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Last Child in the Woods-Revised: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder [NOOK Book]
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INTRODUCTION
One evening when my boys were younger, Matthew, then ten, looked at me from across a restaurant table and said quite seriously, "Dad, how come it was more fun when you were a kid?"
I asked what he meant.
"Well, you're always talking about your woods and tree houses, and how you used to ride that horse down near the swamp."
At first, I thought he was irritated with me. I had, in fact, been telling him what it was like to use string and pieces of liver to catch crawdads in a creek, something I'd be hard-pressed to find a child doing these days. Like many parents, I do tend to romanticize my own childhood— and, I fear, too readily discount my children's experiences of play and adventure. But my son was serious; he felt he had missed out on something important.
He was right. Americans around my age, baby boomers or older, enjoyed a kind of free, natural play that seems, in the era of kid pagers, instant messaging, and Nintendo, like a quaint artifact.
Within the space of a few decades, the way children understand and experience nature has changed radically. The polarity of the relationship has reversed. Today, kids are aware of the global threats to the environment— but their physical contact, their intimacy with nature, is fading. That's exactly the opposite of how it was when I was a child.
As a boy, I was unaware that my woods were ecologically connected with any other forests. Nobody in the 1950s talked about acid rain or holes in the ozone layer or global warming. But I knew my woods and my fields; I knew every bend in the creek and dip in the beaten dirt paths. I wandered those woods even inmy dreams. A kid today can likely tell you about the Amazon rain forest—but not about the last time he or she explored the woods in solitude, or lay in a field listening to the wind and watching the clouds move.
This book explores the increasing divide between the young and the natural world, and the environmental, social, psychological, and spiritual implications of that change. It also describes the accumulating research that reveals the necessity of contact with nature for healthy child—and adult—development.
While I pay particular attention to children, my focus is also on those Americans born during the past two to three decades. The shift in our relationship to the natural world is startling, even in settings that one would assume are devoted to nature. Not that long ago, summer camp was a place where you camped, hiked in the woods, learned about plants and animals, or told firelight stories about ghosts or mountain lions. As likely as not today, "summer camp" is a weight-loss camp, or a computer camp. For a new generation, nature is more abstraction than reality. Increasingly, nature is something to watch, to consume, to wear —to ignore. A recent television ad depicts a four-wheel-drive SUV racing along a breathtakingly beautiful mountain stream—while in the backseat two children watch a movie on a flip-down video screen, oblivious to the landscape and water beyond the windows.
A century ago, the historian Frederick Jackson Turner announced that the American frontier had ended. His thesis has been discussed and debated ever since. Today, a similar and more important line is being crossed.
Our society is teaching young people to avoid direct experience in nature. That lesson is delivered in schools, families, even organizations devoted to the outdoors, and codified into the legal and regulatory structures of many of our communities. Our institutions, urban/suburban design, and cultural attitudes unconsciously associate nature with doom—while disassociating the outdoors from joy and solitude. Wellmeaning public-school systems, media, and parents are effectively scaring children straight out of the woods and fields. In the patent-or-perish environment of higher education, we see the death of natural history as the more hands-on disciplines, such as zoology, give way to more theoretical and remunerative microbiology and genetic engineering. Rapidly advancing technologies are blurring the lines between humans, other animals, and machines. The postmodern notion that reality is only a construct—that we are what we program—suggests limitless human possibilities; but as the young spend less and less of their lives in natural surroundings, their senses narrow, physiologically and psychologically, and this reduces the richness of human experience.
Yet, at the very moment that the bond is breaking between the young and the natural world, a growing body of research links our mental, physical, and spiritual health directly to our association with nature— in positive ways. Several of these studies suggest that thoughtful exposure of youngsters to nature can even be a powerful form of therapy for attention-deficit disorders and other maladies. As one scientist puts it, we can now assume that just as children need good nutrition and adequate sleep, they may very well need contact with nature.
Reducing that deficit—healing the broken bond between our young and nature—is in our self-interest, not only because aesthetics or justice demands it, but also because our mental, physical, and spiritual health depends upon it. The health of the earth is at stake as well. How the young respond to nature, and how they raise their own children, will shape the configurations and conditions of our cities, homes—our daily lives. The following pages explore an alternative path to the future, including some of the most innovative environment-based school programs; a reimagining and redesign of the urban environment—what one theorist calls the coming "zoopolis"; ways of addressing the challenges besetting environmental groups; and ways that faith-based organizations can help reclaim nature as part of the spiritual development of children. Parents, children, grandparents, teachers, scientists, religious leaders, environmentalists, and researchers from across the nation speak in these pages. They recognize the transformation that is occurring. Some of them paint another future, in which children and nature are reunited— and the natural world is more deeply valued and protected.
During the research for this book, I was encouraged to find that many people now of college age—those who belong to the first generation to grow up in a largely de-natured environment—have tasted just enough nature to intuitively understand what they have missed. This yearning is a source of power. These young people resist the rapid slide from the real to the virtual, from the mountains to the Matrix. They do not intend to be the last children in the woods.
My sons may yet experience what author Bill McKibben has called "the end of nature," the final sadness of a world where there is no escaping man. But there is another possibility: not the end of nature, but the rebirth of wonder and even joy. Jackson's obituary for the American frontier was only partly accurate: one frontier did disappear, but a second one followed, in which Americans romanticized, exploited, protected, and destroyed nature. Now that frontier—which existed in the family farm, the woods at the end of the road, the national parks, and in our hearts—is itself disappearing or changing beyond recognition.
But, as before, one relationship with nature can evolve into another. This book is about the end of that earlier time, but it is also about a new frontier—a better way to live with nature.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
The New Relationship Between Children and Nature
Gifts of Nature 7
The Third Frontier 15
The Criminalization of Natural Play 27
Why the Young (and the Rest of Us) Need Nature
Climbing the Tree of Health 39
A Life of the Senses: Nature vs. the Know-It-All State of Mind 55
The "Eighth Intelligence" 71
The Genius of Childhood: How Nature Nurtures Creativity 86
Nature-Deficit Disorder and the Restorative Environment 99
The Best of Intentions: Why Johnnie and Jeannie Don't Play Outside Anymore
Time and Fear 115
The Bogeyman Syndrome Redux 123
Don't Know Much About Natural History: Education as a Barrier to Nature 133
Where Will Future Stewards of Nature Come From? 146
The Nature-Child Reunion
Bringing Nature Home 163
Scared Smart: Facing the Bogeyman 178
Telling Turtle Tales: Using Nature as a Moral Teacher 189
The Jungle Blackboard
Natural School Reform 203
Camp Revival 227
Wonder Land: Opening the Fourth Frontier
The Education of Judge Thatcher: Decriminalizing Natural Play 237
Cities Gone Wild 245
Where the Wild Things Will Be: A New Back-to-the-Land Movement 271
To Be Amazed
The Spiritual Necessity of Nature for the Young 291
Fire and Fermentation: Building a Movement 307
While It Lasts 315
Notes 317
Suggested Reading 329
Index 333
A Field Guide to Last Child in the Woods 345
Anonymous
Posted January 1, 2011
This book was hugely influential to me in my parenting journey. I loved it. It is dense, but very beautifully written for nonfiction. Everyone with kids needs to read this book for an eye-opening realization of the importance of nature in a child's life and the scary implications of the diminution of nature in American society.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Ian_Mule
Posted April 18, 2010
First, some background. I am a college professor. I would consider myself a liberal, but I am definitely a moderate. I think Obama is the greatest President of my lifetime thus far. Not many of my friends would even agree with that. Thus, I am not some right-wing, gun-loving, Tea Party, Fox News watching nut job. And...
I absolutely despised this book. I hated it. Every page I turned I found myself groaning with dismay. My wife kept laughing, because at times I would shout out swear words as I forced myself to wade through the endless pages of ramble.
This is a complete waste of paper. (Luckily, there is an eBook version that wastes less paper. Of course, one would think reading the book on a computer would go against the author's argument!) It is rubbish and has no value other than fuel for burning. Why?
The author fails in the following areas:
-- He is unscientific.
-- He cites non-scientific studies.
-- He bases his entire argument off of interviews done with people that think like he does.
-- He is not critical of his own assumptions.
-- He does not offer a balanced view or counter-arguments.
-- He is a particularly ineffective writer when it comes to persuasion. (By the end of the book, I hated nature! I went into this thinking I loved nature.)
-- He is extremely wordy, and when he is short on words, he cites random no-brainers he interviewed for pages at a time.
The book was one of the most painful reads I have ever endured, and I would not wish this book on my worst enemy. It is over 300 pages long; it could have been written as a 10-page magazine article.
I had to read this book with a group of other professors, because we are attempting to synchronize our classes for a year-long sustainability learning community among Freshmen students at our university. Half of us absolutely hated this book and refused to use it in our classes -- I am a human geography prof, the others who disliked it were sociology and English profs. Others -- including the Rock Climbing prof and the conservation prof -- really liked it.
To me, this book is kind of like Fox News -- if you agree with the author's position already, you may just get riled up by it. If you disagree, you will hate the book by the end. If you are like I was, indifferent toward the position, it will be just an unconvincing and unscientific waste of time -- just like a Fox News Broadcast. I ended up hating it.
Read "Silent Spring" if you want a good book on nature and environment. Read "Garbageland" or "No Impact Man" if you want to know how to save the planet. At least "No Impact Man" didn't have the gall to act scientific.
Don't read this garbage. Please don't even support the publication of such useless stuff. Ugh.
3 out of 15 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted December 29, 2011
I thought this book was great! Having grown up in such a nature loving family, I find it extremely important that children are exposed to nature as much as possible.
I'm really glad I didn't attend the college that the reviewer below me teaches at. I stopped reading the review after "I think Obama is the greatest President of my lifetime thus far."
Anonymous
Posted December 29, 2011
The calmness of nature is a key to our human well being.
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Posted October 17, 2010
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Posted July 30, 2011
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Posted March 13, 2012
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Overview
In his landmark work Last Child in the Woods, Richard Louv brought together cutting-edge studies that pointed to direct exposure to nature as essential for a child's healthy physical and emotional development. Now this new addition updates the growing body of evidence linking the lack of nature in children's lives and the rise in obesity, attention disorders, and depression. Louv's message has galvanized an international back-to-nature campaign. His book will change the way you think about our future and the future of our children.