One of my
favorite conversations this summer involved listening to a certain set of
parents complain about their kids. Before I tell you what the rents were complaining about, let us begin by establishing the
context.
For most of
the year, their spawn are locked away in prisons called “classrooms.” Each morning, the entire household would wake
up with the express intention of leaving each other – the kids to get
institutionalized, and the rents to chase dreams of getting rich by making
their bosses richer. (Okay, that’s
material for an entirely different anti-social commentary, so for now let’s
stay on point: The rents are at work, the kids are in school).
So, the
only time the rents have to deal with the annoying directionless bundle of energy
we call their children is when they come home. And even then, what is typically
on the agenda is to make sure the wide-eyed little devils pipe down so they can
eat and go to bed already.
Sometimes (not
often enough) there are special events called “weekends” and “holidays” where –
if the kids are lucky - the rents can drive the fam to Resorts World and stuff the gang into a cinema so they can watch GIJoe back to back to back while the
rents hit the slots.
Inevitably the
summer season comes, and the rents find themselves completely at a loss. Now the
kids are in the house all the time. The
whole time! For the first time in
the year – without a school to fall back on – the rents actually have the task
of entertaining their insatiable little thrill-seekers: to try to fill up their
days with activity. The rents finally
get to see what these creatures are all about, and this is when I get their
calls.
“All she does is play! She wakes up, borrows
my iPad – i don’t even know why she has to borrow it anymore to be since I
always feel like I’m the one who has to borrow it from her – and starts playing
some game that I didn’t even know was there.
She stops to eat, then starts playing some other game. It never ends!
Meanwhile I’m waiting to check my email, which I have to sneak in to do when
she goes to the bathroom.”
They don't really
have to tell me how this goes. Aside
from being that way myself, I also have recently slogged through a long Sunday with
a kid who swapped xbox games every half hour for the entire sixteen hours of
his waking time. He did not care if we were right in the middle of a boxing
match (he was getting wtfpwnt, if you must know) - he would just suddenly decide
it was time to play something else, unceremoniously eject the disc, and insert
another one (whatever disc his hand randomly attached itself to).
The Super
Secret Law of Finite Play Time and Conditioned Game Gluttony: Once school
starts, or dinner is served, or the parents arrive home, the fun is over.
Can you
really blame a kid for desperately trying to squeeze every possible game into
his life when he knows his play days are numbered? He lives in dreadful fear of the fun being
over!
Now I’m not
telling you all this to call attention to the rents in the hopes that some
social service will clue them in and tell them to back the eff off of their
kids, but I do think summer is a good time to be reminded of what I personally
feel is the most important part of life:
Play. MOST important.
“All he does is play,” the rents cry to me, because I'm apparently such
a good listener. “Why is he like that?”
NEWS FLASH:
that’s all kids want to do. PROFOUND PHILOSOPHICAL
EPIPHANY: isn’t that what we are all supposed to do? TRAGIC DRAMATIC RHETORICAL QUESTION: When did
we stop being kids?
When did we
stop wanting nothing else but to play?
I won’t
answer that, because it’s too depressing to get into. And I did say it was
rhetorical. What I am here to campaign for is that we don’t let our kids follow
suit. And if my campaign happens to bring some of the adults back into the
kids’ camp, that’s a bonus.
You know
how we tell our kids to watch the elders so they can learn a thing or two? Here’s my campaign: To be a better person,
watch the kids. See them for what they naturally are: They are GAMERS. All of them. Let
them play.
“But I thought he'd spend the
summer going to the karate classes we booked for him,” the relentless rents bewail. “And
she was supposed to go to summer art classes every other day, and ballet
lessons on Sundays.”
“I see,” is my shrink-like reply. “You
thought you’d take their vacation – a break from all that learning you put them
through for five days a week for the last ten months – you thought you’d take
that part of their calendar and fill it with even more learning... so they can...
well, what? Become the people you want them to be and get out of your hair?”
Yes, I make
for a very sarcastic shrink. But people like
that about me.
“Here is my proposal: just watch them do
their thing for a change. Instead of trying to fill their calendar like you do
yours, empty it. Stop trying to constantly train them to excel at something you
chose for them. Watch them wander about and see what they pick up. See what
they like to do, see what they're good at.
Watch them play.”
Is his head
buried in that iPad-knockoff gadget trying to figure out what six-letter word
best matches the four pictures on the screen? What one might see as a kid
wasting away in front of a computer, I see as a person getting smarter, wanting
to do better, and having fun doing it. Help
him play.
I’m not
going to sit here and talk about why puzzles and video games and sports are
good for our health and well being, but as a proud member of what I believe to
be the Gamer Generation, I am going to campaign for the continuous promotion of
The
Gamer’s
Mindset.
The Super
Secret Law of Compulsive High-Score-Setters: Once you are of the opinion that
life is something to be enjoyed, all you will want to do is get better at it.
And because
I’m such a nerd, I will now attempt to sum up the benefits of a Gamer’s Mindset
in a corny acronym: “ACT.”
A is for APTITUDE. Gamers become lateral thinkers who not only
think outside the box, but happen to live there. They do not get there by
accident, but by natural experience.
Gamer nerdiness
comes from a multitude of games that are based
on history, city building, governance, trivia, puzzles... Who needs flash cards
when a Gamer can learn to add by being the banker in a Monopoly session?
And after a
young Gamer masters the art of addition and subtraction, he learns the subtler
art of screwing over another player by trading boardwalk for two red properties
straight up.
why dumb kids can't play Civ: Get smarter or get nuked. |
All this aptitude
comes from direct experiences, which in turn fuel a desire to be better as the
experiences build. Gamers are infowhores
who want to read, watch and know everything that has anything to do with
whatever they are currently into.
Hey, you
know who else wants to touch and check out everything in their path? Babies.
And if you want to meet someone who never stops asking why, you won’t
have to find a Gamer or any of Aristotle’s proteges, you just have to chat up a
five year old.
Gamers are
cinephiles, and - more than anyone else – inherently understand what there is
to learn from fiction. Movies and books have
made me a wizard at geography, history and culture, as well as a brilliant
conversationalist. They drilled in some
extremely important life-facts: Humor comes first, good guys win, everything
works out.
Gamers know
how to tell a story, because we’ve read and watched so many of them. We know how it ends, and that gives us supreme
confidence in everything we do.
C is for CONFIDENCE.
Nobody has Faith with a
capital F like a Gamer. Gamers know in
their hearts that there is ALWAYS a solution - that every game is built to be
beat. This grasp of how the world works
might be what Gary Valenciano meant
when he was singing about how God “…won’t
give me what I can’t bear…”
Gamers
don’t need an all-powerful deity to have this confidence. We just know that there
is an answer somewhere, and we are going to find it. Nobody says FUUUUUUU with a capital F like a Gamer.
We are
backed by a community of similarly competitive and confident minds. Somewhere
out there is another Gamer writing a walkthrough to get me past any wall I
might hit. Gamers may seem like loners, but we are never alone, and there is no
game we can’t beat. We know this, and
this makes us tenacious.
The Super
Secret Law of Sucking At Life: You can’t maximize an experience by getting it
right the first time.
T is for TENACITY. Gamers are used to failure and we never give
up. We know what it’s like to start from zero over and over again. We
know that “Game Over” does not mean anything as long as we want to keep
playing. No one says “hey, I did it before, I can do it again”
like a Gamer. Broke up with girl? Create
new character. House burned down and
lost everything? Load saved game.
This makes Gamers
fearless leaders and unapologetic adventurers.
We will try anything if we can imagine it. We will even build a World of Warcraft Dwarf Rogue
to be a Guild tank, if you know what I mean.
No one can tell us what we can’t do.
The days
when the word “Gamer” was synonymous to “slacker” or “stoner” are long long
gone. My generation of gamers has grown up to produce some incredible role
models.
ACT. Gamers are not slackers, they're doers! And
as a parent, you would be well rewarded in welcoming - no, cultivating - in
your child the Gamer’s Mindset!
My good
friend is a high-powered businessman. He
snaps his fingers and things get done.
He makes some calls and deals are made.
He is on top of his food chain because he is always trying to level-up. He makes a lot of money because he needs it to
keep his Magic: The Gathering deck ultra-competitive.
Tjader Regis is the quintessential Gamer |
My brother
was the country’s first official Gaming Guru. He ran the World CyberGames in the Philippines and turned teenaged video game
addicts into local heroes representing the country on international
stages. He proved to parents that one
can make a living playing StarCraft,
and that playing CounterStrike (as
opposed to finishing school and working hard at a nine-to-five for ten years)
can get a kid a passport, a visa, and a plane ticket with hotel accommodations
to the United States, Italy, and Korea.
My
Professional Poker Coach showed me that my approach to the game mirrors my
approach to my life. He showed me that
making small changes in how I play not only improve my game results, but also
snowball into bigger changes in how I play at life. When I accept the realities of game results,
I become more forgiving as a person. Oh,
and paying the rent by playing a game I love all day? Priceless.
Inventors,
politicians and movie stars can take a hike. Gamers are the new role models. Do you want to be your kid’s role model? Embrace the Gamer’s Mindset and trust me on
this: Let them play, watch them play, help them play, and most importantly, play with them.
The family
that plays together, stays together. You
see what I did there.