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The Generous World of Homeschooling and Unschooling Blogs

I’m very grateful for the ideas, resources, stories and networking of home education blogs. Incredible book lists, game recommendations, the opportunity of really digging into an unschooling mindset, the history of various educational movements such as Charlotte Mason, Classical education, Unschooling and more, offers of support and prayer, tips for breathing through a difficult season of parenting, perspective …

Practical activities, printables, recommended reading for parents, principles and philosophies, informative Q&As and interviews, encouragement and more encouragement!

Sometimes I stay up really, really late just taking in what these parents have offered. They are each unique and in this incredible world of networking, one blog leads to another, then to a podcast and on to amazing instagram photos … it just cycles around which is often what the best stuff in life does. There are mums, a growing number of dads and now a few grandmothers sharing and exchanging information. There are single mums, stay-at-home parents, work-at-home parents, work- outside- the home parents. The internet has offered a level of connection in the world of home education that is possibly unparalleled. What was already a growing “movement” has exploded or, maybe more accurately, “blossomed” with the opportunity of global connection. Does it take the place of face to face friendship? No, it doesn’t. Is it better than an organized home education group. Nope, probably not. Is it more enlightening than a good home education book? Not necessarily. It does, however, recommend and connect you to the possibility of all three of those things.

I don’t agree with everything expressed on every website or blog. That might be unlikely since many of them have differing, if not polar, ideas about learning theory and parenting at times. If there’s one thing I’ve found home educators are exceptionally good at though, it’s critical thinking and respectful conversation – not perfect, mind you, but generally very good. Even philosophies that don’t resonate with me or the way our family best operates offer so much perspective … an idea here and there, a different way of thinking. Sometimes the ideas and philosophies that are the most different from mine are actually the most useful. They point out the pieces that don’t resonate with me in any way and make clearer the reasons that our ways seem to be a good fit for us.

If the internet has offered a vehicle, home educating parents have competently taken the wheel and they’ve learned how to drive quickly and effectively. They’ve transported other parents to new ways of thinking, doing, discussing and connecting. What a shift from my early research/ figuring out nearing 2 decades ago(!). And an incredible shift from those trailblazers a few decades ago … wow.

Thank you to all those and their families generously sharing their information and their hearts! They’re a help and blessing to so many. I’m grateful!

Family Pastimes Games

A Valley Gamemaker

Mary Cooke/SENIORS YOUNG AT HEART

This time of year, for many of us, we are still trying to work through our Christmas gift lists. Each year we vow to cut back, but that challenge is rarely met. The children on our lists, with the multitude of electronic gadgets available, is often the hardest group to buy for. Well, we just may have the perfect answer for you this Christmas.

Deep in the Ottawa Valley, in the Perth area, to be exact, there is a truly Canadian company, whose passion for decades is to supply hand-created games with a twist that separates them by far from the usual games you find in retail outlets.
Family Pastime Games is probably the one game company of its kind in Canada, but we’ll let Jim Deacove, whose idea it was a few decades ago, to come with a game that is truly different, tell us about it.

Jim & Ruth-Mary Cooke ArticleWhat makes your games different from the general run-of-mill games we find in toy shops and department stores?
My games differ because they are all based on co-operation rather than competition. In my games we play together, not against each other. In fact, my rule of thumb when designing games is that I don’t have people being against people. The object of a game is working toward a common goal, not wiping out the other player.

Why did you think it was important to create non-competitive games?
First, note that I call my games co-operative, which is a positive image, rather than the negative, non-competitive term. The latter sounds like I have removed something from a game, when instead I have added a new dimension to game playing. Why important? Because competition is ruining our planet as humans fight one another for practically everything. We need to learn how to share and collaborate to solve our problems as well as enjoy each other’s company. We need more experiences of sharing and caring. We have more than enough of the other experiences of killing, maiming and destroying, which is the basis of most other games.

Who did you try them out on at the outset to see if they would be accepted?
My first games were variations of active games such as Hide and Seek. Then came the variations of popular board games such as Scrabble. These are described in a collection of co-op games in my GAMES MANUAL. After wonderful reactions for these among the neighbours, I went to regular toy and game stores and asked for games that reinforced the kind of family values that Ruth and I were instilling in our girls. The stores had not a single game of the kind we were looking for. So I made a few original ones, took them to birthday parties and people began asking where they could buy some. This was the seed for the little business we have today.

Tell us about the very first board game you made.
The first one was HARVEST TIME, which we still make today, over forty years later. The inspiration came from the way we helped each other with our individual family gardens, shared any veggie that we had extras of, sort of like the gang harvesting of wheat that I experienced as a little boy growing up on a farm in Saskatchewan. The object of the game was to help each other gather our vegetables in before winter comes.

Was it immediately accepted, or did you have to really sell people on the idea of non-competitive games?
I was happy being a teacher and had no intention of being a game inventor. The hand of destiny doesn’t take kindly to being denied. Anyway, off I went with my HARVEST TIME game to Toronto where many major game manufacturers were located. I remember well my first appointment with a company head, who liked the idea but said it needed more edge, some conflict to appeal to the market. He suggested that if one of the neighbours was getting ahead of you in harvesting their veggies that a player should introduce something like a groundhog into that neighbour’s garden to slow him/her down. I was shocked. He was serious, folks. I tried to talk him into reality, pointing out that if I did that to my neighbour’s garden, why, he would come after me with a shotgun. The company head just didn’t get it.
I did have to work hard to sell that game and then several others for different age groups and about different themes. Roadside stands. Conferences of all kinds. Craft shows. Wherever I could set up a table, there I would be with about 6 co-operative games.
Once folks were able to try them out, they understood the concept and gradually the games caught on.

How do you come up with fresh ideas, so that there is no duplication?
Life is full of inspiration. For example, I go mountain climbing with some friends in B.C. and I note how we share equipment, climb as a team, even being tied to one another….ergo, a co-operative mountain climbing game. As in real life, if someone wants to be king or queen of the mountain and rush ahead of the rest of the team, we leave this clown back at base camp, because our very lives are at risk here.
There is co-operation happening everywhere. Note how when the world’s economies are in jeopardy, the world leaders meet to discuss how they can co-operate to save themselves. Unfortunately, as soon as the economies stabilize, they go back to dog-eat-dog strategies. Sad, but as G.B.Shaw once said, The only thing we learn from history is that we never learn anything.
Fortunately, there is enough co-operation happening in society, so that we can live more or less happily. If there was any more competition, we would be doomed and some folks think that we are heading down that razor blade of life already without much hope of redemption.
The culture of competition is well embedded, but here and there there are rays of hope, signs of consciousness-raising and you either add to the hope or…

How popular are the games?
I have over 100 games on the market now and some are more popular than others. I find that the games are more popular in Europe than in North America. There is more of a tradition in Europe of families sitting together a playing a board game than there is in North America. The electronic games that tend toward solitary activity are the common culture here. My games are now available in Europe in six different languages and are found in hundreds of stores.
But we have a niche market in North America that keeps bread and butter on the table. Schools are good customers. Family therapists are good customers. This is a new market and in some ways is rather sad, because my games are designed to be challenging and fun for ordinary family play, but increasingly the games are being used as tools for therapy, for people repair. Never my original intention, but I am so glad that the games are finding purpose in this way.

How do you feel about other competitive games, such as hockey and soccer?
I feel like a visitor from another planet in respect to these sports. I can’t identify with the action. I don’t understand how thousands of people can work themselves into a frenzy about a soccer game or how humans can beat up on each other in a hockey match. It is similar to when I quit smoking many, many years ago and when I now see a person blowing smoke out of their heads, it seems like a very strange activity. Same goes for when I observe the crowd reactions to such sports as hockey and soccer. Strange behaviour.
But when I see on TV how the latest NASA landing of a vehicle on Mars is greeted by the control center of scientists when the landing is a success and all that collaboration results in success, and I see those folks hi fiving each other and hugging and dancing together, this is excitement that makes sense to me. By the way, this led to my new game, MOON MISSION.
Truth be told, I get more excited, uplifted and inspired at a Mennonite barn raising than I do at a sporting event.

Would it be safe to say, in all of your games, there are no losers? And if so, why is that a good thing.
My games are outside of the usual win/lose paradigm. There is usually an objective to be realized, but I don’t specify that if you achieve the objective, then you all win and if you don’t achieve the objective, then you all lose. What I do state is that at the end of the game, you determine how far along you got.
How many vegetables did you store away before winter set in? How far up the mountain did you get before you had to return home? Thus, there is always a measure of success to celebrate. This is more like real life and out of the box of rewards and punishments. I recommend studying the work of the psychologist, Alfie Kohn, who makes clear why being realistic is a good thing.
I also design games that are purely co-operative, in which the players are engaged in a process with no particular objective to work towards. Examples of these are such titles as PERSONAL PORTRAITS and FIRST IMPRESSIONS.

What materials do you use to make your games.
Just the usual stuff – cardboard, waterproof papers, waterbased glues and inks, wood items, all of which have been tested for safety in Canada, the USA, and in Paris labs to be able to export to European countries

Tell me about your workplace, and what is the full name of your company?
We began in our livingroom and garage, moved to a cottage, and then, as business increased, we converted the old farm house into a shop that we added to as necessity dictated. We have a modest little factory now with several cottages for woodworking and box storage. We changed from a partnership of Ruth and I into a corporation with the full name of FAMILY PASTIMES LIMITED.
I was able to handle the financial records when a partnership, but trying to keep up with the changing rules for a corporation was beyond my ken and now we are in the merciful hands of accountants.

Do you have a different name for each game?
Each game has its own title, so you can see on our information site that all 105 games are shown with images and descriptions of each and to help customers make purchasing decisions, we have organized the titles according to age ranges, so you will find games such as HARVEST TIME in the category of games for the young, and MOUNTAINEERING for those in between ages of 7 to 12, and then for older players up to adult age and then some games designed for group play and then some books of co-operative games for schools and other institutions.

The phrase, A CO-OPERATIVE GAME™ is our trademark that has been filed with international trademark offices and is held exclusively by FAMILY PASTIMES

CO-OPERATIVE GAMES IN A COMPETITIVE SOCIETY

(c) 2009, Jim Deacove

I am always asked, “How did you get started making co-operative games?”  I answer by remembering out loud … I’m in our backyard on the porch watching the neighbourhood kids playing some games.  Like most families, Ruth and I have been teaching our two little girls such values as sharing their toys, helping mom and dad, being kind to pets, a.s.o. We’ve been finding that more and more energy is needed to maintain these values in our home.  Sitting now and watching the kids at play, some very heady insights are occurring.

The kids gather round and talk over what game they want to play next.  They listen to each other’s suggestions.  Everyone is heard out.  Big, little, fat, skinny, skilled, unskilled.  A consensus is achieved and the game begins.

A whole new scene emerges.  The kids are aggressive.  They push each other around.  Strength is used to dominate.  They pick on each other’s weaknesses, exploiting them for their own advantage.  What I am witnessing is a change from consensus to confrontation.  I begin to wonder what would happen if the nature of their decision-making process were transferred into the game situation itself.

A little later when the kids are again deciding on a game, I shout out to them that I know a new game they might like to try.  I make up the fine points as I talk to them.  “It’s something like HIDE AND SEEK, but I call it LOST AND FOUND.” I go on to describe how I will start the game by covering my eyes at the Home Post and count to a 100 by 5s.  Everyone is to hide so no one else can see them.  We will pretend that everyone is lost and I am coming to rescue you.  When I find someone we will join hands, rush back and both touch the post, which is the Rescue Station.  Then the two of us will go out and each try to find someone and bring them back to the post.  This goes on until we have just one person left to find.  When this person is rescued, since he or she is the best at hiding, you get to start the next game.

I finish counting to a 100 and wander out, keeping my eyes open.  I find a little girl first.  With great delight, big person and little person join hands and hippity hop to the Rescue Station.  Already I feel that something tremendous is about to burst open within me.  I’m joyously discovering something here.  The child looks at me, eyes free of fearing that this big person is going to wipe her out of the game.  The delight on her face is teaching me a lesson which marks my soul deeply.

“I’m not very good at finding people,” she confides shyly at the post, adding “Can I come with you?” I agree to her suggestion.  It’s a friendly, flexible game, so we change the rules right there.  Soon three of us are running to the post.  Then I venture out alone again and the little girl and her friend go as a pair of rescuers.

The game is nearing an end, but we cannot find one nine year old boy.  We gather at the post, by now making up an impressive search party, and compare theories.  “Have we looked by Riley’s garage?  Lots of good spots to hide there.” We devise other plans, but don’t find the boy.  Then someone says, “Hey, we’ve been looking everywhere but up!” We immediately spread out and look up.  Sure enough, the rascal is up a tree and enjoying the spectacle of us scurrying around.  A big cheer goes up when we find him.  We carry him on our shoulders to the post.  He gets to start the next game.

Later,on the porch, I reflect more about the game.  I know that this is a turning point in my life.  I can’t look back now.  The laughter of the kids.  The collective good will.  No one eliminated from the game.  Even the youngest playing and making a contribution right to the end.  The nature and quality of the relationships of the participants felt healthy, felt very right.  No “It” pitted against the rest of the group.  What a name we assign to that person who does the chasing – It”!

I realize what has bothered me about the games we have bought for our two girls.  The game always puts them in conflict with each other.  The point of the game is to beat one another and because the older one has the advantage of experience and co-ordination among other things, she usually wins.  The younger one either has to be coaxed to go on playing or, worse, she cheats in order to even up the odds.  After all, the whole point of the game is to beat her big sister!  Then big sister doesn’t want to play anymore.  “Christa always cheats!” is the complaint.

I reflect also on situations outside the family.  I teach Sunday School in the local church.  We have our lesson from the Bible and we discuss finding non-violent ways to solve problems.  We explore the meaning of compassion, sharing, affection, and so on.  Then I set up the recreation program and the kids pound and push each other something awful.  What a contrast here!

They often drift through the class lesson listlessly, but have great vitality for the games.  I now see how my recreation program is not reinforcing my lessons on living.  Let’s be honest.  That recreation program is undermining my lessons.  I reflect on my high school teaching as well.  A lot more things come together.

Competition is an effective tool for classroom management, for realizing various academic goals.  In the short run, this is the devilish attraction of the competitive technique.  You get those quick, short-term results.  It’s messy and takes too much time to take the co-operative route which tries to nurture action through understanding.  I can get my daughter to clean her room by setting up comparison/competition images with her neat friend, Amanda.  Tanya will clean up under that kind of pressure.  But will she understand what cleanliness, punctuality, etc. are about if I go on doing that to her?  I no longer think so.

That day, almost thirty years ago (1971) on my back porch, shook up my perspectives for good.  I challenged myself to begin the adventure of doing things differently in the family, the neighbourhood, the church, and my teaching in the school.  I had many objectives in those areas of endeavour, but now I was challenging myself to realize them by cooperative rather than competitive means.

For our family it meant going to toy and game stores and asking the salespeople for games that stressed sharing and helping each other.  “We want a good family game.” I remember well the first store owner laughing aloud, then seeing that we weren’t laughing with him, gave serious consideration to our request.  Then we were flabbergasted.  He couldn’t find a solitary thing in the entire store.

We were forced to change the rules on many of the games we had at home.  We changed SCRABBLE around and instead of keeping individual scores we kept a family score.  Just that simple rule change created subtle shifts in the dynamics of the game.  Some examples… We allowed each other to use the dictionary freely.  We permitted helping each other to spell words.  We didn’t hide behind our tokens.  Not only did we expose them, but we even traded them.  Finally, instead of using my cunning to maximize my own score with the treasured letters X, Q, Z, etc. and burying them so no one else could use them, I now could still be ingenious by using the letter well, but also play it so as to create opportunities for others.  Let me tell you that I felt a thousand times better using my mind to assist and share rather than as a weapon.

Why the good feeling? The reason is simple.  Our initial impulse to play a game is social; that is, we bring out a game because we want to do something together.  So how ironic it is that in most games we spend all that energy and effort trying to bankrupt someone, destroy their armies, or in other words, we try to get rid of the very people we just invited over to play with.  If we can play a game that develops not defeats that social impulse, then everyone feels better for it.  Besides altering existing games, I began to cook up my own.  The old cliche about Necessity being the Mother of Invention holds true in my case.  I couldn’t find any co-operative games, so I simply began inventing them.

Once my mind began seeing the possibilities, I found myself creating original games for birthday parties, Play Days at school, co-op games as gifts at Christmas time, and it wasn’t long before friends suggested that I start selling them.  Ruth and I ran a few advertisements and were encouraged by the response.  Slow, but steady growth in sales made us move the little business, which we called FAMILY PASTIMES, from our living room into a prefab cottage.  We literally had a cottage industry.

I have invented several hundred games over the years.  They fall into roughly three categories: (1) Co-op sports and activities such as LOST AND FOUND, which I’ve written up in a couple of manuals. (2) “Parlor” type games in board, card and block format, and (3) Large wooden table action games, which are co-operative answers to Table Hockey, Table Soccer, etc.

What makes a co-operative game different?  My working definition of a co-operative game is simple.  I never have people being against people in any of my games.  I have to make this clear because often I am asked at conferences and workshops if I don’t consider such-and-such a sport an example of co-operative effort.  I acknowledge that a group may co-operate among its members, but they do so in order to obliterate the opposing group.  The goal cannot be separated from the means to get there.  We can extend this and point out that even fighting a war requires a form of co-operation.  The ultimate “game” for altogether too many people!

I see game reviews in magazines refer to various organized crime games and certain adventure fantasy games as co-operative.  In each case, what the reviewer is describing is the opportunity the game offers for some players to combine efforts for a brief time in order to destroy another player.  This is not my idea of a co-operative game.  Very simply, in a co-operative game, people play together and not against each other.

To this day we still make a full range of co-operative games by hand in small quantities.  We sell mostly by mail through a colourful catalog as well as through a variety of stores.  Also there are a growing number of people who feel good about selling our games from their homes and churches.  Schools sell them for fund-raisers.

Initially, I took my ideas to big game companies because I was perfectly happy teaching and had no intentions of becoming a full time game inventor and manufacturer.  I was keenly disappointed by repeated rejection from the giants of the game industry.  My approach was extremely naive.  I went into the offices of game company presidents expecting to talk about the worthwhile game concepts I had developed and tested.  I quickly learned that other priorities were uppermost.  I became quite cynical about the brutally competitive toy and game industry.  Behind the facade of cute and cuddly stuff for kids were hard nosed businessmen and women.  Very few of them were cute or cuddly themselves.  So that’s how and why I got started at co-operative games.

More remembering, but more recently….  I am giving an afternoon workshop for a church group.  I like the format because children are invited to join in.  The adults are well educated and sophisticated.  From chit chat beforehand, I realize that they are  not convinced.  It’s a challenge to spend a couple of hours with folks who are skeptical about co-op games.  I decide to play a typical little kid’s game with them.  “Grown-ups, please be little children with me for the next while and begin to re-experience what a child feels in playing the games we offer them.”

The first workshop game is the first game I ever played myself.  My grade one teacher did it with our class.  Farming families, living far apart, had to send first graders who did not know each other and were apprehensive about starting school.  The teacher used games to help us feel at home, to socialize us.  She had us play MUSICAL CHAIRS.  I was a shy kid and not tuned in to the cultural roles required to play the game successfully.  In fact, I was very bewildered by the rush and push for a chair when the music stopped.  I was eliminated from the game early and felt puzzled and embarrassed when told that I was out and had to take away a chair with me.  Of course, the more we played it, the better I got at elbowing my way to a chair.  Quick cultural conditioning!

I wondered what would happen in the workshop now as we played MUSICAL CHAIRS.  The game spoke louder than words ever could.  One little boy, 4 or 5 years old, was very eager to play.  The music stopped.  People pushed and took places, then looked around to see who the first casualty was.  Some adults audibly moaned to see that the little boy was out.  He was crushed and fled to his mom’s arms.  After that some people were polite and were soon eliminated.  A few didn’t try very hard and were also eliminated.  Later they said that they felt uncomfortable being forced into an aggressive role of having to push others around.  Children who drop out of the game early say much the same thing.  Finally, we had a big group of spectators watching the last two participants go for the big win.

I knew that the adults could see how the game may begin as a socialization process, but quickly defeats this very objective since players get eliminated and must sit around watching.  I spoke a bit about how I felt in grade one when I was made to leave the game early.  I tried to make plain to adults and children alike why the games I make up today are different.

Then I introduced CO-OPERATIVE MUSICAL CHAIRS and got the players back again with their chairs.  “People are now going to be more important than the chairs, so the only rule change is that after each round we take away a chair, but we keep all the people.  It’s up to the imagination of the group to figure out how to make a place for everyone.” I can still vividly see the laughter as the people hug each other, sit on each other’s laps and succeed in all getting on one chair at the end.  The little boy is on the shoulders of an adult.  He is having a fine time.

The game uses the same hardware, music and people.  The structure is changed, so the roles the people play change too.  People relax after a few rounds when they suddenly realize that, hey, I don’t have to rush and push because I am guaranteed a spot.  People afterwards remark on how good they felt using their strength to hug instead of to push.  Children make the same remark over and over.

The workshop moves into a sampling of various table games.  Groups of people gather round different games I have set out.  HARVEST TIME is a board game for families with children aged 3 to 7 years of age.  People enjoy being neighbours who help each other to bring in the harvest before winter comes.  This is a very real life situation.  I look to real life for my game themes.  Co-operative games are rooted in reality.  If HARVEST TIME were competitive, players would each be trying to get a garden harvested before anyone else.  If someone else was getting too close to winning, others would have to send some disaster into that garden to slow him or her down.  This is reality?  Yet this is exactly how most competitive games are set up and ask us to behave accordingly.

I also set up HOMEBUILDERS for 5 to 8 years of age.  This game was inspired by my working with friends to build our home.  And then some people try MOUNTAINEERING (ages 7 to 12). 1 went mountain climbing in the Rockies with several friends once.  We were tied to one another at times.  The last kind of person we wanted or needed around was some clown racing ahead trying to be King or Queen of the Mountain.  Other people are playing board games such as COMMUNITY (9 to adult) and OUR TOWN (10 to adult).  People work together in these two to make a caring community and build a stable economy in their town.  In SPACE FUTURE (10 to adult), players engage in the adventure of completing a common mission in space.  In EARTH GAME (10 to adult), we are world leaders developing strategies to solve the many problems on Spaceship Earth, and so on.

We have time for one more game.  I use the Puzzle Pack because it brings the entire group together again for a big co-operative effort.  A tiny 6 year old girl comes to the front of the church auditorium where I stand holding out a paper bag.  She and several other children reach into the bag and each take out one piece of a puzzle.  The church group is working on three puzzles at once.  I have mixed the pieces for all three puzzles together.  Now Cindy has to find out which puzzle her piece belongs to.  She goes around to all three tables where people are working on the puzzles.  “Does this piece belong here?” she asks a teenaged boy at the last table.  He eagerly examines the new piece and pops it into place.  Cindy smiles triumphantly before returning for another puzzle piece.  She prefers selecting the puzzle pieces, while others enjoy fitting the pieces together.  The adults in the group seem more interested in solving the cartoon mysteries printed on the puzzles.  But because she’s playing a co-operative game, Cindy’s contribution is as valuable as anyone else’s.

Finally, the children go off after the play session to their study groups and the adults remain with me for a concluding Question and Answer Session.  The questions are direct and challenging.  Some are surprising to me since they come from a church group and I realize that I have brought with me some assumptions about adults who belong to churches.

Q. Don’t you think that co-operative games and the co-operative philosophy will tend toward mediocrity, toward making everyone the same, while competitive approaches bring out individuality, qualities of leadership, etc?

A: On the contrary.  The games I make and the games we played today allow for the gifted to do their very best and for those less able to make their best contribution too.  Each is valued.  Those with leadership qualities quite naturally emerged and contributed.  What pleases me is that these leaders had to use their abilities in a responsible way that showed caring for others.  They are not asked to dominate, exploit weaknesses for self-aggrandizement, manipulate and then defend themselves from others trying to take over and get rid of them.  It’s a deeper challenge to the gifted to work with people in a co-operative way.  You see, we like to think that co-operative games are for the losers only.  Indeed, while a co-operative game does allow for the “loser” to express ability without fear of elimination, a co-operative game also serves the winner, whose character suffers from always winning at the expense of others.

A further observation I would make is that I see no harm in the quick-minded learning to be patient with the slow.  Finally, one of the best features about our games is that most are fun for adults and children to play together.  The trouble with many competitive games of strategy is that parents must deliberately play poorly in order to make the game fair and interesting for children.  When competition between individuals is removed, skilful players are sincerely able to try to win, because their efforts help everyone who is playing.  Thus, it is competition that forces the more skilled to be mediocre in their efforts in such situations.

Q. I need competition to better myself, to learn new things, to pursue excellence in what I do. Otherwise what is the incentive to get ahead?

A: If I may be a bit facetious.  There is a lot of concern about getting ahead.  What is wrong with the head you have now?  Perhaps we spend too much time pursuing the ideal we aren’t and not enough time enjoying and realizing what we are already.  We strive to be this someone else whom we are constantly comparing ourselves to.  If you look at it closely you’ll see that this comparison is the very root of competition.  For me, competition kills the pursuit of excellence.  Let me give some examples.

When I have friends over for a meal, I go to a lot of trouble to provide a superb meal, the best I can cook.  If someone comes early, I get him or her involved in making the meal.  We are tasting, slicing, adding this and that until the meal shapes up “just right”.  Getting things “just right” is what we naturally do.  You see it in children when, say, their blocks fall down.  They try again.  They want it to be right.  Now in making this meal what has been my incentive?  I am doing it for it’s own joy.  What is operating here is affection, simple affection for what I am doing.  To introduce competition is extraneous and unnecessary.  It’s only necessary when there is no affection.  Really, I don’t need the Galloping Gourmet or some famous chef in the next room whipping together a better meal than me to drive me to do better.

Or let’s take dancing.  My wife and I are dancing and there are a lot of other couples on the dance floor as well.  We are both getting into the rhythm of the music and each other.  We try some neat steps and just greatly enjoy what we are doing.  Suddenly there is a spotlight focussed on us and a voice over the P.A. announces that a dancing contest is on and the spotlight will move from couple to couple with the judges declaring a winner of incredible prizes.  Personally, this would ruin the occasion for me.  I don’t need the competitive element to make my dancing better.

I am reminded of when our two girls were in grades one and two.  They loved to sing in the little kids’ school choir and to do the simple folk dancing in groups.  Annually, there was a Music Festival or so it was called.  A festival is a time for people to get together and celebrate, be festive, but , alas, this festival turned out to be a contest.  A bunch of trophies donated by local merchants were awarded to the best choir and the best folk dancing group.  The Killarney School down the road won both trophies.  This happened the next year as well.

Coming home from this second festival, our older girl said she didn’t want to take singing or folk dancing any more.  “Why?” I asked, a bit stunned.

“Because Killarney always wins the trophies.  They are better than we are and will always win,” was her solemn answer.  You see what had happened to their love of singing and dancing?  We adults with our structuring of winners and losers, trophies and hoopla had corrupted it.  It happens slowly but thoroughly, until you get to be my age and don’t want to do very much unless prodded and pulled by the carrots of reward and punishment.  Reward and punishment are central to competitive patterns of behaviour.

Q: Still, don’t co-operative games tend to shelter, even coddle children?

A: I am providing a supportive play experience, it’s true, but recognize some cautions.  I don’t protect children from not making it to the summit of the mountain or completing the space voyage.  Our games are designed to offer realistic challenges.  It is entirely possible for people to fail in our games.  Of course, the failure arises and is faced differently than in a competitive endeavour.  But the risk of failure is present.

In addition, I should point out that the cultural habit of competing and confronting adversaries runs deep.  Some players end up fighting the game itself, even though it’s a co-operative game.  We suggest that you’ll get better results learning how to get along with Time, with Winter, with Gravity, with Mountains and so on, rather than fighting them.

Q: What I’m worried about is that children are going to have to take their place in a competitive society and it’s a tough, even brutal society.  Don’t we do them a disservice if we commit them to the kind of philosophy and environment that you are suggesting?  They should be given the tools and skills to make their way in a competitive society.  They have to be prepared to live in the reality of today.

A: First, let us not underestimate the amount of sharing and caring that takes place daily in our families, neighbourhoods, societies… If we didn’t have at least 50% co-operation going on, we wouldn’t have much of a society at all.  So, people can find places in society to live and work and be friendly, sharing humans.  I think we adults have to be active in creating more such places for our young.

Secondly, it is an open question for me as to which is the best way to prepare children for that dog-eat-dog society you describe.  I’ll say more about that.

Thirdly, I think that at some point you have to decide what kind of society you want to witness to.  I’ve had a glimpse of compassion, sharing, caring and it feels a whole lot better to me than confrontation, violence, greed, etc.  The danger in saying that society is brutal and then following that with the notion of preparing our children for it is that we accept the status quo and go on perpetuating it.  I refuse to accept that way of living.  I’ve seen and you have also seen that there is a better way for people to live and work and play together on this planet.  And when this sense of caring gets firmly established within you, you have to act out of that source.  You can’t help it.

But also see what happens when the caring isn’t there.  Your relationships at all levels and of all kinds begin to change in the glow of caring.  As a teacher I simply couldn’t go on doing the same old things as before.  I had no new formulas, but the insight and intelligence newly uncovered began to work out better ways to teach and relate to the students in my care.  In my family, life unfolded differently as well.  The skills and values taught our children also just had to be different.

For us it meant moving out of the city and into a rural area.  It eventually meant home-schooling and then a small parent-run school.  We gave our energy to this kind of non-competitive environment for ourselves as adults and for the kids.

Now I admit that we were operating on faith about this, because at some point the kids would have to go to the local high school and then take their places as citizens in this brutal society you speak of. But Ruth and I had to find out, personally, if it was possible for people to live in a different way.  Then maybe it would be possible for society elsewhere too.

Our girls are in high school now and the beginning was not without tears.  They were inwardly prepared for all the competing for marks they knew would happen, but they were not as well prepared for competition for popularity, for peer approval.  We worked through this and other traumas as a family.  Our girls are friendly people and diligent students, curious and wanting to learn.  So, they got to be liked in time and also got to be enjoyed by their teachers for being good students.

The girls have survived and thrived without being trained to compete, strive, and do all those things we think will better equip children to deal with a tough society.  And they are not insecure, fearful, anxious as so many of their peers are.  I think the key is that our girls don’t have a big emotional investment in winning and losing.  They fail a test and look it over to see what went wrong.  Winning and losing is not tied in with their sense of self-worth.  They don’t feel somehow diminished as a person by not succeeding at something.  But they do try to do their best – “get it right”.  They have a self-confidence, flexibility, resilience that should serve them well when they become citizens.  I am pleased with their growth and the intelligent adaptability they show in a competitive society.  I want them to be good citizens in the special sense of goodness we have been talking about.

Q: Our family plays a lot of games and we get pretty enthusiastic about them.  I’m wondering if it will be hard for us to play a co-operative game.  It sounds like we would have a lot of re-educating to do.

A: Some reorientation will have to take place.  You won’t have to view each other as enemies anymore, for one thing.  Your enjoyment of games will take you a long way as incentive to play a co-op game.  I think that the enthusiasm we have for games is a social impulse to do something enjoyable together.  If that is your basic motivation, then you will adjust to a co-operative game quickly.  However, if your enthusiasm and enjoyment have developed further than that and depend on gaining satisfaction from wiping out the other person, then you’ll have a tough time at first.  You’ll be disoriented.  You keep wanting to attack and keep waiting to be attacked and it never happens.  Someone else gets in trouble and you can help out by sharing your carefully amassed fortune or else if you get in trouble and someone else extends a helping hand, you get confused.  It’s a sad comment on our culture.  But there it is.  We see it every day writ large on the front pages of our newspapers.  The fruits of a competitive way of life!

Q: I am sorry I missed the beginning of this workshop.  There has been a lot of serious discussion since I came in and I wonder if I can ask a simple question which will indicate where I as a mother of young children am coming from.  The question is this: aside from all the serious ideas, are cooperative games at least fun to play?

A: The others here should answer that.  I find them fun to play and it seems to me that anyone who experienced the games in the first hour will agree that co-op games are indeed friendly forms of fun.  I would like to add that for those who want to give their minds a good workout, we have challenging co-op strategy games as well.  If you decide to play co-op games with your family, I think you will have an enjoyable, social time together.

Let me sum up this article.  Games are used in various settings and for various reasons… Socialization, entertainment, academic learning and character growth to name some.  Whatever your objective, I invite you to realize it by co-operative means.  Parents and teachers trying to teach children to share, be kind to living things and to help others out are often troubled by games and recreation programs which undermine these values.  Co-operative games provide the opportunity to experience sharing and caring behaviour.  My thesis is that we simply don’t have enough such experiences.

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