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David Suzuki

Pushing our kids out the door may be the best way to save the planet.
 
In a survey conducted for the David Suzuki Foundation, 70 percent of Canadian youth said they spend an hour or less a day in the open air. And when they are out, it’s usually to go from one place to another. In other words, it’s just a consequence of trying to be somewhere else.
 
Nearly half the young people surveyed said they don’t have enough time to join programs that would involve them in outdoor activities. School, work and other responsibilities make it difficult to do things like kick around a soccer ball or go for a walk with friends in the nearby woods.
 
For someone of my generation this is almost unfathomable. When I was a kid, being outside was the norm. Rain or shine, our parents would tell us to get out of the house. All those hours exploring the great outdoors made me more resilient and confident.
 
As a teenager in London, Ontario, my sanctuary was a swamp. I’d return home at the end of a day, often soaking wet and covered in mud, with my collection of insects, salamander eggs and turtles. That piqued my interest in science. Making tree forts and lying in fields watching the clouds stimulated my imagination and creativity. Being outside made me a happy, healthy kid and made me feel connected to the world around me. As a father, I also encouraged my kids to enjoy time outdoors, and one of my favorite activities now is exploring nature with my grandchildren.
 
In just a few generations, life has changed dramatically for children. Now, they can’t seem to find the time to play outdoors. They sit in front of screens for long periods of time. The gap between the time kids stay inside with electronic devices and the time they spend outside is widening. A U.S. survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found young people are engaged with entertainment media for an average of seven and a half hours a day. Over seven days, that’s longer than the average workweek!
 
We can’t blame children for occupying themselves with Facebook rather than playing in the mud. Our society doesn’t put a priority on connecting with nature. In fact, too often we tell them it’s dirty and dangerous.
 
As parents, grandparents, uncles and aunts we need to start getting out into nature with the young people in our lives. Families play a key role in getting kids outside. The David Suzuki Foundation survey found that youth were 20 per cent more likely to take part in outdoor programming or explore nature on their own if they spent time outside from an early age.
 
Younger teens reported that getting outside with their families was the best way to connect with nature. Older youth were more likely to explore nature spontaneously, on their own or with friends—likely because parents relax restrictions and allow them to do more of what they want.
 
And what they want is fun and adventure, at least when it comes to being outside. More than half the youth said they enjoy spending unstructured time in nature. They want to be outside in their neighborhoods with their friends catching bugs, watching birds or riding bikes. This is great news.
 
What we need to do is encourage them—and sometimes just get out of their way.
 
We need to make sure our neighborhoods have green spaces where people can explore their connections with nature. We need to ask teachers and school board representatives to take students outside regularly to incorporate the natural world into everything they learn. And we need to stop making the outdoors scary for children.
 
If we don’t, we’ll never raise the next generation of environmental stewards to help protect and celebrate the wonders of nature. After all, people are more likely to look after something they have come to know and cherish.
 
Parents need to remember all the fun times they had outside as kids. They need to trust their children, and kick them out the door like my Mom did. Our survival may depend on it.

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Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Specialist Leanne Clare.
 
Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.
 
For more insights from David Suzuki, please read Everything Under the Sun (Greystone Books/David Suzuki Foundation), by David Suzuki and Ian Hanington, now available in bookstores and online.

 

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  • Daniel Ferra says:

    Hi,

    California law does not allow home owners to size their Solar systems larger than what they use.
    Residential home owners, should be allowed to participate in the State mandated goal, to achieve 33% renewable energy by 2020.
    Due to this law, we have automatically taken out over 8 million roof tops, that would generate over 11,500MW of power, thats 5 San Onofre nuclear power plants.
    We need to let our tax paying, home owning citizens in on this Feed in Tariff, it would be a gold mine for the State, Counties, Cities and the Environment, the possibilities of each entity selling carbon credits is an untapped gold vein.

    That’s why I created a petition to California Energy Commission, California Public Utility Comission and Governor Jerry Brown, which says:

    ” The California Feed in Tariff allows eligible customers-generators to enter into 10- 15 or 20 year contracts with their Utilities to sell the electricity produced by renewable energy systems, let California home owners in on the Feed in Tariff allowing them to over size their Solar systems.”

    Will you sign my petition? Click here to add your name:

    http://signon.org/sign/let-california-home-owners?source=c.fwd&r_by=3329334

    Thanks!

  • Christine says:

    It’s so true that environmentalists arise out of young people who were able to experience nature. It’s sad that so many youth now live in cities where the ability to experience untamed nature becomes less and less. Yes, we can “connect with nature” anywhere, but there is something different that comes from feeling like you’re in “wild” nature where the mind can roam free. Hopefully we continue to save the last of our wild lands and work on reforesting parts of our cities.

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