My
five year old is a sports nut, anything that has a ball he wants to play, watch
and then play some more. Anyone who has
watched a sporting event on TV can attest to the fact that nearly every play is
followed by an instant replay, often in slow motion.
In the event that a replay is not shown, our TV allows us to rewind
the play ourselves so that we can watch and re-watch as many times as we would
like. Because of this, every game played
in our house, including board games, involves at least one replay showing how
the action unfolded.
On
one hand, the replay can be a strong teaching tool. By looking at how we did something, we can
look at it again to find areas to improve so that we can do it better/different
the next time. We can also look at the
replay of how someone else did something or handled a specific situation and we
can learn from them as well.
On
the other hand, the replay can create a never-ending loop that leads to
insanity. Maybe I’m being a little
dramatic, let me explain. The replay also
used in our house for each child to recount the grave injustice that their
sibling has committed against them. After
the initial replay, I am provided with the camera angle from the other child’s
perspective, which naturally tells a slightly different story. Unlike the replay official, I don’t get to go
hide under a hood to think about and decide which camera angle shows it
best. I have to make an immediate
decision to diffuse the situation as quickly as possible. Like any sporting replay, my rulings on the
field are usually met with cheers from some fans and groans from others. The most important part is that play resumes.
Play
resumes. They keep going and within
minutes the incident is all but forgotten (or replaced by the next replay). They learn from it, accept it and move
on. If only it were always that easy -
but who’s to say it always has to be as complicated as we make it?
One
last thing, don’t forget that when you pull together all the replays and keep
the best ones, you get a highlight reel.
Heart-FULLy
yours,
Kacey
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