Paul Dixon knows something about having fun. He's been in the toy business since 1994 as a toy buyer for Target, and a salesperson for the Walt Disney Co. and Hopkins-based Animal Adventure. He has also worked with his cousin, author Lehman Riley, to publish a series of children's books featuring their grandfather helping youth learn about history. Adults these days, Dixon believes, have forgotten how to have the kind of fun they had as children. So he has been encouraging people — on a TEDx talk and a guest spot on a CNN podcast episode about play — to find a version of their favorite childhood toy, play with it, and see what happens. We asked him to explain how adults can benefit from revisiting toys.
Q: How did you develop the concept of adults playing with favorite childhood toys?
A: One day five years ago, I was just sitting around and the idea came to me. OK, I've been in the toy business for a while. So what was my favorite toy? My electric football set came to mind and I thought, what if I buy this toy and actually play with it for 30 days and see what happens?
Q: So, what happened?
A: The personal benefits that I gained, sitting around on the floor playing with this football set for 5 to 10 minutes for 30 days, was the connection to how much I enjoyed that game when I was a child. It's kind of like with music. Sometimes a person can hear a song from 20, 30, 40 years ago, and instantly go back to that state of mind based on the song. I think there's a similar connection with toys.
Q: When kids play with toys, they tend to do things like whirl them around, pretending the action figure is alive or that someone's driving the toy car. Should adults try to play with toys the same way a kid would? I think of kids as being better at pretending that kind of thing.
A: It's more open-ended. Everybody's different. You may sit there with the toy and just look at it. You might have amazing memories come up. For some people, maybe there's going to be no effect. For other people, it's going to be the most important thing that has ever happened to them. When we're kids, one of the primary things that resonates in our mind is like, how can I have more fun? Just think how excited most children get during the holiday season or at birthdays when they open up a present. So as an adult, do you ever get that excited about anything?
Q: Maybe we just feel too busy to set aside time for fun?