owleealeckza t1_irrs17c wrote
Reply to comment by Outside_Classroom_38 in Positive childhood experiences of blue spaces and adult well-being. Individuals who recalled more childhood blue space experiences tended to place greater intrinsic value on natural settings, visiting them as adults – which increases better mental wellbeing by Wagamaga
Your experience is not the typical experience of poor children, imagine that.
Call_me_Casper t1_irs0y4p wrote
Sure, but doesn't that prove the point he's making?
[deleted] t1_irt16sd wrote
[deleted]
PaulaLoomisArt t1_irstifz wrote
Are there more poor city kids than poor rural kids? Because as another poor kid who grew up playing in a river, that’s pretty common in rural areas in the United States at least. “Blue spaces” can provide free entertainment, free relief from hot summers, and in some cases, a source of free food as well. My siblings and I spent countless hours around the water and all the neighbor kids did too. These weren’t vacations to a beach somewhere with our parents, just a handful of children playing unsupervised on a muddy river bank.
uselessfoster t1_irtomll wrote
Yeah I do think this is a good point. Rural poor and urban poor are lumped together all the time, but there are some big differences in access to different resources for the groups.
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