If you want to understand play, observe an expert – no, not me, a two-year-old child. I learned about play from watching my granddaughter paint. She would dip her brush in a colour, turn it around, lift and hold it for a moment to make sure there were no drips, then bring it carefully to the paper and spread the paint in slow, voluptuous swirls. Then she would repeat this, using the same colour of paint and applying it in exactly the same place on the paper. So I would say, ‘Why not try a different colour on a white part of the page,’ but she would not even hear me. Once again, dip, balance, swirl, dip, balance, swirl. She was totally absorbed and rapt, in the kind of transcendent trance masters work years to attain, the mindfulness people go on courses to learn.
What I was trying to do was get her to produce a painting, an abstract Jackson Pollock that would impress her parents, but Mia was interested only in the act of painting, the process not the product. She was not painting a picture. She was playing with paint.
And she understood the true nature of play. So much of what we do is utilitarian, functional – to make money, build a career, find a sexual partner, stay healthy, look young. Everything must have a purpose. But the purpose of play is that it has no purpose, no benefit other than enjoying it for its own sake. To play is to revel in one’s own potential, both mental and physical. Play is an expression of zest. Zest is the spirit of play.
Of course many would claim that play does indeed have a purpose, that young children play in order to learn skills, develop cognition, become social and so on. Others, including me, would argue that these are accidental byproducts. Watch a young child walking along a street, or, rather, not walking but jumping, hopping, skipping, dancing, running, climbing on walls, or trying not to step on the pavement lines, anything but purposeful walking. This is walk as play, a zestful revelling in the awareness of being alive and full of energy and potential. Young children understand zest but most adults have forgotten it.
This is because the Western mindset has become dominated by instrumental rationality and the necessity of goal, plan, direction and progress, what I call the tyranny of the project. For a mindset like this play is childish and frivolous, a waste of valuable project time. This attitude is also responsible for the contemporary obsession with time, now the most frequently used noun in the English language. It’s ironic that we are living longer and longer but have less and less time. How did we become like this?