
31/03/2025
Noteworthy to share 🥰
Play doesn’t need to teach anything to be worthy. A child spinning in circles, digging a hole for no reason, or talking to a stick isn’t wasting time—they’re claiming space in a world obsessed with outcomes. Play is not preparation for life. It is life.
Too often, play is tolerated only when it leads to something “productive.” But research tells a different story. Real play—freely chosen, self-directed, often nonsensical—is where children build their sense of self, explore emotional landscapes, and experience joy on their own terms (Hughes, 2011; Lester & Russell, 2008).
Peter Gray, research professor of psychology and leading voice in the field of play and self-directed education, warns that when adults hijack play to teach, we strip it of the very qualities that make it powerful. True play has no predetermined outcome. It doesn’t need to be educational, therapeutic, or efficient. Even when it looks frivolous, it’s doing deep work: protecting mental health, supporting autonomy, and resisting a culture that demands constant productivity from even the youngest among us.
Let kids dig holes. Let them be “unproductive.” That’s where the real work lives.