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What are the benefits of outdoor climbing for children?

"Three turns, six sits, seven teeth, eight crawls." Generally speaking, children will crawl at eight months. Climbing is a sport that almost all children love when they are young. Their sofas, windowsills, tables, cabinets, etc., wherever they can climb, they will try one or two. Many parents often stop climbing because it is dangerous. In fact, climbing is beneficial to children's physical and mental growth, mainly in the following aspects:
During the climbing process, the distance and height are constantly changing. Every time a new height is reached, it will bring a new sense and body face to the child's vision, which will help to cultivate the child's space concept. At the same time, it also enables children to observe the environment from a new perspective, which is conducive to children's exploration of the environment and fully meets their curiosity.
When climbing, children need to mobilize all parts of the body to coordinate operation, and need the cooperation of hands, feet, eyes, and various parts of the body. It is conducive to training children's physical coordination ability, making them more flexible and more agile, and has a positive effect on promoting physical development. Great benefit.
Climbing off the ground and climbing up is very interesting and challenging for children, and children will practice repeatedly. Repeated attempts will allow children to accumulate experience, improve their skills, and slowly become more brave and confident because of their proficiency, which will help them to cope with difficulties and be aggressive and confident.
Climbing has many benefits for children's growth and development, but current parents often prohibit children from doing this sport because they are afraid that their children will be injured while climbing, thereby suppressing their enthusiasm for environmental exploration and their desire to learn new things. Growth is bad.
Children who lack climbing training have poor coordination skills. When children play with other partners, they will feel that their skills are inferior to others, which will lead to a sense of inferiority. They will also become timid and inferior when they enter social work in the future. Therefore, parents should pay attention to the training of their children's climbing ability from an early age. As long as the parents are there to accompany them, they can rest assured that their children can practice.