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Taking Risks
July 11, 2014
Conditions are never just right. People who delay action until all factors are favorable do nothing.
-William Feather

In her article "Giving Ourselves Permission to Take Risks," which is included in the new Exchange Essential: Promoting Creativity in Adults, Elizabeth Jones explains why it is "safer to take risks than to run away from them":

"Courage, as we’ve learned from the Cowardly Lion, is a virtue that is hard to sustain.  New experiences are often scary; we don’t know what will happen next or what we should do.  Yet all new learning involves risk.  The challenge is to think — to pay attention, to calculate, to invent new ideas, to discuss (and often argue) our ideas with our friends and our mentors, to act, to reflect on what happened — and to try again.  We learn by doing — and by thinking about the past and the future.

"It is safer to practice risk-taking than to run away.  With children, adults are there to set outer limits, but not to stop their investigation of the world.  Skilled adults scaffold for children, ‘spotting’ their action as a coach does.  Fearful adults forbid action, risking any of these less than desirable consequences: ­Permanent fear, self-doubt, and cowering obedience; or rebellion, plotting ways to do it on the sly.  (All of us break those rules we believe to be unfair and unreasonable; with practice, we can become skillful at not getting caught, and enjoy the rush that accompanies sneaking.)   

"Risk is inevitable; it’s a requirement for survival.  The challenge is to name it, practice it, enjoy the rush of mastery, and bear the pain when pain is the outcome.

"A child who climbs may fall.  But a child who never climbs is at much greater risk.  Fall surfaces under climbers aren't there to prevent falls, only to make them less hard. And hugging doesn’t make the pain go away, but it does make it more bearable.  Reading this, what have you been thinking?  Are these good ideas?  Dreadful ideas? [Or shocking ideas?]  Try one of them on a colleague.  Do you agree with each other?  Disagreeing is how we keep learning."







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Comments (2)

Displaying All 2 Comments
Gale Wiik · July 11, 2014
Breezy Point Day School
upper holland, Pennsylvania, United States


Last year on a trip to Norway with 3 of our grandchildren ages 4, 6, 8 at the time, I saw them climb and play on many stone working fountains, sculptures in Viegland Park and anything else they could jump over or get on. Yesterday, in Seattle, Washington, I saw them and hundreds of other adults and children enjoy a concrete bowl and giant fountain and slippery whale sculptures. I watched and kept my mouth shut as my 37 years in the preschool and camping environment has taught me to watch and see and if something looks dangerous [to] stop it before they begin. I have some great photos of both. I agree with the author. That risking is good , but it is all a fine balance of good choices. Still, ACCIDENTS will happen. Lawsuits should be minimized and kids will be better prepared for the real world.

Jennifer · July 11, 2014
Early Head Start
Spokane, WA, United States


Thank you for the article today. I have been subscribing at one job or another for more than 10 years now and have always enjoyed opening my email every morning because of it.

I find articles which challenge me a bit to be most meaningful to my everyday work and make me a better provider & person.

Cheers!

Jennifer Lawrence



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