REFLECTIONS

What Play Actually Does, and Why Its Absence Is a Wellbeing Crisis

children's wellbeing education & storytelling family stories Jul 02, 2025

Play is one of the first languages through which children tell their stories, and we have been taking it away from them without asking what we are taking with it.

Play is not a reward for finishing work. It is not a break from learning. It is not downtime squeezed between the things that matter. Play is how children learn to be human.

The evidence on this is not recent or contested. It has been accumulating for decades across developmental psychology, neuroscience, and education research. Unstructured, child-led play is the primary environment in which children develop social competence, emotional regulation, resilience, the capacity to tolerate uncertainty, and the experience of agency over their own lives.

These are not soft skills. They are the foundational capabilities that everything else, academic achievement, creative thinking, mental health, adult functioning, rests upon.

When children play freely, without adult direction or predetermined outcome, they are doing something cognitively and emotionally complex. They are negotiating with peers. They are making and revising rules. They are practising failure in a low-stakes environment where they can try again immediately. They are discovering what they are capable of when no one is telling them what to do. They are building, in real time, the internal resources that will determine how they handle difficulty for the rest of their lives.

This is what play deprivation removes. Not fun. Not leisure. The developmental scaffolding that produces resilient, socially capable, emotionally regulated children. Research consistently links sustained play deprivation to poor self-control, greater difficulty adapting to change, shallower social relationships, and increased vulnerability to stress.

The British Psychological Society has called the erosion of school playtime a serious threat to children's development. The Raising the Nation Play Commission's 2025 report documented the scale of the loss and described a generation of children growing up unhealthy, unhappy, and not school-ready as a direct consequence.

What strikes a clinician in this evidence is something familiar. The presenting complaint is the deterioration in children's wellbeing. But the root cause is the systematic removal of the conditions that produced wellbeing in the first place. We have not developed a new childhood problem. We have created a childhood environment that no longer provides what children have always needed.

StoryQuest is not play in the traditional sense. But it shares play's essential structure: child-led, creatively free, unbound by predetermined outcomes, and experienced alongside peers in a context where anything is possible.

When a child narrates their own story and their partner writes down every word, they are exercising exactly the agency, creative freedom, and sense of authorship that play has always produced. The engagement is total not because the activity is entertaining but because it is genuinely theirs. That is what play does. And it is what we have spent thirty years quietly removing from children's days.

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