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The pursuit of playfulness

Remember when you were a kid, and you played every chance you could? Then you grew up, life got serious and next thing you know, it’s all just work and bills and boring things. Well, this is why we’re taking a look at adult play and finding out just what roller skating has to do with it all.

“What do you do for fun?” Once I was asked this at a wedding by someone I didn’t know very well and honestly, the question stumped me. Racking my brain, all I could think of were things I did outside of the corporate job I held at the time. “Well,” I began, “I like to exercise and read and… and… drink wine?” The person I was speaking to seemed just as unimpressed by my answer as I was. Shifting on my feet I felt compelled to return the question. Without missing a beat, he replied, “Fishing. Camping. Four-wheel driving.” “Oh,” was all I could say before taking another sip of wine.

Though this exchange took place several years ago, something about it has long bothered me and I’ve never really been able to articulate why until recently.

You see, last Christmas, my children conspired with their father to buy me a pair of roller skates. At forty, I was more than a little reluctant to hit the roller rink. However, not wanting to disappoint anyone I tied up my laces and strapped on my wrist guards – because forty remember – and off we went.

Having not been in a pair of skates since I was a kid, I deferred to my children for guidance. Our roles reversed as they began teaching me the ropes or should I say, rolls. Though I was rather wobbly to begin with, eventually and literally after much handholding by my kids, I got the hang of it. And you know what? It was fun. Like really, really fun.

Not only is it the satisfaction of taking on a new task, there’s also the thrill that comes with moving your body in a way, and at a pace, that you normally wouldn’t. Additionally, there’s the low-level risk that you might actually hurt yourself, which forces you to stay – for want of a better term – ‘in the moment’. And then there’s the Lols. So many Lols! But most importantly, I really feel like it’s the fact that I’m doing an activity with no other end than itself.

I’m not trying to be a champion roller skater (if that’s even a thing), not training to join a roller derby team, I’m not even trying to be better at it from one week to the next. I’m just doing it purely for the fun of it, which has made me realise how little we do this in adulthood.

Not just child’s play

The play expert

The positives of play

Prioritising play again

Whilst Brown agrees that as adults, we’ve become culturally conditioned into feeling guilty about play, he says the key to re-introducing play lies in our childhood memories.

“To really regain play in your life you will need to take a journey back into the past to help create avenues for play that work for you in the present. This can be achieved through a complete play history, or it can be done by simply sitting and remembering (and often visualising) something you did in the past that gave you the sense of unfettered pleasure, of time suspended, of total involvement… Remember how that made you feel? Remember and feel that emotion and hold on to it… It can be the rope that lifts you out of your play-deficient well… Remember the feeling of true play and let that be your guiding star.”

Once that has been done, Brown then advises to find activities that allow you to recreate that feeling as often as possible. Funnily enough, when I think back to my own childhood and ‘play history’, roller-skating on the veranda of our family home is one of the first things that comes to mind.

As seen in Swell Issue 17.

Words: Emily McGrorey | Illustration: Claire Cresswell

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