Mistrusting Adults, Mistrusting Kids
By separating the generations this way, we are creating a new society, one that actively distrusts any adult who wants to help a kid other than his own.
The signs on every playground in my city, New York, say this: âPlayground rules prohibit adults except in the company of children.â
Apparently, any adult who simply wants to watch kids at play could be a creep, so letâs just ban âem all. Trust has been replaced by disgust.
There was a case here a few years back when seven chess players playing outside at a park were fined for ⊠wait for it ⊠playing chess. Their chess tables â concrete ones, placed there by the city â were deemed too close to the playground, so the men were booted.
It didnât matter that they hadnât caused any trouble. It didnât matter that, in fact, some of them had taken it upon themselves to teach the local kids how to play the game of kings.
The reality of the situation â the menâs kindness â didnât matter. All that mattered were the fantasies conjured up by âwhat if?â thinking: What IF they turned out to be monsters?
By separating the generations this way, we are creating a new society, one that actively distrusts any adult who wants to help a kid other than his own. Compare this anxiety with what goes on in Japan. There the kids wear brightly colored hats, often yellow, their first year of school â kindergarten.
âDoesnât that put them in danger?â asked a friend I was talking to about this. To her, a kid who calls attention to himself is a kid who could be attracting a predator. Itâs like she really thinks kids should play outside in camouflage.
But attracting adult attention is exactly what the hats are supposed to do. In Japan, the assumption is that the easier it is to see children, the easier it is for grown-ups to look out for them.
Japanâs belief is that children are our collective responsibility. Americaâs is that children are private treasures under constant threat of theft.
Which brings me to the flip side of our obsession with stranger danger: The idea that any time a parent lets her kids do anything on their own, she is actually requiring the rest of us grown-ups to âbabysitâ them, for free.
This is the reason some stores wonât let kids shop alone until a certain age. A viral story from Canada concerned an 11-year-old who was detained by the staff of the Lego store because he was shopping there without a parent.
It didnât matter that he had come there with his own money, intending to buy the Legos he loves, and it didnât matter that he was perfectly well-behaved.
All that mattered was that a store employee deemed him an unbearable burden. The manager had him detained until his father could come pick him up.
While this detention outraged many people, a significant contingent sided with the store, saying that employees shouldnât have to âbabysitâ a kid.
But in fact, no one did have to babysit him. He was just a person in public, albeit a young one.
If some problem had come up â say he poked himself in the eye with a tiny Lego sword â well, then, yes, some adult may have had to come to his aid. But that is not babysitting! That is one human being helping another.
Most kids walking to school or playing in the park are not going to need major assistance from anyone, adult or otherwise. But if they do, Iâd like to think most of us would give it ungrudgingly. Their parents have not foisted a huge burden on society by letting their kids be part of it.
Kids out and about in the world are just that: kids, out and about. Not a big, unpaid job for the rest of us.
Iâm not sure about the hats, but Japan has the right idea. Looking out for everyone beats trusting no one.
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