Backpacks, Kids, and UsHe was probably nine or ten years old. I suppose he would be about four feet tall if he were standing normally. But he wasn't, thanks to his immense backpack. It was so heavy that his whole body curved sharply forward as he trudged along the sidewalk. He looked a little like an undersized and overloaded Sherpa on his way to Mt. Everest. I've been noticing the effects of backpacks on children during the past few years. Every year the packs seem to get bigger and heaver, forcing the kids wearing them to distort their bodies more and more grotesquely. What makes me particularly upset about this trend is that I know what's in store for children once they reach school. They will be forced to use standardized chairs and desks that make no allowance for natural variation in childrens' shapes and sizes - furniture chosen to save a few dollars and make them easier for the custodial staff to stack and move. To add insult to injury, they may well be required - while using that horrible furniture - to watch a video on the importance of having good posture! The conditions faced by most children in schools today would never be tolerated in a workplace thanks to union pressure, government regulations and the threat of lawsuits. But they are widely accepted for our kids, even though their young bodies are at great risk of developing harmful posture patterns that can lead to pain and poor physical functioning in later life. Why? I've thought a good deal about this issue and I see two main reasons why this blatant misuse of our children is allowed to continue. First, many parents, teachers and school administrators literally can not see the harm that's being done. Sometimes it's because their own posture leaves a lot to be desired. I've noticed in my own work as an Alexander Technique teacher that people with poor posture are not usually very good at seeing the same sorts of patterns in others. Then too kids are remarkably resilient, even when faced with the backpack and seating outrages so common in our schools today. The harmful consequences may not show up for a few years and so elementary teachers are not likely to see them. And when they do show up - perhaps in high school - it may seem then that the child just somehow developed bad posture earlier, somewhere else. Second, I think our society has some serious blind spots when it comes to childhood development.
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