Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Safety and Freedom Go Hand in Hand

We have for a couple years now had an amazing culture of freedom in our KidsChurch worship. We've jumped on trampolines, danced, jumped, stomped, drummed, twirled, jump roped, and hula hooped for God. Yet all this time I've struggled with it being unsafe. Kids are great at being free, but are still exploring their space and learning how their bodies function. So they have a hard time determining when they are in someone else's space or when they've switched from slow jogging to roadrunner speed. For awhile now I've been trying to sort out how to maintain the freedom, but increase the safety. I place such a high value on the freedom because it allows the kids to explore how they worship God. This idea of freedom in worship goes against what we've been telling kids for years. "When you are a child the way to worship is to sing and do some cute actions." While this is a valuable way to worship for many kids it is disenchanting for about the same amount of kids. So we have been living in a place of freedom that has been scary for me as a volunteer and now more scary because I am the person responsible for creating the safe environment. Until now I would play 'traffic cop' during worship and walk around and tell kids to stop whipping each other around, running too fast, etc. This is exhausting.

The tension came to a head this last week when I told the kids we couldn't run in worship and then we sang a song with a lyric that said, "I am free to run." Except they weren't free to run. As I was trying to figure all of this out someone said to me, "Well in adult worship we have a place up front for people to dance and wave flags. They don't do it in the seats because that would be unsafe." This clicked something into place for me. In our adult service there is great freedom, but even there safety parameters have been put in place. If we all sat in chairs and waved flags people would get smacked in the face, poked in the eye, and leave unhappy and frustrated. Freedom is not freedom if we don't feel safe. Getting smacked in the face by someone else's freedom would not feel like freedom to me, only to the person who is waving the flag. Safety releases more freedom.

So this is what KidsChurch is starting to look like now. The kids are free to run in worship, but they must run along the outside perimeter of the room. The middle is reserved for dancers, action doers, singers, etc. The kids at camp were also introduced to safe or unsafe. When a kid is being unsafe I simple go to them and say, "What you're doing is unsafe. You can be safe or have a seat until you are ready to be safe." See they are not in trouble. IT IS NOT A PUNISHMENT. Actually they can decide to change their behavior in that moment and continue to participate. I actually had 2 six year olds that were hitting each other that I did this with and they immediately decided that it was more fun to play soccer without hitting than to sit under a tree. They are also in charge of when they rejoin the group if they decide to sit out. The child returns when he/she is ready, not when I decide. There is no lecture involved, just safe or unsafe. This changed the entire atmosphere. Kids are smart. They got it almost immediately. It very quickly annihilated the hitting and other inappropriate behaviors because we have an already established culture of participation to build on. The kids WANT to participate. The best part, I left feeling great instead of drained and worn out.

1 comment:

Jen said...

This is so great - turning a corner! I love the comparison to using flags in upstairs worship - NOT in the chairs (hitting everyone around them). Funny stuff! And so right.