Play versus Games

What is the difference between “play” and “games?”

We “play” “games,” so they can’t be the same exact thing, right?

And we never “game” “play,” do we?

It seems like “play” is the state of being associated with the activity we do.

It is the way we do a game. How do we do a game? We do it “play”-wise.

I think that play is the state of being we assume. Game is the thing we do in that state of being.

That state of being is indicated by:
openness
imagination/creativity
curiosity
spontaneity/instinct
freedom/unselfconsciousness
compassion/empathy
energy/intention (directed or “undirected”)

…and we can do it with anything we choose.

A game is an action with specific rules designed to guide our play to specific ends – to an end.

That is, all games teach certain rules. All games, necessarily, limit our play in some specific way.

This has been a guide for how to play, and how create games

Finite and Infinite Games – Review

Just finished reading James Carse’s book “Finite and Infinite Games.”

Finite and Infinite Games

Finite and Infinite Games

I can’t recommend it highly enough.  It’s incredibly dense for such a short paperback book (177 pages).  It might take a while to get through, but it’s worth the consideration and effort!

The  book isn’t strictly about “games” in the sense that we usually consider them, but applies the concept of play to human life in general – one of the things I like most about it!

Regarding fitness and health, here’s a nice quote for you:

Physicians who cure must abstract persons into functions.  They treat the illness, not the person.  And persons willfully present themselves as functions.  Indeed, what sustains the enormous size and cost of the curing professions is the widespread desire to see oneself as a function, or a collection of functions.  To be ill is to be dysfunctional; to be dysfunctional is to be unable to compete in one’s preferred contests.  It is a kind of death, an inability to acquire titles.  The ill become invisible.  Illness always has the smell of death about it: Either it may lead to death, or it leads to the death of a person as competitor.  The dread of illness is the dread of losing.
One is never ill in general.  One is always ill with relation to some bounded activity.  It is not cancer that makes me ill.  It is because I cannot work, or run, or swallow that I am ill with cancer.  The loss of function, the obstruction of an activity, cannot in itself destroy my health.  I am too heavy to fly by flapping my arms, but I do not for that reason complain of being sick with weight.  However if I desired to be a fashion model, a dancer, or a jockey, I would consider excessive weight to be a  kind of disease and would be likely to consult a doctor, a nutritionist, or another specialist to be cured of it.
When I am healed I am restored to my center in a way that my freedom as a person is not compromised by my loss of functions.  This means that the illness need not be eliminated before I can be healed.  I am not free to the degree that I can overcome my infirmities, but only to the degree that I can put my infirmities into play.  I am cured of my illness; I am healed with my illness.

(pp. 91-92)

The crux of this book is critical for those of us who want to change the way fitness is approached – by ourselves or by the “industry.”  “Functional” fitness, all the rage nowadays, is part of a larger outlook on life that confines individuals to boundaries, and attempts to confine Nature similarly.

In order to create change, we have to change the way we speak about things.  We need perspective.  This book will help.  Get it!

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Exuberant Animal – in SF

Yesterday was another great Exuberant Animal event, this time held at the gym I work in – DIAKADI Body.

Frank Forencich, creator of EA, came down from Seattle for a day of discussion and PLAY!  There were about seven DIAKADI trainers there, two clients of DIAKADI trainers, and two other folks who had heard about the program.

We were together for eight hours, and it was great!  The first hour was a warmup and some play.  Then Frank went through the basic knowledge that underlies the EA philosophy and approach to play.  We switched back and forth every hour for the rest of the day, discussion/play, discussion/play.  I wish school was always like this!

If you do anything at all after reading this post – GO OUT AND PLAY!  If you can’t think of any games, the EA website has some great ones you can use.