I'm really pumped about this article about the value of play. It's the cover article of my favorite magazine---the NY Times Sunday Magazine: Taking Play Seriously.
I just finished reading it and it explores the question: Is there really an evolutionary or developmental need for play and what is lost when people play less?
The author, Robin Marantz Henig, explores the biological and sociological research on play in animals, children, and adults.
Hey Shana,
you might be interested in this great book:
Playful Parenting (Paperback)
by Lawrence J. Cohen
Cohen is a play psychologist and he has some wonderful insights for the need for play for children as well as lots of examples of games e,g. singing an opera for his daughter about the tragedy of her getting dressed.
Also check out "Playing BY Heart" written by the 'founder' of "Original Play" Fred O. Donaldson. I highly recommend taking his workshop too. Fred played with wolves for 7 years as well as many other animals. His stories and articles are remarkable.
Hi Shana! I am also very grateful for article above; contents came in perfectly for my workshop with a group of executives who were really skeptic to my "playful" methods concerning leadership and human relations! Thank you! And maybe you would like to be my friend?
Warm regards
Kerstin Gauffin
Great article! Thank you Shana for this link which leads to all kinds of useful information from the National Institute for Play, the New York Public Library broadcast and American Public Radio's Speaking of Faith Series.
We focus a lot on just getting people to play here in Olympia and are working toward a workshop on "Improvising Age" - accessing play and movement to bring meaning to our aging.