaric, risky war-like sport? Ha! It's people like you who'd like schools to let our kids walk in the hallways or get up from their desks or engage in conversations with other students. Let them do that and, God help us, they'll kill themselves and each other and then the U.S. and our planet and all the other planets that revolve around the earth....


Dodge Ball Deaths?

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/20/2008

PLEASE!!!! Principal of Middle School... direct us to this questionable data!!!!


Really, really great

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/20/2008

Really, really great post.

I'm a young man myself, so I'm not that far out of school, and I always railed against the constant rule-making myself.

Even more, in the quest for 'safety' we're cracking down on worthwhile behavior, positive values.

My highschool had a policy on fights: everyone involved is automatically ticketed and suspended. Of course this meant it wasn't worth stepping between two guys to try to break them up: you'd end up out of school for three days, a note on your record and a 50 dollar fine for trying to stop a fight. Standing up for a friend who was being picked on lead to the same situation.

By trying to curb a not-all-that-problematic behavior with draconian measures they managed to beat nobility, assertiveness, protectiveness and loyalty to your friends even when the chips are down (or backpacks as it were) out of the kids. The end result was that the rules favored the bullies too, because if you responded to provocation you were in as much trouble as they were.


rules -

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/20/2008

I agree that the rules of childhood, as practiced in so many schools, operate so as to prevent learning essential lessons which are necessary for adult life. Many of those same schools don't allow teams to win or lose, another "rule" calculated to avoid reality.

A well written and important message. I feel the writer's boys will be fine.


an interesting a well

- submitted by Anonymous on 03/20/2008

an interesting a well written article. It's difficult to argue against rules that try to enforce safety - but the schools should try for a better more sensible balance.

Good for you, and lucky for your kids that you understand the issues involved. Sounds like you are the kind of parent that will help you kids develope their own sense of safety and when its okay to take some risks. They will also learn when your rules are important, and when they can bend.


great piece

- submitted by linda keenan on 03/22/2008

i have a 3 year old and im just getting to learn all the rubber walls we've put up around our kids. there are NO bikes even though it's a bikeable town. i realized i couldnt have a backyard birthday party because i knew parents would be too worried that i dont have an enclosed space. i feel like i need to encase my child in BUBBLE WRAP. i really like the soviet union analogy. very interesting piece!


Amen

- submitted by Anonymous on 05/07/2008

I insist on helmets for biking and scooters. But other than that, I think there is nothing like a good scrape to let kids know when they've gone too far. I (gulp) let my kids climb actual trees! While I cook dinner! Call CPS now!

Kids are pretty good at detecting BS. It would be nice if we could stop bombarding them with it.


Over protection

- submitted by Lenore from "Free Range Kids" on 05/20/2008

Just wanted to say this article is GREAT. I'm in the same situation -- wanting to loosen my grip, annoyed at how much I've already strangled those boys of mine, and worried about a society that equates ANY risk with ENORMOUS risk. Especially since anything you do, even chewing gum, inevitably entails SOME risk, however minute. Loved this piece and the comments. -- L.


Over protection

- submitted by Lenore from "Free Range Kids" on 05/20/2008

Just wanted to say this article is GREAT. I'm in the same situation -- wanting to loosen my grip, annoyed at how much I've already strangled those boys of mine, and worried about a society that equates ANY risk with ENORMOUS risk. Especially since anything you do, even chewing gum, inevitably entails SOME risk, however minute. Loved this piece and the comments. -- L.


unschooling

- submitted by Michele James-Parham on 05/31/2008

all the more reason to NOT send your children to school...because I can't think of a more rule-driven place that can "...suck the joy out of life."


Unfortunately America has

- submitted by Anonymous on 07/29/2008

Unfortunately America has become a sue happy nation. When a child does get hurt on a playground the parents are the ones who immediately want to blame the school. Even if it was just an accident that really couldn't be prevented, the parents look for someone to blame. Accident reports always ask what could have been done to prevent the accident from happening and what would be done to prevent it from happening again. This usually results in removal of play equipment and establishing more rules. Until you work with children and their parents you have no idea what teachers and administrators deal with on a daily basis.


Kids are pretty good at

- submitted by Anonymous on 11/13/2008

Kids are pretty good at detecting BS. It would be nice if we could stop bombarding them with it. Why dont you dwell on teaching some good stuffs for your child. Like handicrafts or <a href="http://www.artfire.com/modules.php?name=Category_Top&main_cat_id=5">handmade jewelry</a>.


Kids are pretty good at

- submitted by Anonymous on 11/13/2008

Kids are pretty good at detecting BS. It would be nice if we could stop bombarding them with it. Why dont you dwell on teaching some good stuffs for your child. Like handicrafts or [url=http://www.artfire.com/modules.php?name=Category_Top&main_cat_id=5]handmade jewelry[/url]


I've found that my kids

- submitted by tokmik on 12/14/2008

I've found that my kids rarely put up a fuss about wearing safety equipment or taking safety precautions as long as they actually get to DO something cool (like jump the curbs with their bikes or launch rockets). The children need more experience than just the safe stuff. ______________ http://www.pinnaclesecurity.com


Dodge Ball

- submitted by Yam Erez on 01/20/2009

I also liked the Soviet Union analogy and thought it was a great article. I'm a free-range parent, but I have to put in a word here against dodge ball. I was forced to play in in Phys Ed, and I don't see how you can associate the word "education" with this game. I was the smallest in the class, so invariably ten balls would come flying at me at once. I hated dodge ball, and find it a shame they're kids still play it*. Phys Ed can offer so many wonderful activities; why must it be dodge ball (which by the way we more aptly called "bombardment")?

*If a group of kids organizes it on their own, I think it's OK as long as they all understand that the idea is to hit each other with balls.


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