Education
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 23: Recreation
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Recreation, when true to its name, affords
refreshment for mind and body, and thus enables us
to return with new vigor to the earnest work of life.
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There is a distinction between recreation and amusement.
Recreation, when true to its name, re-creation, tends to strengthen and build
up. Calling us aside from our ordinary cares and occupations, it affords
refreshment for mind and body, and thus enables us to return with new vigor to
the earnest work of life. Amusement, on the other hand, is sought for the sake
of pleasure and is often carried to excess; it absorbs the energies that are
required for useful work and thus proves a hindrance to life's true success. {Ed 207.1}
The whole body is designed for action; and unless the
physical powers are kept in health by active exercise, the mental powers cannot
long be used to their highest capacity. The physical inaction which seems
almost inevitable in the schoolroom—together with other unhealthful
conditions—makes it a trying place for children, especially for those
of feeble constitution. Often the ventilation is insufficient. Ill-formed seats
encourage unnatural positions, thus cramping the action of the lungs and the
heart. Here little children have to spend from three to five hours a day,
breathing air that is laden with impurity and perhaps infected with the germs
of disease. No wonder that in the schoolroom the foundation of lifelong illness
is so often laid. The brain, the [208] most delicate of all the
physical organs, and that from which the nervous energy of the whole system is
derived, suffers the greatest injury. By being forced into premature or
excessive activity, and this under unhealthful conditions, it is enfeebled, and
often the evil results are permanent. {Ed 207.2}
Children should not be long confined within doors, nor
should they be required to apply themselves closely to study until a good
foundation has been laid for physical development. For the first eight or ten
years of a child's life the field or garden is the best schoolroom, the mother
the best teacher, nature the best lesson book. Even when the child is old
enough to attend school, his health should be regarded as of greater importance
than a knowledge of books. He should be surrounded with the conditions most
favorable to both physical and mental growth. {Ed 208.1}
The child is not alone in the danger from want of air and
exercise. In the higher as well as the lower schools these essentials to health
are still too often neglected. Many a student sits day after day in a close
room bending over his books, his chest so contracted that he cannot take a
full, deep breath, his blood moving sluggishly, his feet cold, his head hot.
The body not being sufficiently nourished, the muscles are weakened, and the
whole system is enervated and diseased. Often such students become lifelong
invalids. They might have come from school with increased physical as well as
mental strength, had they pursued their studies under proper conditions, with
regular exercise in the sunlight and the open air. {Ed 208.2}
The student who with limited time and means is struggling to
gain an education should realize that time [209] spent
in physical exercise is not lost. He who continually pores over his books will
find, after a time, that the mind has lost its freshness. Those who give proper
attention to physical development will make greater advancement in literary
lines than they would if their entire time were devoted to study. {Ed 208.3}
By pursuing one line of thought exclusively, the mind often
becomes unbalanced. But every faculty may be safely exercised if the mental and
physical powers are equally taxed and the subjects of thought are varied. {Ed 209.1}
Physical inaction lessens not only mental but moral power.
The brain nerves that connect with the whole system are the medium through
which heaven communicates with man and affects the inmost life. Whatever
hinders the circulation of the electric current in the nervous system, thus
weakening the vital powers and lessening mental susceptibility, makes it more
difficult to arouse the moral nature. {Ed 209.2}
Again, excessive study, by increasing the flow of blood to
the brain, creates morbid excitability that tends to lessen the power of
self-control, and too often gives sway to impulse or caprice. Thus the door is
opened to impurity. The misuse or nonuse of the physical powers is largely
responsible for the tide of corruption that is overspreading the world.
"Pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness," are as deadly
foes to human progress in this generation as when they led to the destruction
of Sodom. {Ed 209.3}
Teachers should understand these things, and should instruct
their pupils in these lines. Teach the students that right living depends on
right thinking, and that physical activity is essential to purity of thought. [210]
{Ed 209.4}
The question of suitable recreation for their pupils is one
that teachers often find perplexing. Gymnastic exercises fill a useful place in
many schools; but without careful supervision they are often carried to excess.
In the gymnasium many youth, by their attempted feats of strength, have done
themselves lifelong injury. {Ed
210.1}
Exercise in a gymnasium, however well conducted, cannot
supply the place of recreation in the open air, and for this our schools should
afford better opportunity. Vigorous exercise the pupils must have. Few evils
are more to be dreaded than indolence and aimlessness. Yet the tendency of most
athletic sports is a subject of anxious thought to those who have at heart the
well-being of the youth. Teachers are troubled as they consider the influence
of these sports both on the student's progress in school and on his success in
afterlife. The games that occupy so much of his time are diverting the mind
from study. They are not helping to prepare the youth for practical, earnest
work in life. Their influence does not tend toward refinement, generosity, or
real manliness. {Ed 210.2}
Some of the most popular amusements, such as football and
boxing, have become schools of brutality. They are developing the same
characteristics as did the games of ancient Rome. The love of domination, the
pride in mere brute force, the reckless disregard of life, are exerting upon
the youth a power to demoralize that is appalling. {Ed 210.3}
Other athletic games, though not so brutalizing, are scarcely
less objectionable because of the excess to which they are carried. They
stimulate the love of pleasure and excitement, thus fostering a distaste for
useful labor, a disposition to shun practical duties and responsibilities. [211]
They tend to destroy a relish for life's sober realities and its tranquil
enjoyments. Thus the door is opened to dissipation and lawlessness, with their
terrible results. {Ed
210.4}
As ordinarily conducted, parties of pleasure also are a
hindrance to real growth, either of mind or of character. Frivolous
associations, habits of extravagance, of pleasure seeking, and too often of
dissipation, are formed, that shape the whole life for evil. In place of such
amusements, parents and teachers can do much to supply diversions wholesome and
life-giving. {Ed 211.1}
In this, as in all things else that concern our well-being,
Inspiration has pointed the way. In early ages, with the people who were under
God's direction, life was simple. They lived close to the heart of nature.
Their children shared in the labor of the parents and studied the beauties and
mysteries of nature's treasure house. And in the quiet of field and wood they
pondered those mighty truths handed down as a sacred trust from generation to
generation. Such training produced strong men. {Ed 211.2}
In this age, life has become artificial, and men have
degenerated. While we may not return fully to the simple habits of those early
times, we may learn from them lessons that will make our seasons of recreation
what the name implies—seasons of true upbuilding for body and mind
and soul. {Ed 211.3}
With the question of recreation the surroundings of the home
and the school have much to do. In the choice of a home or the location of a
school these things should be considered. Those with whom mental and physical
well-being is of greater moment than money or the claims and customs of
society, should seek for their children the [212]
benefit of nature's teaching, and recreation amidst her surroundings. It would
be a great aid in educational work could every school be so situated as to
afford the pupils land for cultivation, and access to the fields and woods. {Ed 211.4}
In lines of recreation for the student the best results will
be attained through the personal co-operation of the teacher. The true teacher
can impart to his pupils few gifts so valuable as the gift of his own
companionship. It is true of men and women, and how much more of youth and
children, that only as we come in touch through sympathy can we understand them;
and we need to understand in order most effectively to benefit. To strengthen
the tie of sympathy between teacher and student there are few means that count
so much as pleasant association together outside the schoolroom. In some
schools the teacher is always with his pupils in their hours of recreation. He
unites in their pursuits, accompanies them in their excursions, and seems to
make himself one with them. Well would it be for our schools were this practice
more generally followed. The sacrifice demanded of the teacher would be great,
but he would reap a rich reward. {Ed 212.1}
No recreation helpful only to themselves will prove so great
a blessing to the children and youth as that which makes them helpful to
others. Naturally enthusiastic and impressible, the young are quick to respond
to suggestion. In planning for the culture of plants, let the teacher seek to
awaken an interest in beautifying the school grounds and the schoolroom. A
double benefit will result. That which the pupils seek to beautify they will be
unwilling to have marred or defaced. A refined taste, a love of order, and a
habit of care-taking will be encouraged; and [213] the
spirit of fellowship and co-operation developed will prove to the pupils a
lifelong blessing. {Ed
212.2}
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So also a new interest may be given to the work of the
garden or the excursion in field or wood, as the pupils are encouraged to
remember those shut in from these pleasant places and to share with them the
beautiful things of nature. {Ed
213.1}
The watchful teacher will find many opportunities for
directing pupils to acts of helpfulness. By little children especially the
teacher is regarded with almost unbounded confidence and respect. Whatever he
may suggest as to ways of helping in the home, faithfulness in the daily tasks,
ministry to the sick or the poor, can hardly fail of bringing forth fruit. And
thus again a double gain will be secured. The kindly suggestion will react upon
its author. Gratitude and co-operation on the part of the parents will lighten
the teacher's burden and brighten his path. {Ed 213.2}
Attention to recreation and physical culture will at times,
no doubt, interrupt the regular routine of school-work; but the interruption
will prove no real hindrance. In the invigoration of mind and body, the
fostering of an unselfish spirit, and the binding together of pupil and teacher
by the ties of common interest and friendly association, the expenditure of
time and effort will be repaid a hundredfold. A blessed outlet will be afforded
for that restless energy which is so often a source of danger to the young. As
a safeguard against evil, the preoccupation of the mind with good is worth more
than unnumbered barriers of law and discipline. {Ed 213.3}
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"Manual Training"
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