5 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do: Gever Tulley at TEDxMidwest

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
  • In his humorous and uplifting style, Gever Tulley debunks classic myths of childhood safety. With rampant fear mongering, is it any wonder that children are actually over-protected? Instead, Tulley believes the most effective way to keep children safe is to give them a little taste of danger.
    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @andy4an
    @andy4an Před 10 lety +6609

    "the most effective way to keep children safe, is to give them a little taste of danger"
    well said.

    • @jakspinks7644
      @jakspinks7644 Před 5 lety +8

      First

    • @sageneodraconus
      @sageneodraconus Před 5 lety +165

      This is very true. I was opening Christmas gifts for my niece (toys she had received and now wanted to play with) and asked her to go get me a knife out of the kitchen. She was like 8 or maybe older at this point. She tells me that she's not allowed to touch the knives. At which point I told her just to hurry up and get it. She brings it into the room barely pinching the tip of the handle with the blade hanging down. I open the toys and tell her to sit next to me for a minute. I have her open her hand with her palm upward. Then I attempt to show her the proper way to hold a knife so that you don't hurt yourself or the person you're handing it to. She freaked out like no other and I had to abandon my attempt to teach her something that I viewed to be a vital safety lesson. Who in this world will ever avoid a sharp knife, box cutter, or other sharp tool in their life? I wasn't trying to scar her by pretending to cut her hand or anything like that. I was trying to show her something that could prove to be truly vital in her life at some point. The point was safety because if no one ever teaches her how, then when she has no other choice but to use a knife, then her chances of hurting herself increase exponentially. As much as I hate to say this, my sister (her mother) does actually coddle her kids a little bit too much. She views it as shielding them from the bad things in the world. However, by "shielding" them, she's also leaving them unprepared for when they inevitably encounter these things in the real world. She won't be able to protect them from every single thing forever and they should know what to do should the need ever arise and not just get thrown into a panic because the situation is totally foreign to them. I should also clarify that I was only trying to show her HOW to do something, but at no point was I tell her she was ALLOWED to do anything she was told not to do. I was not giving her permission to go play around with sharp objects, the goal was merely to teach her the safe way to do so if she ever had to. Parents overprotect kids in so many ways it's unbelievable. 8 years old may have been a little young for this type of lesson, but she's 10 or 11 now and would probably still throw a fit if I tried the same thing today. That's the point I'm trying to make. If I was able to teach her properly the first time, then she would never have to be afraid about it ever again. Proper knowledge can be the singlemost greatest form of protection you can ever give your children. Exposing them to dangerous situations to give them instructions on how to keep themselves safe in dangerous situations is better than telling a kid to avoid something for the rest of their life at all costs. If my niece were successfully trained on how to handle a blade, she could finally cut the cord and grow up. Lol. Had to end on a joke but I meant every word before that

    • @jordy7625
      @jordy7625 Před 5 lety +11

      @@sageneodraconus Well said

    • @apathyguy8338
      @apathyguy8338 Před 5 lety +11

      Any other old geezers remember Lawn Jarts?

    • @XxxXxx-yh5gz
      @XxxXxx-yh5gz Před 4 lety +7

      Exactly how vaccine works

  • @rickhubanks6722
    @rickhubanks6722 Před 5 lety +3130

    When my son was 8 he climbed up a tree and wanted me to come up and get him down. I told him "You got up there, you get down" my wife was losing her mind freaking out. He got himself down and now he owns a business cutting trees out of powerlines.

    • @lemnems582
      @lemnems582 Před 4 lety +143

      If this is true, then thats amazing!

    • @moabt.frican7163
      @moabt.frican7163 Před 4 lety +78

      How can i not like this comment? Very cool

    • @kaylag5043
      @kaylag5043 Před 4 lety +85

      When I was a kid I was told that a few times. I definitely learned how to get out of problems on my own.

    • @ricecake1228
      @ricecake1228 Před 4 lety +7

      :0

    • @jeremiahlaing6757
      @jeremiahlaing6757 Před 4 lety +15

      Depending on how high the tree was, that was a bad decision. Letting a child climb a tree is one thing, but when one is asking for help to get down, ignoring his/ her request is, simply put, dangerous and mean

  • @jordyv.703
    @jordyv.703 Před 5 lety +3443

    *CZcams recommended*
    "Let's hide this video for SEVEN years"

  • @ExtoPlasmOfficial
    @ExtoPlasmOfficial Před 5 lety +2213

    TED talks are really getting me to realize that people don't see children as children anymore. They're seen as and raised to be robots; able to digest and regurgitate useless facts without asking any questions, expected to be safe 100% of the time, and basically become absolutely perfect, regardless of how much of a tall order that may be.
    Just let kids be kids. How hard is this to understand?

    • @thomasray
      @thomasray Před 5 lety +29

      Yes. I agree so much. So, so much.

    • @thomasray
      @thomasray Před 5 lety +29

      @Mia Li Wait, isn't lazy one of the things people say MILLENIALS are? Also, did you say that children are being educated?

    • @dingfeldersmurfalot4560
      @dingfeldersmurfalot4560 Před 4 lety +36

      By now a lot of adults don't know what kids are anymore, because they were in some sense raised in glass bubbles themselves. You've got one generation of over-supervised, freedomless kids grown up to raise another. They can't teach their kids how to be courageous and free because they never knew what that is and have nothing to teach.

    • @sleepdeep305
      @sleepdeep305 Před 4 lety +5

      What? I love regurgitating useless facts, although they probably aren’t the same kind of useless facts you’re talking about...

    • @Lim-mv7rq
      @Lim-mv7rq Před 4 lety

      hear hear

  • @Frost_Blight
    @Frost_Blight Před 9 lety +6747

    do parents seriously not let their kids climb trees now?

    • @celuler22
      @celuler22 Před 9 lety +372

      sadly they dont trust kids intuitien about trees lol or they dont teach it to them anymore

    • @MajimeTV
      @MajimeTV Před 9 lety +335

      I never learned how to climb a tree because my grandfather was blind and I was scared of getting stuck up there & him not being able to help me down.

    • @fakepro5848
      @fakepro5848 Před 7 lety +85

      celuler22 this is sad. what is wrong with people?!

    • @ronniemirano7120
      @ronniemirano7120 Před 7 lety +238

      It also has to do with where you are from, there weren't any climbing tree's where I lived growing up. I grew up with lot of tall palm trees and cactus and like hell would I want to try to shimmy up either of those, I climbed a lot of walls instead. Some of the issue is apart of location and availability to climbing trees, the rest is sissy parents.

    • @TheCandyDragon
      @TheCandyDragon Před 7 lety +146

      The trees in my area have the lower branches cut off to discourage climbing, unfortunately...

  • @1234567895182
    @1234567895182 Před 9 lety +4428

    when i was a child, i asked my dad if i could touch the stove. He said do it so I did, burned myself, lesson learned. Proof that this guy is right xD

    • @Jesse-lv2yo
      @Jesse-lv2yo Před 9 lety +386

      One of my parents gave me a cigarette when I was ten. It was so traumatizing and terrible I never picked up the habit despite all my friends doing it at some point.

    • @domotacool6892
      @domotacool6892 Před 9 lety +137

      i thought there was a spider on my screen cause of you

    • @PONYBOYonline
      @PONYBOYonline Před 9 lety +347

      NumberSixteen BusShelter I asked my dad if I could stick my dick in the toaster. He said do it. I haven't stuck my dick in any toasters since.

    • @dagoldenkakashi4025
      @dagoldenkakashi4025 Před 9 lety +8

      O.O 😂😂

    • @piffman9559
      @piffman9559 Před 9 lety +31

      Isak The Baron same here I'm happy my mom let have some cause I have never picked one up

  • @jeffreyhuang3814
    @jeffreyhuang3814 Před 4 lety +652

    When I was in grade 4 I had a supply teacher named Mr Tunsios. He was a frequent supplier for our school and the kids loved him. One day he asked us "who wants to see me blow up a bomb after school?"
    Everyone was excited. There was a unanimous yes.
    He brings a cooler outside filled with dry ice. He dumps it in a plastic nestle disposable water bottle and dumps boiling water in. He seals the bottle.
    At this moment we are all 20 metres away lying like soldiers on the ground. Then it blows up. The explosion was massive and loud and spectacular.
    Then he repeated the experiment a bunch of times. It was quite amazing.
    That is the only thing I remember from elementary school.

    • @shamirarshad1867
      @shamirarshad1867 Před 4 lety +24

      Wow that is so amazing, it is a great experience for children to learn about explosions and dry ice. 👍👍

    • @FrediskiwidoesrandomSTUFF
      @FrediskiwidoesrandomSTUFF Před 4 lety +17

      We did that at our school and someone called the cops because it was so loud

    • @sole7816
      @sole7816 Před 4 lety +3

      I got so scared ngl... We’ve never since something like this before at my old school but we did fun experiments like make ice cream but not explode something!! I wish I did that!

    • @theshlankiebrosmisc3432
      @theshlankiebrosmisc3432 Před 4 lety +23

      imagine a teacher saying that nowadays 😂😂. "who wants to see me set off a bomb after school"

    • @greatwavefan397
      @greatwavefan397 Před 4 lety +5

      I got worried until I finished reading it

  • @BrainDeadMetalics
    @BrainDeadMetalics Před 4 lety +1030

    My future child will be the most badass kid. Glue those fingers

    • @Brandon-me2qr
      @Brandon-me2qr Před 4 lety +5

      天日 ボルトHikari ok MR badass

    • @annaturquoise7114
      @annaturquoise7114 Před 4 lety +9

      Azurda I love you

    • @EvilSatanson
      @EvilSatanson Před 4 lety +18

      Looking at my 2y.o. and 4y.o. girls, thinking about where to get some superglue and 9v battery xD

    • @brendabalzan1994
      @brendabalzan1994 Před 4 lety +3

      I don't need to glue mine... I get some sort of cut every other month. So I'm often 1 thumb or finger less. Going back to full hand is always strange at first. I'm learning to work around it all. Plasters and gloves have made it easier for washing and cleaning. Also learned to keep cleaning and disinfecting the area and around. Progress.

    • @davidm3493
      @davidm3493 Před 4 lety

      Remembering the time one of my kids was a toddler and bit into a tube of superglue and got some in his mouth. Of course I freaked out and called poison control. They said it is hard to swallow superglue since it basically sticks on contact and I just had to clean out his mouth with vegetable oil. They were right!

  • @daskrumelmonster3241
    @daskrumelmonster3241 Před 7 lety +2226

    Dont talk to strangers
    you could become friends

    • @i.s.9451
      @i.s.9451 Před 5 lety +147

      The strangers, are the ones I am worried for.

    • @starpop3737
      @starpop3737 Před 5 lety +6

      eleora I.S. 😂

    • @DEmma1972
      @DEmma1972 Před 5 lety +35

      You could miss out on seeing some little puppies

    • @dondemitri3760
      @dondemitri3760 Před 4 lety +17

      *the fear of commitment*

    • @alainc.4132
      @alainc.4132 Před 4 lety +34

      @@goodels2336 or... OR you could hit the candy jackpot in the windowless van that stranger is driving.. I would risk it...

  • @Chartoise
    @Chartoise Před 8 lety +5947

    Being too protected and too safe, leads to fear...
    Who do you think fears the rain the most... the one who walks in it everyday, or the one that never walked in it?
    Fear resides, where experience stops.

    • @Chartoise
      @Chartoise Před 8 lety +69

      Pablo Rages Don't you think we are over protecting our kids? Because in my personal surrounding, I see that parents over protect their kids.

    • @briannaharter4411
      @briannaharter4411 Před 8 lety +127

      it wasn't safer back then.it just seemed safer back then cause there wasn't big media coverage of every single bad thing that could happen.the world hasn't changed in terms of danger but it has changed into a more paranoid world.where people freak out of the simplest of things.

    • @fishsauce617
      @fishsauce617 Před 7 lety +14

      Awesome. I'm going to quote that. ^and kidnapping isn't as high as most think.

    • @Ayelis
      @Ayelis Před 7 lety +51

      According to statistics, parents do most of the kidnapping. So if you want to be kidnapped, hang around at home all day.

    • @payne3672
      @payne3672 Před 7 lety +20

      Kids are not more aware, they are more exposed - to what the media provides. You worry more over a gun/knife yet you say kids are more brave (intelligent?) - no. I disagree. I do understand where you are coming from, the knowledge and availability of weapons has increased but not the use of patience or safety while holding one - that has decreased. People were less aware and more care-free, because the media wasn't shoving down our throats. Again, the availability has increased - not the delivery of the news. Another example but far from the strongest, the teachers walk around the classroom like hand sanitizer is holstered to their hip, creating fear of germs. I rolled around under homes, in dirt-sometimes worse, used porta-johns, barely ever had the chance to wash my hands when it was time to eat, and bite my nails - I never get sick even though the kids are sick four times a month. When was hand sanitizer put to use for general public, late 90's?

  • @hutchesonchris42
    @hutchesonchris42 Před 4 lety +643

    I get the strangest looks when I tell people my 9 & 6 year olds ride their bikes to school.

    • @ricecake1228
      @ricecake1228 Před 4 lety +18

      I would love a Netherland route.

    • @diego032912
      @diego032912 Před 4 lety +58

      I was walking to school started since 3rd grade when I became 8 years old. It's why I've always had a nack for being outside and exploring and adventuring because even though I lived in a suburb I would always go exploring around my neighborhood and bike around as well. I miss my childhood man

    • @williamfuendeling2734
      @williamfuendeling2734 Před 4 lety +46

      By 4th grade I rode my bike to school and home every day and was home for an hour without my parents every day after school. Tought myself to cook with that time and now I can cook pretty well at 15.

    • @At0micMeltd0wn
      @At0micMeltd0wn Před 4 lety +15

      William Fuendeling If I walked to school it would have been a 7 mile march, along a highway of 70mph cars, with no sidewalk. for some reason my parents didnt let me walk to school.

    • @noleenafahy
      @noleenafahy Před 4 lety +3

      where i live almost everyone walks or bikes to school

  • @bryanslocks3481
    @bryanslocks3481 Před 4 lety +749

    Problem solving on your own is one of the most important skills anyone can learn, ever.

    • @elmo7608
      @elmo7608 Před 3 lety +4

      Reading is pretty important too

    • @PelemusMcSoy
      @PelemusMcSoy Před 3 lety +6

      Kids need to learn problem solving skills at some point in their lives, because while their parents will do whatever they can to help the kid, there will come a point where the kid is on their own and the parents cannot help them.

    • @Macionik
      @Macionik Před 3 lety

      I'm totally agree with you, but I'm doubting about looking for the solution in the internet. You must learn how to Google yourself, but the problem itself was solved by someone else. Does that count??😅 (I want to think it does count)

    • @pooshu6468
      @pooshu6468 Před 3 lety

      @@Macionik i mean...yeah it counts. Being “tech savvy” or maybe being able to problem solve with a little info

    • @stantonclark
      @stantonclark Před 2 lety

      @@elmo7608 well pretty much everyone (99% or whatever) can read in the western world, but problem solving is what will get you a job.

  • @andy4an
    @andy4an Před 10 lety +2879

    oh man, this guy should have gotten the full 18 min.
    I love people who find creative ways to break and fix our minds.

  • @pijn2370
    @pijn2370 Před 4 lety +976

    Growing up in a strict household, I never had the chance to do any dangerous things and let me tell you, it isn't fun at all and there are so many things I regret not doing, because I was always in fear I might get punished.

    • @okdonny3369
      @okdonny3369 Před 4 lety +5

      how old are you now??

    • @jameshall5556
      @jameshall5556 Před 4 lety +22

      I am in that household now.

    • @VwapTrader
      @VwapTrader Před 4 lety +15

      Parents like they stunt their children’s growth

    • @firebal6129
      @firebal6129 Před 4 lety +6

      @@jameshall5556 And yet your parents let you be on the internet?!? Someone has there phobias wrong...

    • @jameshall5556
      @jameshall5556 Před 4 lety +17

      @@firebal6129 haha. You totally owned me. It's not like I'm afraid of talking to my parents about things because I might face punishment or anything... Hahaha.

  • @Liam-iv7wk
    @Liam-iv7wk Před 4 lety +761

    This guy is on to something. Every year I had to take chemistry I was always hoping we'd get to blow something up in class. Needless to say I was very disapointed until I lit my chemistry book on fire.

    • @Russo-Delenda-Est
      @Russo-Delenda-Est Před 4 lety +30

      We used to make dry ice bombs on occasion in high school science. Probably not officially sanctioned, but very informative, and fun.

    • @UMSLdragon
      @UMSLdragon Před 4 lety +8

      @@Russo-Delenda-Est best I got was methanol in a 5 liter culigan bottle. it was like a rocket haha

    • @SwordKirby110
      @SwordKirby110 Před 4 lety +14

      One of the last things we did in chemistry was blowing up a trashcan. Honestly, one of my favorite classes and where I excelled.

    • @benjaminbrewer2569
      @benjaminbrewer2569 Před 4 lety +4

      Did you light it with a magnifying glass.

    • @darredenko
      @darredenko Před 4 lety +5

      We were allowed to like, boil water and separate water from salt when salt has dissolved in water.
      Mind you, this was like in the 8th grade, age 14 or something?
      Jeez.

  • @nasheextant3898
    @nasheextant3898 Před 4 lety +244

    I was pestering my dad one day about what electricity tasted like so he asked me if I wanted to lick a 9 volt battery
    It tastes like pennies
    When I told him that
    His next question was
    "Why do you know what pennies taste like?"
    Well...

    • @dragonetteamelia
      @dragonetteamelia Před 4 lety +26

      Lmao, who hasnt licked a penny tho

    • @mohammedalhajeri818
      @mohammedalhajeri818 Před 4 lety +6

      which taste like sweaty balls

    • @ellenma6002
      @ellenma6002 Před 4 lety +14

      @@mohammedalhajeri818 Well how do you know that? Did you lick a basketball? And why would a ball be sweaty?

    • @dragonetteamelia
      @dragonetteamelia Před 4 lety +1

      @mad M haha, maybe you were a more sensible child

    • @drditup
      @drditup Před 4 lety +5

      thoughts and prayers to every penny out there

  • @xHarryMetalx
    @xHarryMetalx Před 10 lety +638

    Being raised in a Mexican household, I never encountered too many limitations when it came to danger. The more hurt you got, the more fun things became.

    • @mariosspyrou1054
      @mariosspyrou1054 Před 5 lety +7

      That's quite lunatic

    • @ohthemadam8290
      @ohthemadam8290 Před 5 lety +22

      sounds like my kind of fun

    • @Charles-hm6ze
      @Charles-hm6ze Před 5 lety +18

      I love how you have to let everyone know youre mexican

    • @danconrad920
      @danconrad920 Před 5 lety +30

      It's all fun and games until someone looses a finger
      then it's hilarious

    • @Monninaq1
      @Monninaq1 Před 5 lety +25

      yeetusthefetus he’s right!! Mexican life is much less sheltered. Peanut allergies are unheard of, people don’t commit suicide at the first disappointment and we are not afraid to touch each other. Believe me, it makes a difference!

  • @laurengell552
    @laurengell552 Před 9 lety +1558

    I am seventeen and I fell out of a tree two weeks ago and I was on crutches for a week. Tonight, I super glued my fingers together for the first time. I am a child at heart.

    • @michellemanly1365
      @michellemanly1365 Před 6 lety +81

      Lauren Gell My project fell apart before school so I stuck some super glue on it. My fingers got stuck together for half the day and the teacher got stuck to the project. Pretty funny day.

    • @southerncross5360
      @southerncross5360 Před 6 lety +22

      This is funny truth about being a kid...I'm in my 40's and I say kids in elementary school today have iPhones and when I was kid I put Elmer's glue on my hands to watch it dry! This is reality of how our world and culture has changed for the worst...

    • @ewstap9040
      @ewstap9040 Před 6 lety +5

      I'm 12 and have accidentally superglued my fingers together, Ima do that now

    • @ewstap9040
      @ewstap9040 Před 6 lety +2

      Southern Charm I'm in 7th grade and me and my friends still do that sometimes (doesn't happen often though usually when we accidentally do it but then we put more for the peel)

    • @nev466
      @nev466 Před 5 lety +8

      I've put hot glue on my hand cause my grandmother gifted me a hot glue gun for christmas due to myself making bows. I learned to wait when its not as hot to put it in the palm of my hand. I learned well.

  • @dace9590
    @dace9590 Před 5 lety +365

    as my mother says, every kid needs to eat their hand full of sand in their childhood

    • @ayyerr
      @ayyerr Před 4 lety +9

      I've had 2 friends that went to the corner of the playground and put spoonfuls of sand in their own mouths and spit it out. Your mother might have a solid point

    • @Glitchmelon
      @Glitchmelon Před 4 lety +3

      @@ayyerr they didn't eat it tell them to do it again but eat it

    • @nea463
      @nea463 Před 4 lety +4

      Lol, so they have to eat their hand with the sand...
      thats nice...
      jk i know what you are going for lol XD.

    • @icecubes9056
      @icecubes9056 Před 3 lety +3

      in preschool, my friend convinced me to eat sand because apparently, it was "yummy." I believed her and ate the sand... the sand beneath the slide in the playground.

    • @siddharthtripathi5806
      @siddharthtripathi5806 Před 3 lety +1

      No wonder Anakin fell to dark side, he never ate sand.

  • @herculesmclovin
    @herculesmclovin Před 5 lety +725

    List: (explained insightfully in video)
    1. Walk to school.
    2. Climb trees.
    3. Burn stuff (not other animals) with a magnifying glass.
    4. Create small explosions/chemical reactions.
    5. Super glue your fingers together.

    • @MJRNKR
      @MJRNKR Před 4 lety +16

      Thank you. I was looking for this list because I couldn't be bothered finding my earphones and don't want to disturb the other people in the room. Super gluing your fingers together is SOOOO scary, though. I'm always convinced I'm going to rip my skin off and bleed to death from my fingers...

    • @jaxonk1440
      @jaxonk1440 Před 4 lety +5

      Me and my brother would catch ants on fire

    • @jaxonk1440
      @jaxonk1440 Před 4 lety +2

      @Michael Haddad élève theres nothing else to do in Nebraska.

    • @ohtych1004
      @ohtych1004 Před 4 lety +3

      What if you live like 30 min drive away?

    • @hahahahaurgay6498
      @hahahahaurgay6498 Před 4 lety +3

      OHTYCH 100 have fun waking up at 5:00 and walking

  • @servals2384
    @servals2384 Před 7 lety +1491

    I grew up on a farm surrounded by forest where I was in constant contract with potentially dangerous animals (untamed horses, bulls, venomous snakes, massive snapping turtles...), our favorite play areas were 40 feet up in massive trees or in crevices at the tops of giant stacks of hay bales, and our favorite pastimes included hunting for snakes, jumping out of a willow tree, having mini "wars" where we would create teams and fend off opposing teams with sticks and pine cones as weapons, and running loose through the forest eating wild berries and roots. I'm not dead. Meanwhile, nowadays I see summer camps where kids aren't even allowed to run around a field without an adult trailing them. People seriously need to chill.

    • @kendomyers
      @kendomyers Před 7 lety +78

      Servals
      Louisiana? where was this?
      i have to say though that eating random berries without knowing what they are is a mistake.
      in a survival situation, you should do each of these steps with 30 minutes in between :
      you should test it unboken against your skin, broken against skin, broken against lips, chew on one then spit it out, then eating only one.

    • @NoodleZelda
      @NoodleZelda Před 7 lety +75

      Servals none of those things are bad, except for the stick war thing. I played with sticks in second grade, six years ago. Somebody who was playing hit me in the eye, ripped my cornea open, made me see double, and temporarily blinded me. It hurts. :p

    • @dalmationblack
      @dalmationblack Před 7 lety +21

      still statistically very unlikely though NoodleNetWorks

    • @benjaminlippsmeier5296
      @benjaminlippsmeier5296 Před 6 lety +44

      Servals damn you had the most perfect childhood ever

    • @SakvaUA
      @SakvaUA Před 6 lety +47

      That's called a survivorship bias. Those who ate wrong berries/mushrooms, fell from trees or left blind from explosions will not be able to tell their story on youtube. :) On the other hand I did all those things as well. Stinky water snakes, huge metal dumps with lot's of sharp/spiky things, gunpowder, other explosives - me and my buddies experienced it all. I'm lucky to have all my fingers and eyes.

  • @alfiet9532
    @alfiet9532 Před 7 lety +681

    This was a list of things I was forbidden to do as a child. I find it really difficult when faced with any kind of danger and usually feel like my childhood was unfinished. LET YOUR KIDS THESE OR THEY WILL GROW UP SCARED OF LITERALLY EVERYTHING.

    • @jacobmartin8332
      @jacobmartin8332 Před 5 lety +1

      Me too. I loved the times when my dad would help me bombs for special occasions.

    • @knickemz
      @knickemz Před 5 lety +3

      I think when he said bomb in a bag he meant the baking soda and vinegar reaction. Put them in a bag close it and it will explode without the possibility of injury.

    • @riazahmed77
      @riazahmed77 Před 5 lety

      @@knickemz pakistan india

    • @andreasrs69
      @andreasrs69 Před 4 lety

      Same so relatable, I didn’t do a single activity he mentioned

    • @InnaVitamina777
      @InnaVitamina777 Před 4 lety +3

      Just a guess but gonna go out on a LIMB(get it?!) and say you have some type of anxiety,struggle with social relationships and suffer frequently from depression (with or without substance abuse tendencies?!)

  • @Savsshit
    @Savsshit Před 4 lety +145

    My dad let me brother and I shoot the air soft guns at targets when we were younger. Before giving them to us he shot us both to show what would happen if we shot each other, him, the dog, or our other siblings. It stung a bit but didn’t cause any damage. What it did do is teach my brother and I to be careful with guns. He and I have been shooting real guns for a few years and know how to use them properly. It was worth it.

    • @shamirarshad1867
      @shamirarshad1867 Před 4 lety +5

      Great father teaching. 👊👊

    • @arnoldwardenaar127
      @arnoldwardenaar127 Před 4 lety +1

      Indeed, that's a lesson you'll never forget

    • @ianmorgan3239
      @ianmorgan3239 Před 4 lety +4

      For me when I turned like ten my dad pretty much just said to wear safety glasses so I would just go out into my backyard in shorts and a tshirt with my friends and we'd all just shoot eachother with airsoft guns. We'd come in covered in bruises and bumps but it was worth it because it was hella awesome. We all loved it xD

    • @Savsshit
      @Savsshit Před 4 lety +1

      Ian Morgan now that my siblings are older we do that too!

    • @ianmorgan3239
      @ianmorgan3239 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Savsshit I would do it with my little brother when he was like 6-8, it'd be the middle of summer and he'd be out their with like 5 layers of clothing and a coat with an entire helmet on so he couldn't feel getting shot 😂

  • @MrLuigiFercotti
    @MrLuigiFercotti Před 4 lety +82

    I've said this for years.
    When did children suddenly evolve to have legs that were incapable of walking and bicycling to get somewhere?

  • @ConspiciousCultist
    @ConspiciousCultist Před 9 lety +438

    I'm 19 and I realized I didn't even do any of these things minus the battery-licking and that's because they didn't find out fast enough.
    Here's to hoping I won't be so overbearing if I have children.

    • @otepmeimban
      @otepmeimban Před 9 lety +11

      Conspicuous Cultist did you know why those batteries tasted sour?
      because someone did it before you

    • @oliviawronski6387
      @oliviawronski6387 Před 7 lety +3

      Booksarefun666 Wow. I licked airport handle bars as a baby. And... yeah I was fine. I also had e. coli. as a 1.5 year old (bad plane food probably) :).
      Guess I was lucky.

    • @jonahnichols2158
      @jonahnichols2158 Před 7 lety +6

      Helen McCoy E Coli can be deadly though, depending on the strain. If it was HB101, no worries, but the dangerous one is to worry.

    • @oliviawronski6387
      @oliviawronski6387 Před 7 lety +2

      Trucker1114 1 Nearly died, apparently. Still probably have the hospital records somewhere.

    • @naverilllang
      @naverilllang Před 6 lety +1

      Booksarefun666 the only things i didnt really do until layer was walk to school and the chemistry. when i was young, i was in a dumb situation where i lived in one town, but was in a different school district. so while the closest elementry school was about half a mile away, i was supposed to go to a school that was 10 miles away. needless to say, i didnt walk that. that hcanged when i moved later on.

  • @castirondude
    @castirondude Před 6 lety +331

    Back in the day .. our school did a dropping when we were about 12 years old during summer camp - in groups of 5-8 kids we were blindfolded and driven out in the country at night. We were dropped in random unknown places with no adults and had to find our way back to town. One of my classmates had a lighter and hairspray bottle which would make a huge flamethrower and by lighting the flame , other groups of students were able to find us so we banded together and found our way back. We just thought it was a fun thing to do but I realize now how great it is to learn how to get yourself out of a pickle at an early age.

    • @jayyu8229
      @jayyu8229 Před 5 lety +19

      i love doing the hairspray and lighter thing.

    • @williamfuendeling2734
      @williamfuendeling2734 Před 4 lety +13

      That is amazing, I wish more kids had the opportunity to figure out bad situations on their own.

    • @rswow
      @rswow Před 4 lety +3

      I wonder how many forest fires get started like that.

    • @jgrimsta
      @jgrimsta Před 4 lety +2

      @@rswow We used to steal hairspray bottles from our mums, then we'd light a big outdoor candle, set the hairspray bottles next to the candle and shoot it with an airrifle. Great fireball, great fun!

    • @ethelcampbell3317
      @ethelcampbell3317 Před 4 lety +6

      this days this would never be allowed

  • @schizoffbeat
    @schizoffbeat Před 4 lety +50

    "The Most effective way to keep children safe is to give them a little taste of danger." yep! they understand better the possible consequences

  • @dominicgerding6383
    @dominicgerding6383 Před 4 lety +65

    I remember climbing the massive trees in my grandmother's old backyard and it was a highlight of my childhood. Nothing felt better than being up there, seeing the top of the garage and feeling like a king. It was a little scary, but that's why I did it!

  • @RedlightRecordsStudio
    @RedlightRecordsStudio Před 10 lety +538

    I'm forwarding this to my wife right now...

  • @dmustakasjr
    @dmustakasjr Před 9 lety +277

    *Disclaimer* Always be an active participant in your children experiencing these things. A kid in my neighborhood I grew up with, owned and used a home chemistry set. Burned down his parents house. Thankfully nobody was harmed. But yeah...

    • @majormana1
      @majormana1 Před 9 lety +4

      Also whh make a bomb im bag when you can make a bittle rocket and send stuff flying in yard mkre easiky and less dangerously. You can experiment with amiut of vinegar and baking soda to see what happens. Or their is also the blowing up balloon from gas of vinegar and baking soda.

    • @CobisTaba
      @CobisTaba Před 8 lety +36

      Demetrios Mustakas Jr. I have a suggestion, don't "always" be there, but know when you should. Know what could be dangerous, and what not. Give your child the freedom to be alone, free and out of your sight for a while.

    • @florianhulsmann5172
      @florianhulsmann5172 Před 6 lety +7

      Demetrios Mustakas Jr. My grandma accidently burnt down her parents' farm at the age of 5. Nobody died. Accidents happen^^

    • @cringemeister04
      @cringemeister04 Před 4 lety

      My grandpa played with fire under a bed and burned his family’s apartment

    • @Tamarahope77
      @Tamarahope77 Před 4 lety +2

      Apparently, Thomas Edison burned his garage down with his experiments and got a whipping from his dad. His school teachers couldn't handle him so his mother pulled him out to homeschool him, but she didn't manage to teach him to spell, because all he wanted to do was to experiment with things.

  • @reeeech9245
    @reeeech9245 Před 4 lety +56

    100% agreed. It's when they are young that they are testing the limits of everything. If they don't learn this now, they won't in the future.

    • @UMSLdragon
      @UMSLdragon Před 4 lety +2

      yet sadly for many kids now the first limit they hit and cant get passed is their parents. Why? because parents fear social services

  • @Tenajeh
    @Tenajeh Před 4 lety +90

    Great speech! But it seems that 575 downvoting danger-avoiders probably could not figure out as kids how to unglue their fingers.

  • @fouadatwi4842
    @fouadatwi4842 Před 7 lety +207

    OMG I had to pause this video to write this comment
    I pressed this video in hope of hearing "climb trees" and i was correct.
    I'm​ 19. last year i climbed a tree and dicovered that im really good at it and enjoyed it alot. Now I spend a lot of time climbing trees and structures "I even climbed my way up to the roof of my university". And i wish my parents let me climb any tree in my childhood so i could discover my passion that makes up most of my free time and training time, but instead i had to wait 18 years to find this out.

    • @omaroliblish
      @omaroliblish Před 5 lety +7

      Are you going to be a professional tree trimmer?

    • @mungbean345
      @mungbean345 Před 5 lety +10

      @@omaroliblish Or lineman, or construction worker, or roofer, or fireman/rescue personnel, or outdoor photographer, or pilot? There are a lot of jobs that require climbing and/or a head for heights!

    • @Zack_Wester
      @Zack_Wester Před 4 lety +3

      @@mungbean345 why have I never seen the Tree climbing as acceptable for experience for a job. instead eveyone writes first job from highschool we got a junior job as a X.
      Hard requirements 3-5 years prior documented experience and two diplomas.

    • @mungbean345
      @mungbean345 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Zack_Wester I see your point. 🙂 Tree climbing isn't really resume material, but it's one of those things that can show you what skills and traits you have (like enjoying the outdoors, being nimble and coordinated, and being okay with heights) that can be help narrow down what kind of job would really suit you. *Then* you should talk to people in that profession to see if it's really the right one for you, as well as ask them what kind of education/experience is ideal to get you into that career. For some jobs, if the situation is right, an apprenticeship or other on-the-job training might be available if they urgently need someone who is hard working and reliable. If you're really interested and polite, it's amazing how much people will help you get where you want to go!

    • @mrmaniac3
      @mrmaniac3 Před 4 lety +5

      Happy climbing dude

  • @DavidJBuchner
    @DavidJBuchner Před 9 lety +184

    It's so funny, because when I was a kid, putting your tongue across the contacts was how we tested the strength of a 9V battery. Nobody I knew had a voltmeter.

    • @asnarkyname.1500
      @asnarkyname.1500 Před 5 lety +2

      David Buchner that doesn’t work..

    • @2003wrx64
      @2003wrx64 Před 5 lety +17

      @@asnarkyname.1500 Yes it does. You may not be able to tell exactly, but you can certainly tell if it's dead or close to dead.

    • @JayTimmons
      @JayTimmons Před 5 lety +3

      I'm in my 30s and I still do that.

    • @grantperkins368
      @grantperkins368 Před 5 lety

      Exactly!

    • @grantperkins368
      @grantperkins368 Před 5 lety +3

      @@asnarkyname.1500 you've obviously never tried it

  • @JoeSmith-pf7ir
    @JoeSmith-pf7ir Před 5 lety +14

    I am 43 and I just super glued my fingers together yesterday.

  • @caramelqueengaming3601
    @caramelqueengaming3601 Před 6 lety +10

    People around me make me feel like I don't want to "take care" of my child but this is really reassuring.

  • @NicholasGM78
    @NicholasGM78 Před 10 lety +857

    I have done everything on his list, and after a lifetime of higher-than-average danger scenarios - including active duty time in the Marines - I have survived as much or more than almost anyone I know.
    More important than this man being brilliant, he's legitimately onto something that so many have forgotten, and I love his stab at fear-mongering in the government and media.
    Jolly good show, Mr. Tulley.

    • @MuffinTastic
      @MuffinTastic Před 10 lety +21

      **puts on monocle and top hat**
      I SAY! Jolly good show, old chap!

    • @corneilius8681
      @corneilius8681 Před 10 lety +4

      HAHA!!! Is it a coincidence that I was an active duty Marine and agree with this man.

    • @lapinchem
      @lapinchem Před 9 lety +8

      In the United States the government has made Iodine illegal to possess, Yes the ELEMENT Iodine. The lengths that government will go to in order to control the people, frequently amazes me. This reminds me of a really good book, that talks about this, State of Fear, by Michael Crichton.

    • @rmcbean5699
      @rmcbean5699 Před 9 lety

      How do you survive more than somebody?

    • @NicholasGM78
      @NicholasGM78 Před 9 lety +11

      Surviving one thing isn't necessarily that noteworthy, but when you survive particularly dangerous circumstances over and over, that would be surviving more than most others. As in I've survived more attempts on my life or dangerous events than just about anyone else I've ever met.

  • @MrSaemichlaus
    @MrSaemichlaus Před 10 lety +79

    The principle of inoculation: Letting the body feel a little sample of the poison, so it will be able to defeat the dosage in a real case of infection. Kids that often play in the dirt are less likely to get infected.

    • @Zack_Wester
      @Zack_Wester Před 4 lety +1

      Sone one should get thouse idiots to play Mass effect and studie the Quarians as they littarly failed there immunity system by not exposing it to dirt. (result of living several generation on sterile space ships).

    • @mrmaniac3
      @mrmaniac3 Před 4 lety

      ZackWester oh

    • @stormtorch
      @stormtorch Před 4 lety +1

      Isn’t that kinda how vaccines work?

    • @phoenixyt5421
      @phoenixyt5421 Před 4 lety +3

      @@stormtorch yes, it's exactly how vaccines work

  • @alokym86
    @alokym86 Před rokem +12

    Thanks a lot!!! I can't imagine my childhood without "dangerous things!" It might be so boring, but, thanks to poorness, my parents had no time to disallow me to do what I want.

  • @lifenature5463
    @lifenature5463 Před 4 lety +39

    Nice talk! I experimented with all those things when I was a child, excepting super gluing my fingers, that I did later in life.
    When I became a father I tried to pass those experiences down to my two daughters, in particular, tree climbing, starting a fire without matches, safely handle a sharp knife, a task that my wife doesn't know and keeps on cutting herself, and camping or sleeping outside without a tent.
    My eldest daughter grew up being very cautious and safe opting for five stars hotels, while my younger one became a professional freestyle skier injuring herself several times and being able to sleep in a tent with 5 degrees Fahrenheit in winter.
    In any case, it is definitely better to teach your own children how to deal with potential dangers than how to avoid them altogether.

  • @ettinakitten5047
    @ettinakitten5047 Před 8 lety +539

    How to reduce risk of *real* dangers:
    1. Car accidents - he mentions walking more, parents can also reduce risk by learning defensive driving and by never answering their cell phone while driving. (Incidentally, if your child is in the car with you and the cell phone rings, let them answer and relay the message to you. A real life conversation is a lot less risky than a cell phone one, and if it's important, you'll still get the message. Plus, it helps kids learn phone skills.)
    2. Familial homicide - most common kind is killing young infants, which is often due to post-partum depression. This can be dealt with, as a new parent, by monitoring your own mood and stress level and asking for help if you need it. For older kids, in addition to parental stress, spousal abuse is another contributor to homicide risk. The best way to reduce the risk is to learn early warning signs of abuse and don't get involved with someone like that. (Hint: you don't want someone who acts like Edward from Twilight or Christian from Fifty Shades of Grey.) If you're already in an abusive relationship, it may not be safe to leave right away, but start making plans to leave as soon as you can do so safely. Even if your partner has never hurt your child, if he (or she) is hurting you, your child is not safe.
    3. Abuse - the abuse that is most likely to endanger a child's life is physical abuse. This is mostly caused by parental stress, as well as parents who don't understand child development and have overly high expectations, and parents who lack alternate strategies for discipline. The biggest thing is to *never* shake a baby. If you want to shake your baby, set them down, go to another room, and call a parents' help line or someone supportive. Monitor your own stress level and ask for help if you need it. Also, learn what is typical for kids of various ages. (For example, a 12 month old doesn't do things to annoy or manipulate adults, because they don't yet understand that they can affect an adult's emotions. They just have very little self control and very strong emotions.) And learn about time-out, rewards for good behaviour, how to explain reasons for rules in terms a young child understands, etc, and practice these skills until you master them.
    4. Suicide - this is mostly for teenagers, and the vast majority of suicidal teens have depression, so learn the symptoms of depression. Sad mood every day, loss of enjoyment of things they used to like, lack or energy or too much energy, sleeping too much or too little, eating too much or too little (not trying to diet), those are all possible signs. Cultivate a trust with your teen where they can tell you their honest thoughts and feelings without you freaking out or punishing them. And if they are struggling, seek help. Most people with depression will respond to a combination of medication and cognitive-behavioural therapy.
    5. Drowning - this is probably the easiest to prevent on the list. Teach your child to swim as early as possible. There are classes which teach 6 month olds to float on their back and 12 month olds to alternate floating and paddling to get to the shore. They also train kids how to swim in clothing, because if a kid falls into water accidentally, they'll probably be fully clothed. Also, if you have a backyard pool, keep it covered in a child-proof cover when not in use, and when it is in use, never leave children swim unsupervised. (Note: a drowning child can't yell for help. Learn the signs that someone is drowning if you ever take your kids swimming without a lifeguard.)

    • @whatreallymatters571
      @whatreallymatters571 Před 8 lety +2

      edward from twilight wasn't abusive and neither was Christian grey. pretty sure there are real stories that you can draw from those two not being anywhere near close. But overall really good and detailed post.

    • @MaximilianonMars
      @MaximilianonMars Před 8 lety +27

      They were creepers, if a person behaved like that in real life there's a good chance they have a body in the trunk of their car.

    • @MaximilianonMars
      @MaximilianonMars Před 8 lety +5

      +Amanda aka Goldmare What you said follows what I've learned. There's a good video about similar phenomena, search on CZcams: Ben Goldacre publication bias. Love of money is the root of all evil, big pharma is stinking rich.

    • @GeorgeRRFloyd
      @GeorgeRRFloyd Před 7 lety +7

      i dare you to read all that

    • @johnchristian7788
      @johnchristian7788 Před 7 lety +2

      Ettina Kitten Having common sense, care and love can prevent all of these.

  • @joshua___8697
    @joshua___8697 Před 7 lety +94

    I used to love experimenting with burning things with a magnifying glass and when I started doing it at the playground at recess, I eventually got in trouble and they said I could never do it again because they were worried I'd start a fire. It's sad how they didn't believe I was sane enough to not start a damn forest fire ( I never did it by trees or things that might start a unwanted fire, I just burned leaves most of the time). Parents and teachers these days are breeding stupidity, ignorance and false fear in kids by their delusional beliefs about how children are. Kids aren't as stupid as people treat them. When you treat a kid like they're stupid, that's when there is real danger of the kid becoming stupid. What a parent says and portrays back to the child about them is what the child grows up believing about him or herself. So as a parent, don't ever believe/ think that your child is stupid or inherently delusional/mistaken, they get all of their mistakes and wrong beliefs from you the parent. "Everybody is a genius, but if you judge a fish by it's ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid." - Albert Einstein

  • @oreste8570
    @oreste8570 Před 6 lety +127

    "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger"

    • @andrewandrei3062
      @andrewandrei3062 Před 4 lety +6

      **unless it's sodium cyanide**

    • @vuaeco
      @vuaeco Před 4 lety +1

      But what kills you makes you dead. :D

    • @user-mc5pl6xk9x
      @user-mc5pl6xk9x Před 4 lety +4

      A guy from my city blew up his right arm. His left arm is definitely stronger now

    • @iigamingkinq
      @iigamingkinq Před 3 lety

      yes dude,

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV Před 3 lety

      *unless it’s losing a limb*

  •  Před 4 lety +41

    Yeah! I have always wondered about those parents putting helmets on their kids before going to the playground. And the playground itself is covered by rubber ground almost everywhere. There is no chance any kid could get hurt but perhaps inhale/consume too much "rubber" instead.
    That said, I was brought up without any safety nets whatsoever, near a wild forest. Sure, with slightly less luck I would not live today, because me and my siblings really had fun in that forest. But I survived and so did all of my siblings. And we had a great time in that forest and a lot more we explored around or house.
    Parents today must learn to differ "real-danger" from "whatever-risk". Most of the risks parents hear of almost never happens but on the other hand there are some real dangers parents may overlook (in the mist of everything else they *_think_* is dangerous but is far down the risk-ladder).

    • @drcola143
      @drcola143 Před 3 lety

      yes! They have to make playgrounds MORE SAFE now since parents don't like ANY RISK. Like most of the playgrounds near me are just slides

    •  Před 3 lety

      @@drcola143 My comment was very much ironic. Sure, when I was a kd I could surely get hurt. But would I get hurt for life? Or even killed? I strongly doubt it. At least not at the playgrounds.
      However, I also played with my friends in the real forests. And for sure there were some occasions I really could have killed myself by accident. So (ironic on) let's burn down all forests (ironic off).

    • @drcola143
      @drcola143 Před 3 lety +2

      @ yep but at playgrounds built nowadays you can't get a scratch on you no matter how rough you play. The only good playgrounds are ones built quite a while ago

    •  Před 3 lety

      @@drcola143 And that is sad, right?

    • @drcola143
      @drcola143 Před 3 lety

      @ yes

  • @superpanicked7995
    @superpanicked7995 Před 7 lety +100

    glueing your fingers together is fun, so satisfying to peel it off

    • @neptica9926
      @neptica9926 Před 7 lety +15

      SuperPanicked no not glueing, super glueing. It is much harder to separate.

    • @Manj_J
      @Manj_J Před 4 lety +1

      Same applies to acrylic paint, as an artist, one of the most satisfying parts of painting is peeling paint off your fingers while waiting for it to dry between layers

    • @sweetasterium
      @sweetasterium Před 4 lety

      @@Manj_J yes

  • @zorkan111
    @zorkan111 Před 8 lety +721

    Reminded me of one time I saw a child picking up a leaf in the park, probably out of curiosity and/or playfulness, as children are, and his mother forbid him to pick up leaves because "they're dirty".
    Or another example, I've seen so many times when mothers telling their kids to "walk normally" when they wanted to balance on a curb of a walkway in park. I guess they were afraid of kid falling and scratching a bit of skin.
    FFS dumb mothers, let kids be kids.

    • @oliviawronski6387
      @oliviawronski6387 Před 7 lety +49

      TheBookWorm1718 Yeah. Mine would just tell me not to dirty up the house, but outside dirt, grime, pebbles, leaves, all was fair game.

    • @katherynhill2372
      @katherynhill2372 Před 6 lety

      Helen McCoy

    • @ewstap9040
      @ewstap9040 Před 6 lety +9

      Lmao I'm 12 and yesterday I actually just put a leaf that was plucked out of a tree in my phone case (that's clear so you can see the leaf fine) it's still in my case

    • @brettpalmer7700
      @brettpalmer7700 Před 5 lety +26

      I still walk on the curb and try to balance on it...I’m 16

    • @smithchasea
      @smithchasea Před 5 lety +22

      @@brettpalmer7700, I'm 39 and still do it on occasion, and when you are in your 30's I am sure you will too.

  • @James-zp4ce
    @James-zp4ce Před 4 lety +17

    Totally agree. The more my mum restrained me from doing stuff the more i wanted to and did it later on

    • @halazeyad958
      @halazeyad958 Před 3 lety +1

      lol i only did the super glue thing never climbed a tree or did small explosions or anything bad my mom always doesnt let me do things that arent "safe'' im 13 and always was a goodie two shoes

  • @jackriver8385
    @jackriver8385 Před 5 lety +24

    I always let my son figure out a lot of things by himself. Now he's 1,5 years old and because he's been climbing stuff since he was 8 months old, his balance is amazing! Sure, he's fallen a few times, but I was always there to make sure he didn't get seriously hurt. Now he has such a good sense of danger, he barely ever falls :) and he can eat many fruits by himself without choking to death, and he loves exploring everything! I hope he will continue to be such a curious and intelligent boy :)

  • @heavymetalgaming7145
    @heavymetalgaming7145 Před 8 lety +1253

    I've learned a lot from this guy...my kids are gonna be burning ants with a magnifying glass at the top of a tree while licking 9 volt batteries. I'm sure child services will understand.

    • @useodyseeorbitchute9450
      @useodyseeorbitchute9450 Před 6 lety +183

      I think they would be unhappy about it, but because of lack of tree climbing skills they would not be able to do much about it...

    • @it1221
      @it1221 Před 6 lety +3

      HeavyMetal lol

    • @mustanaamiotto3812
      @mustanaamiotto3812 Před 6 lety +10

      Me and my brothers ate and still do eat ants. Its healthy!

    • @leondyer6351
      @leondyer6351 Před 5 lety +9

      Mustanaamiotto I heard they serve fried ants in Chile, maybe go there for your next vacation?

    • @jacobmartin8332
      @jacobmartin8332 Před 5 lety +27

      Don’t forget, you NEED to teach them how to make large bombs.

  • @FLlTTER
    @FLlTTER Před 9 lety +243

    This is a shining example of a TED Talk. I just love the way this guy thinks!

  • @chicn495
    @chicn495 Před 4 lety +56

    2012: Not Yet
    A bunch of years: Not yet
    2019: It's been 7 years and they need our views

  • @salmaa9459
    @salmaa9459 Před 4 lety +45

    When i was in the elementary, my school's independence day competition is catching catfishes, goose and crabs in the mud, it was sooooo fun although most times we ate the mud.
    But the gooses are *enormously scary*

    • @halazeyad958
      @halazeyad958 Před 3 lety

      that must be fun my school never did anything fun it was very very boring tho when i have summer i could spend all day outside so that was fine to me

    • @kovyvuri
      @kovyvuri Před 2 lety +1

      geese is the plural of goose

  • @downbntout
    @downbntout Před 8 lety +206

    So Yes. So right. Can't we raise braver kids?

  • @ok-qc5ry
    @ok-qc5ry Před 7 lety +152

    Gever: Climb trees
    Me: AHHH YEAH READY TO CLI-
    *realizes I live in Arizona so it's mostly palm trees*

    • @UMSLdragon
      @UMSLdragon Před 4 lety +9

      climb anyway. what do you need branches for lol. I watched a guy in nicaragua climb a coconut tree to get ripe coconuts. Just shimmied right up.

    • @charlesward8196
      @charlesward8196 Před 4 lety +2

      Hey you could always climb mesquites, or cat claw acacias. Seriously, though, I bet there are a lot of mulberry trees that are great for climbing.

    • @TheSunriseAnimation
      @TheSunriseAnimation Před 4 lety +2

      @@charlesward8196 or walls

    • @charlesward8196
      @charlesward8196 Před 4 lety +4

      I grew up in Silicon Valley in the ‘60s. We had a fruitless mulberry (morus alba, male) that my dad had built a platform in, about 10 feet off of the ground. My brothers and I added higher platforms up to 20 feet as the tree grew. Had a rope swing and everything. In the ‘80s I was in Las Vegas, and when my daughter was 6 months old I planted a fruitless mulberry before the Clark County Commission banned them because of pollen issues. I had to rent a jack hammer to hammer out a hole 4’x4’x4’ in solid caliche and amend the soil to put a $5.00 tree in a $100.00 hole. When the tree went in the ground my daughter could wrap her whole hand around the trunk. The tree grew faster than the kids did and it had three platforms up to 16 feet, and a rope swing. They never fell out of the tree. We moved away 20 years ago, bu that tree is still there, and I hope kids are still climbing it.

    • @Mithsn
      @Mithsn Před 4 lety +1

      Well then; you better get practicing.

  • @Dumbassfish63
    @Dumbassfish63 Před 4 lety +347

    Me watching this video
    "Climb a tree" "*yeah yeah alright*"
    "Use a magnifying glass to set something on fire" "*uh ok*"
    **"MaKE a BomB iN a bAG"** "what

    • @xtensioncordtv1969
      @xtensioncordtv1969 Před 4 lety +39

      *Let YoUr cHiLd eXeRcIse tHeIr RiGhT tO BrInG A hAnDgUn To sChOol*

    • @instaQuest21
      @instaQuest21 Před 4 lety +17

      Man SEnd youR kids TO IsIS🕶️

    • @Mr.Ut21
      @Mr.Ut21 Před 4 lety +12

      Yall aint never done anything dangerous and it shows.

    • @charliee123lol
      @charliee123lol Před 4 lety +18

      Ryan Taylor exactly hahah these guys are acting like he said make a pipe bomb it’s literally just bicarb soda and vinegar

    • @jeong-ilkajokaya3849
      @jeong-ilkajokaya3849 Před 4 lety +1

      @@xtensioncordtv1969 I stand behind that

  • @celyne1820
    @celyne1820 Před 4 lety +12

    When I was in Year 1, there was a big pit in the middle of the entire school which had tons of climbable trees. Yeah, it was against the rules but every kid did it. The year before, I could only climb the tree which was the easiest to climb, by Year 1 I was climbing every tree in the pit. And I can thank my friends for that. They encouraged me to face my fears and they gave step-by-step instructions on how to climb the trees. Tree climbing taught me a lot. To trust the people you love, face your fears, how to solve problems and to always use your imagination. I would recommend all parents to let their kids climb trees, or even better climb one themselves. Because in the end, we are all kids in our brains and at heart.

  • @shahars7108
    @shahars7108 Před 10 lety +193

    this is how every one should think

  • @blpswag9414
    @blpswag9414 Před 7 lety +79

    My friend wasn't allowed to go in the front yard until he was 10

    • @willjones6234
      @willjones6234 Před 5 lety +17

      That is just terrible parenting

    • @zain4019
      @zain4019 Před 5 lety +3

      Sponge Gar wow that’s awful :/ I hope you can now though.

    • @thanhvinhnguyen8731
      @thanhvinhnguyen8731 Před 5 lety +2

      BLPSWAG lol I ran all over the place when I was 6

    • @jpaddyclifford1960
      @jpaddyclifford1960 Před 5 lety +3

      @Brandon_37 I'm was allowed to go in the front yard as long as it was only #1 never # 2 (There was that one time) ; /

    • @snomme5954
      @snomme5954 Před 4 lety +2

      Whhhaaatttt? When I was 5, my mom let me walk over a mile across town to my best friend's house and walk to school everyday

  • @iigamingkinq
    @iigamingkinq Před 3 lety +6

    when your climbing a tree sure its nerve racking, but it makes you feel alive and it is just so fun

    • @halazeyad958
      @halazeyad958 Před 3 lety +1

      ughhhh never climbed a tree before im 13

  • @kaylag5043
    @kaylag5043 Před 4 lety +10

    I did basically all of these things as a kid! I've also noticed that letting kids play in the rain is frowned upon more because they could get a cold or make a mess. Kids aren't allowed to learn from mistakes.
    When I was a kid, I decided to swing from a tree branch and attempt to land on a plastic table sort of thing. My parents told me I would get hurt but I didn't listen, so they just let me do it. The table broke and I just fell traight through it and I had cuts down my legs. My parents didn't freak out, all they said was "well we told you not to do it, didn't we? It's your problem now. Bandaids are in the bathroom drawers" and I fixed it up myself. Because I got hurt, I learned not to do that again.
    Mistakes are a very effective way for children to learn, especially with mild danger.

  • @sarabravo2000
    @sarabravo2000 Před 7 lety +763

    I'm commenting in a video from 2012, in 2016. In a language that isn't even mine. About a subject that isn't even talked about in this video. Well... kind of. I just needed to say that the top five worst fears parents have, according to this video, are kind of made fun of here because they just don't happen that much in USA. But I just couldn't resist the need of saying that those are REALLY important issues here where I live. I live in Venezuela, a dictatorial government no one cares about, apparently. And problems as kidnapping, drugs, homicides and more are our day-to-day issues. I am 15 years old, and I don't know what actual freedom is. Just some months ago I heard how a police man was killed- I heard the gunshots, and feared for my own life as people were running and my dad had to keep driving the car trying to not to look at the cop's dead body-, and I know my parents didn't let me do a lot of things Gever Tulley mentions in this video for my own safety. Our fear was not imposed by the media, it was imposed by our own lives.
    I'm sorry about the rant, I just couldn't help it.

    • @HeChemicalFe
      @HeChemicalFe Před 7 lety +30

      That good sir is mess up

    • @lookituptv3248
      @lookituptv3248 Před 7 lety +131

      saradeweasley I'm 17 and just wanted to thank you for giving me a new perspective on life and a new appreciation for the safety that I often take for granted. I wish you luck in your life and that you find safety and happiness.

    • @HeChemicalFe
      @HeChemicalFe Před 7 lety +6

      .

    • @falcaogames6065
      @falcaogames6065 Před 7 lety +15

      saradeweasley me too I live in Brazil

    • @sarabravo2000
      @sarabravo2000 Před 7 lety +78

      LookitupTV
      Thank you for your words and good wishes. Remember that, just because someone is suffering, it doesn't mean that your suffering is not valid. Thanks for reading me and for appreciating your safety. Bless you.

  • @Ishasgirl
    @Ishasgirl Před 9 lety +153

    Walking to school where I live is extremely dangerous and highly impractical, so I think that one depends on where you live but the rest I agree with.

    • @adrilazzaro
      @adrilazzaro Před 8 lety +14

      +Kamena It's probably not unless you live in a spectacularly shitty area or a third world country, hell, I myself grew up in a third world country but honestly most of the crime happens at night or between gangs, the rest is all blow out of proportion

    • @Ishasgirl
      @Ishasgirl Před 8 lety +31

      Crime isn't the issue (the "city" I live in actually has a very low crime rate). it's lack of sidewalks and a tenancy for people to speed that makes it dangerous here. way more likely to be hit by a car than anything else. also impractical because it would take over an hour to walk to any of the schools nearby. if I lived closer to a school and there were sidewalks and crosswalks it would be fine.

    • @finthegeek
      @finthegeek Před 8 lety +3

      +Kamena surely you can make your own way to school though. it's not the walking, it's the independence.

    • @Ishasgirl
      @Ishasgirl Před 8 lety +13

      +Fin H I never said I had a problem giving them independence, I have an issue with the actual walking to school because it is dangerous here. being responsible for getting ready and on the bus in time I feel has the same effect while being much safer in my area. if you live in a place that allows for it, by all means have your kids walk to school!

    • @finthegeek
      @finthegeek Před 8 lety +2

      Kamena the more dangerous it is the more savvy your kids have to be.

  • @accidentalvoyeur
    @accidentalvoyeur Před 4 lety +15

    My parents brought me up right. I am 5 out of 5 for the things I did/was allowed to do. I think I definitely had an advantage over kids now and became a very competent, innovative, and well-rounded person. Thanks, mom and dad, for all the life experience!

  • @andyheckel
    @andyheckel Před 4 lety +7

    My parents (my dad especially) encouraged me to do all of these things. I would call myself very succesful nowadays, and much of it is because of them letting me be curious, "investigative" and always trying to learn new things as a child! I approve what this man says!

  • @mangieboria
    @mangieboria Před 10 lety +26

    Excellent!! Lets allow our children the freedom to explore, understand and learn to respect the world we live in!

  • @utl94
    @utl94 Před 9 lety +158

    A much needed talk, thanks a lot!
    Greetings from Sweden!

  • @3blackcats33
    @3blackcats33 Před 4 lety +8

    When I was in primary (elementary) school I walked to and from school every day with my best friend for a year or so as we lived next door to each other and I loved it as we could talk and exercise in the morning before class. We sometimes rode our bikes and scooters to school and as it was downhill I got over my fear of bikes.

    • @halazeyad958
      @halazeyad958 Před 3 lety

      lucky you! never walked to school even when my school was literally right there my mom was very "protective" as she passed every fear of hers on to me almost every single one

  • @lovepirate14
    @lovepirate14 Před 5 lety +11

    Watching this in 2019, it's amazing how we took this advice and ran completely the other way. I'm pretty sure parents would have their kids taken away by CPS if they let their kid walk to school alone nowadays.

    • @PelemusMcSoy
      @PelemusMcSoy Před 3 lety +2

      I've heard of some parents having the police called on them when a neighbor learns they left their 12 and 10 year old kids home alone for a couple hours. There were no burglars, fires, or anyone in danger; they were just home alone probably watching TV or playing video games.

    • @superslimanoniem4712
      @superslimanoniem4712 Před 8 měsíci

      Luckily where I live it's still quite common for kids to bike to school.

  • @LordQueezle
    @LordQueezle Před 9 lety +41

    I once climbed a pine tree to the top (a very _tall_ tree) and when I called down to my mom her reaction (after she saw where I was) she told said she thought to herself "Tell me when your down safely because I don't want to watch." :) It was fun. And I did it later that summer, too. I've also had fun with a magnifying glass (dad gave us a lesson on burning things... that and what black powder does when light outside of a chamber... :)

    • @megaman161
      @megaman161 Před 9 lety +28

      Lucky you. Whenever I climbed the pine tree outside my house my mom had a fit, yelling at me to get down before I fell.
      I actually passed by my old house a while ago (hadn't been back on the street for over 15 years) and all the low hanging branches of the tree were cut off. It was really sad.

  • @LiarraSniffles_X3
    @LiarraSniffles_X3 Před 7 lety +168

    TLDR: 55 things that normal kids have been doing with or without parental supervision everywhere around the globe except america, because everywhere else doesn't let news outlets govern how they raise their kids.

    • @wako1576
      @wako1576 Před 7 lety +14

      depressingly accurate

    • @trishayamada807
      @trishayamada807 Před 5 lety +7

      Liarra Sniffles it’s not news outlets...it’s other parents who notify the authorities that OMG children are playing in a park without their mom, dad, babysitter.

    • @cleaningduster2655
      @cleaningduster2655 Před 5 lety +1

      Liarra Sniffles 55 things only some kids in america experience

  • @The_Jazziest_Coffee
    @The_Jazziest_Coffee Před 4 lety +2

    Now I see why my uncle exposes to hard work and stuff.
    Sure, it looks scary, but it's fun and interesting to learn.
    Learning to commit to things and not be afraid is important for kids and others alike.

  • @scooter-kid
    @scooter-kid Před 5 lety +4

    I have a friend that as over protective parents and I can’t wait to see what will happen when she moves out of her parents house because I want to see what she does with even the smallest bit of freedom.

  • @radiantcat540
    @radiantcat540 Před 9 lety +56

    It's because of liability, if a child gets hurt, who is to blame? Obviously whichever adult was supposed to be responsible to the child at that moment. It's actually a really selfish thing to limit children because you don't want to be held liable.

    • @camogrrl
      @camogrrl Před 4 lety

      Victor Agata is this an American thing? Not all countries are culturally litigious. In my country you can’t even sue people , you are proven by a court of law to have neglected a child and you get a jail sentence. No laws say kids can’t climb trees and lick batteries and ride their bike to the swimming hole . People who sue over kids being kids want money money money from litigation, that’s how this came about I bet.

    • @davem5333
      @davem5333 Před 4 lety

      You don't want to sued or held liable and see everything you have worked for gone. Even if you successfully defend yourself the legal expenses can break you.

  • @Skreen32
    @Skreen32 Před 9 lety +69

    He literally outlined my childhood.

  • @muleteammate
    @muleteammate Před 5 lety +6

    I climbed trees, had a bunch of magnifying glasses (and learned to make fire with them), tested 9V batteries with my tongue (are they dead or not?), had a chemistry set (and over time, made a lot of different kinds of firecrackers), walked or rode my bike to school (later a motorcycle). I got my PhD in chemistry, worked 31 years in the American pharmaceutical industry, and am working on plant medicines in Peru for the last 2 years, still using that knowledge, and freedom I had to explore.

  • @gwensimmons_gigi1629
    @gwensimmons_gigi1629 Před 5 lety +16

    Dude you are so correct!!! We did all those things back in Trinidad without hovering parents. We knew they still loved us. Happy Holidays to you and yours!!💕🎆🎶🤘🏾💫🎈

  • @TheNakedWombat
    @TheNakedWombat Před 9 lety +66

    Were I to start with putting children in the education system all over again knowing what I know now, I wouldn't. They would all be home schooled from day one until the system is fixed. Our youth are raised to be scared of every shadow. They can't run, jump, climb trees and more which denies them the life necessary skills they need but they certainly know anxiety.

    • @mike4ty4
      @mike4ty4 Před 7 lety +1

      I am not sure how that the ability to climb trees, at least with bare hands and feet only, is a "necessary life skill". I have not encountered a need for it yet that could not be accomplished with tools. Although maybe I'm biased from that the family never owned a home due to poverty and was always renting and thus the property managers always took care of the trees (to varying degrees of both competency and efficiency.). I was not mollycoddled away from it, rather I was allowed to try it but gave up because I just didn't have the muscle strength and didn't get that you had to keep trying at it over and over every single day in frustration to get the muscle strength, or it didn't interest me enough to pursue it further (Computers were much more interesting.), i.e. to make such repeated efforts.

    • @TheNakedWombat
      @TheNakedWombat Před 7 lety +10

      Physical activities including tree climbing and balance walking on walls of different heights helps a child's body with developing motor skills, strengthens their muscles, teaches risk factors and for a great many it is fun. As you found, it takes time but what's good for us doesn't not evolve in an instant like microwave foods.
      Computers have their benefits. Computer games has their benefits but children need physical activity.
      With regard to you giving up, all children do that in their early stages because it is hard but a parent/carer should be there to motivate them and get them to persist instead of just giving up when it gets a bit hard for them. I have four children who were all sent up climbing walls, encouraged to climb trees and more.
      And now we have Doctors begging parents to let their children out to do these activities because the lack of has seen middle aged diseases appearing in children as young as ten years old such as diabetes, hip replacements from the level of obesity for the child, children's bones breaking too easily due to children not able to strengthen their bodies by the knocks and falls common in childhood. And rickets. Rickets has reappeared from a lack of Vitamin D, best sourced by the sun.

    • @mike4ty4
      @mike4ty4 Před 7 lety +1

      @Wombat & Charlene: The thing is that it depends on what the kid wants. Some want it, I didn't. I did have more interest in climbing rocks, trouble was the rocks had to be driven to and gas money gas money...
      I don't get diabetes or hip replacements at 10 though because I did not eat a shit load of calories and junkfood and get obese. about 2000 cals per day and I grew up short and skinny not tall and a balloon.
      Plus I did get up, move around (I liked to play on my own with a movement involved), just didn't climb damn trees much.

    • @TheNakedWombat
      @TheNakedWombat Před 7 lety +2

      I'm sorry, I didn't realise the world revolves around you.

    • @mike4ty4
      @mike4ty4 Před 7 lety

      @Wombat & Charlene Where do you get the idea I said or think THAT from? What I'm just saying is that there isn't one right way to do things that everyone should follow. I responded to your post because you were suggesting I was somehow done wrong by or made a bad choice simply to pursue what was interesting to me, and it seemed your argument was therefore contradictory. Your original post was suggesting children should be _not actively kept from_ certain things - and now it seems you are suggesting not only that, but that they should be _mandated_ to do things that they might not want to do or they are not interested in. It seems to me you are suggesting that all kids actually _want_ to do these various items you say they are “coddled” from and that is not true any more than saying they don't want to or can't and should be coddled away from them. It's just the flip side and it's still as erroneous.
      I say don't coddle kids but also don't _make_ them do the stuff that some “coddle” parents would coddle them away from _if they don't want to do it_.

  • @chaosmagican
    @chaosmagican Před 8 lety +43

    I will always remember the moment when I was waving to my mother from a tree on the same level (which was 3rd floor). I loved climbing, should do it again...

  • @thomasjorge4734
    @thomasjorge4734 Před rokem +1

    We had a teacher: load and fire, ( a blank), a Revolutionary War-style Musket. We loved it! He won our attention, respect, admiration and wonder.

  • @VikkiVennen
    @VikkiVennen Před 4 lety +9

    i was lucky enough to attend Brightworks, his school for a couple years. such a smart man

  • @Amundstvoll
    @Amundstvoll Před 10 lety +33

    I've done all those... wonder if I did all 50... he should have had more time. I was shooting guns, used a chain saw, drove a tractor and so on from when I was 10. The only time I was actually hurt (near death), was in a car.

    • @brucelee975
      @brucelee975 Před 9 lety

      Fette kult, jeg også!! vår generasjon er fullt av gamere

    • @willjones6234
      @willjones6234 Před 5 lety

      Yeah im 12 and some of my favorite things are cutting down trees with axes and taking my grandpa's tractor for a spin, and I've never gotten hurt

  • @infinitesimotel
    @infinitesimotel Před 10 lety +17

    This is one of the infinitesimally few TED talks worth listening to that hasn't been banned. Nice one.

  • @sparrowwestlake7267
    @sparrowwestlake7267 Před 4 lety +21

    This is more true than ever in 2019.

  • @MNkno
    @MNkno Před 4 lety +1

    I had a toddler who was oblivious to danger. He climbed to the top of apartment water tanks, rode his small push-cars downhill across 2 streets and into more serious traffic, one heart-in-mouth risk per day. At the end of my rope, I put him on roller skates (to the horror of his grandmother - it was dangerous!)... but after 2 days on roller skates, he became risk-conscious. Mission accomplished!

  • @AndrewSanchez11235
    @AndrewSanchez11235 Před 10 lety +150

    I think he's indirectly speaking about the pussifcation of america. When i was growing up you shot bb guns (or real, small caliber guns if in the country), played with matches, rode your bike without a helmet, and all sorts of other shit that is nearly illegal now. My parents and grandparents did crazier stuff than me yet we all turned out fine. WTF happened? Why are parents so scared for their children now?

    • @AndrewSanchez11235
      @AndrewSanchez11235 Před 10 lety +1

      ***** Sounds about right.

    • @djmaleda
      @djmaleda Před 9 lety +17

      Its the same in the UK.
      They have banned cash on the buses this month. Its just the beginning.
      If we allow the cashless society agenda, there will be no more gran parents giving a child a dollar to get sweets. There will be no more "keep the change phrases". What would homeless people do? Money is the last bit of freedom we have, and they are coming for it. What we gonna do?

    • @velpo
      @velpo Před 9 lety +1

      Was just about to say this but saw your post. Good job!

    • @srbaruchi
      @srbaruchi Před 9 lety +13

      ***** Exactly right. News/reports without balanced analysis and contextual interpretation can just as easily obscure reality as reveal it. It is a mystery to me why the questioning/testing/proving methods taught in our primary and secondary science classes are not applied (or at least not applied with the same vigor) to nonscience subjects. Example: Why don't we have grade-school-level classes in which students can explore the existence of god(s) and all supernatural occurrences? We teach our children plenty about risks to their bodies. What about the risks of dangerous, irrational assumptions/presumptions planted in their heads?

    • @deshipe
      @deshipe Před 9 lety +7

      ***** Its the product of the legal system. Because of the constant lawsuits and burden on insurance, it is the law to have your child in a car seat until the age of 8.

  • @katieb8717
    @katieb8717 Před 3 lety +15

    My School: banned baking soda volcano
    Me: makes it with ketchup soap and baking soda
    My school: Suspends me for doing volcano.
    My mom: fu** that- parent/staff meeting
    Me: 👁 👄 👁

    • @halazeyad958
      @halazeyad958 Před 3 lety +1

      lol my mom what kill me altho i never did ant trouble in school cuz im a goodie two shoes but she would dtil kill me

  • @supercroc8172
    @supercroc8172 Před 2 lety +1

    When I was 6, I lived in an area filled with very steep hills that were incredibly high. One of my favorite memories back then was building home made vehicles using random things from my garage (surfboards, wheels, etc). I would then ride my creations down those steep hills at high speeds. It was wonderfully fun. I would try the weirdest combinations and I learned how to improve from mistakes and failure, since some of my vehicles didn’t work. I never got hurt doing it. My family and I moved away to the mountains many years later.
    Now I’m in high school, and I have a huge passion for engineering, specifically electrical engineering. I’m creative with how I approach problems and many people often talk about how “smart” I am. Creating those vehicles really helped sparked more curious and abstract me, and I’m glad that my parents allowed me to be more like a kid back then and not a robot.

  • @Joy6168
    @Joy6168 Před 10 lety +17

    I did most of these things on this guy's list and was glad for the problem solving skills it gave me.

  • @tonywells7512
    @tonywells7512 Před 8 lety +8

    5 dangerous things I did with my kids and nephews around 7-10, with me usually getting the most injured:
    1. Shooting BB guns at each other in the garden.
    2. Full contact wrestling.
    3. Climbing steep cliffs.
    4. Burning fingers on gas burners whilst camping.
    5. Running down rocky hills, usually resulting in cut knees and elbows.
    Just a lot of plasters and antiseptic spray required.

  • @captainanus8131
    @captainanus8131 Před 6 lety +3

    i agree with this man. I took apart a disposable camera and almost killed my self with a fully charged capacitor and I turned out just fine.

  • @JohnDoe-pv2iu
    @JohnDoe-pv2iu Před 5 lety +2

    This is absolutely perfect. We learn from things around us. There are now a lot of young adults walking around afraid of the world because they were psychologically neutered as children. Great Video!

  • @ojav4254
    @ojav4254 Před 8 lety +7

    Although I agree, there have been times where seemingly "harmless" activities become dangerous. Take for example a small, AA battery. I told me younger brother to go play with one and see if he could turn on a small toy car motor using the battery and a bunch of wires and other metal things. Turns out he took a "U" shaped piece of tin and touched both ends of the battery with it. That thing heated up in less than a second and gave both him and me (when I touched it to see what happened) a nice blister.
    But the logic stands, a lesson was learned and science became a bit more respected. Lets not talk about the electric fly swatter I got as a gift for him though...its a whole other story.

    • @Mark_Cook
      @Mark_Cook Před 6 lety

      Moj Dak Old comment, I know. But doing that U thing with a 3.5 volt battery is not dangerous, i did it many times as a kid, sure it might burn you a bit, but nothing worse than what a hot glue gun will.

  • @davef21370
    @davef21370 Před 7 lety +14

    Brilliant, too much health & safety is bad for health & safety !!

  • @peterspaltman
    @peterspaltman Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you from the bottom of my heart. As a father of 2 i cant stand the allmost denigrating way most kids are treated these days.

  • @n1kirby
    @n1kirby Před 4 lety +14

    8:59
    got em

  • @goneinmymind
    @goneinmymind Před 10 lety +3

    We live in a society where perents are so afraid of everything and not allowing such activities for their children that when they grow up they mentally rely on the safety net their perents made for them. I love this video and it stated everything I every thought of this generations upbringing of kids

  • @dimethylhydantoin
    @dimethylhydantoin Před 6 lety +3

    I love what he said about trees. I've been climbing since I was 7; I still climb sometimes, and there definitely is a separation from everything on the ground below. It's relaxing and exciting to be 20, 40, or more feet up there. And, I admit, there were a few times when I still was learning when I had to get stronger or figure something out fast so I wouldn't get hurt and not be allowed to climb anymore.

  • @bytejuggler
    @bytejuggler Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you dad, for allowing and even encouraging me to do all these things as a kid...!

  • @devansanchez4473
    @devansanchez4473 Před 2 lety +1

    after getting off of crutches for my broken ankle one of the weirdest and most wondrous things was walking with an open drink. or moving around with more than just what i could carry in my pocket. take a shower without 10 minutes of prep time. what is natural and unthought of can become magical once the nature of your circumstances are changed

  • @ColonelMinecraft
    @ColonelMinecraft Před 8 lety +204

    ...now I wanna lick a 9v battery

    • @TheVegardH
      @TheVegardH Před 8 lety +13

      Did you do it? If not, try! I remember when i was little, I competed with my siblings on who could hold it on the tongue the longest.

    • @firstmkb
      @firstmkb Před 4 lety +10

      I haven't done that for 40 years, but the memory is fresh! For the best experience, get a new one.

    • @jaxonk1440
      @jaxonk1440 Před 4 lety +2

      You wont burn your tounge on a nine volt battery it actually feels cool