Friday, April 27, 2012

The Need For Nature

 
                Here is the vast, savage, howling mother of ours,
Nature, lying all around, with such beauty, and such affection for her children, as the leopard; and yet we are so early weaned from her breast to society, to that culture which is exclusively an interaction of man on man.  - Henry David Thoreau

I feel quite fortunate that I stumbled across an article by Richard Louv entitled, Get Your Mind Dirty from the June 2011 edition of Outside Magazine, as the content of the piece made me realize how essential the natural world is to the overall health of our children.  It also made me become conscious of the fact that we, as parents, spend so much time and effort laboring over decisions regarding education, when the natural world has proven time and again to be a grand educator.  As stated by Saint Bernard, “You will find something more in the woods than in books.  Trees and stones will teach you that which you can never learn from masters.” 

Nature, if we permit her to, teaches our children everything from: colors, to shapes, to the changing seasons, the beauty of life cycles, the fundamental and the more advanced skills that at one time used to be innate in all of us.   Education should expand beyond the traditional classroom with lessons to behold around every corner of the organic world.  Providing our children with the opportunity to step outside and explore the natural world is a gift that not only enhances intellectual growth but also allows a child to run free, the way children should. 

Due to the way in which society is shaped today, children spend far less time outside as in previous years. Louv believes that because all of life is “rooted in nature,” that the “separation from it desensitizes and diminishes us.”  Louv goes on to explain that nature aids in learning for children, and boosts physiological and physical health.  And if that isn’t enough to encourage every parent to get their child outdoors, the latest string of evidence shows that exposure to the outside world can even enhance a child’s’ intelligence citing that some of the greatest minds (Einstein and Gödel) took time each day to ramble in the woods.

After completing the article, I was prompted to quickly purchase Richard Louv’s  book, Last Child in the Woods.  In his 2005 book, he coined the phrase, “Nature – Deficit Disorder," which he uses to describe the “growing gap between children and nature.”  The book is complete with seven parts devoted to the importance of nature in the lives of our children. At the conclusion of the book, Louv provides a list of future reading on similar topics and a creative action list on ways in which children and adults can make the most of their time outdoors.

For parents interested in either the article or book, both provide further research and benefits associated with children spending time outside and less time “plugged in” to games, TV and the Internet, revealing that a balance must be found between the electronic world and the natural world.  With that said, we are quite fortunate, as Switzerland is a haven for outdoor enthusiasts with a plethora of well-marked trails, forest schools, and playgroups located in the woods. Not to mention the vast array of green space. Our children can spend time frolicking and exploring the world around them, all the while absorbing the benefits from the great outdoors.

But of those benefits cited by Louv including: increased senses, heightened creativity, the way in which nature can heal, the ability to think more clearly, physical health benefits, those that stood out the most were: the creative freedom supplied in abundance to our children and the ability for nature to teach our children..  Breathing fresh air, free exploration, discovery, wonder and awe are all gifts we can provide our children by simply stepping outside.  There is something magical about observing a child when he or she is free to roam, for a child can find joy in the smallest of discoveries, hope in the flight of a bird and sheer bliss in the muddy depth of a freshly formed puddle.


No comments: