Grow and Imagine: The Child Development Podcast

The Power of Play- How Toddlers Learn Without Trying

Subscriber Episode Kay P. and Derrick B. Season 1 Episode 5

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Ever wonder why your toddler spends twenty minutes transferring dog kibble into your favorite shoe or prefers the cardboard box over the expensive toy inside? In this episode, we dive into the hilarious and fascinating science of toddler play. Discover why play is a "cognitive cheat code" that turns heavy brain-building into effortless fun, and learn the real reasons behind awkward toddler playdates and endless games of pretend. We also share three practical, science-backed strategies for caregivers, including how to create a stress-free "Yes Space" and why letting them make a mess might just prevent picky eating. Tune in to find out why the toddler chaos in your living room is actually pure genius at work! 

Thanks for joining us on this journey through childhood. Until next time, keep learning, keep growing, and keep supporting the young humans in your life. 

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SPEAKER_00

Um, have you ever watched a toddler for more than like five minutes and just thought, what on earth is actually going on in there? Right, absolutely, all the time. I mean, seriously, if you have ever sat there and watched a two-year-old spend twenty solid minutes uh painstakingly transferring a single piece of dog kibble from a bowl into your favorite shoe.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. Or, you know, watching them walk in a slow circle just to lick a sliding glass door. Aaron Ross Powell Yes, exactly.

SPEAKER_00

You know exactly what I'm talking about. To a rational adult, it looks like absolute madness, or honestly, um like a deliberate plot to slowly drive caregivers insane.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell It completely defines all adult logic.

SPEAKER_00

Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_01

We look at a toddler repeatedly, I don't know, dropping a spoon off a high chair. We think they're just passing the time between snacks.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus Or actively trying to push our buttons.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, exactly. It looks completely unproductive.

SPEAKER_00

Well, today we are getting into the source material that explains what is actually happening behind those seemingly uh blank stairs. We're taking a deep dive into the incredibly heavy cognitive lifting that is hidden within that completely irrational toddler behavior.

SPEAKER_01

It's fascinating stuff.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. And importantly, our mission today is to walk through three specific science-backed strategies for caregivers to encourage this development, you know, without losing their minds in the process.

SPEAKER_01

Because observing a toddler is honestly like hilarious.

SPEAKER_00

It's like watching a tiny, highly motivated alien who just landed on Earth, right? Like they are trying to figure out the literal laws of physics from scratch.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That is the perfect analogy. Because what we perceive as absurdity is, biologically speaking, a highly rigorous scientific method at work.

SPEAKER_00

Really, a scientific method.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. The transition we need to make the shift in perspective is going from judging the behavior by adult standards to um understanding the biological reality of their rapidly developing brain.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So transferring that piece of kibble isn't just a waste of time.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell No, not at all. It's a critical experiment for them.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And the numbers in our sources surrounding this development, I mean, they are just staggering.

SPEAKER_01

They really are.

SPEAKER_00

Like the Harvard University Center on the Developing Child, they note that in the first few years of life, a toddler's brain is forming new neural connections at a rate of over one million per second.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Just wait. Stop and consider the sheer metabolic cost of that.

SPEAKER_00

A million a second.

SPEAKER_01

Right. A million new neural connections a second requires an immense amount of biological energy. Building that architecture takes a massive toll on the organism.

SPEAKER_00

Which kind of explains the exhaustion, right?

SPEAKER_01

Completely. It completely explains that wild pendulum swing of toddler behavior. Like w why they're running around with endless manic energy one minute.

SPEAKER_00

And then they suddenly fall asleep face first in their mashed potatoes the next.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Yeah. Their brains are burning through calories at an astonishing rate just to wire the basic circuits of human consciousness.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Which um brings up the research from Dr. Karen Purvis in our materials. This is the part that completely reframed how I look at childhood.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, the repetition data.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. She noted that when a human is trying to learn a new skill, it normally takes about 400 repetitions to build a new synapse in the brain.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That grinding rote memorization we're all used to.

SPEAKER_00

Right, the adult way of learning. But if that exact same learning happens during play, she found it only takes 10 to 20 repetitions.

SPEAKER_01

It's an unbelievable drop.

SPEAKER_00

400 down to 20.

SPEAKER_01

And the mechanism behind that drop from 400 to 20, um it fundamentally changes our understanding of play. We often think of play as the break from learning, you know, like recess.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, the time off.

SPEAKER_01

But from a neurological standpoint, play is actually the most highly efficient mechanism for learning that the human brain possesses.

SPEAKER_00

I am still stuck on the physical reality of that though. Like, how is a synapse forming in 20 repetitions instead of 400 just because the kid happens to be having fun? I mean, it sounds like a literal cognitive cheat code, like typing a command into a video game to skip the boring levels and instantly upgrade your character.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell It is a cheat code, but the cheat code is entirely chemical.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, break that down for us.

SPEAKER_01

So when a toddler is engaged in self-directed play, their brain releases a very specific, very powerful cocktail of neurochemicals. You get dopamine, right?

SPEAKER_00

A reward chemical.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Which flags the experience as rewarding and heightens motivation. But crucially, you also get a massive release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor or BDNF.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, the sources refer to BDNF as miracle grow for the brain.

SPEAKER_01

It is an incredibly apt description. But looking at how it actually functions physically is even more fascinating.

SPEAKER_00

How so?

SPEAKER_01

Well, BDNF doesn't just make the brain generally better, it physically alters the architecture. It encourages the neurons to branch out, forming these new dendrites that look almost like tree roots. Wow. And it thickens the synaptic connection, so it essentially fertilizes the brain, making it incredibly receptive to binding new information like permanently.

SPEAKER_00

So when your toddler is walking in those endless circles carrying a wooden spoon. Right.

SPEAKER_01

They're a slightly uncoordinated scientist. They're experimenting with gravity, testing spatial awareness, and feeling how the weight of the spoon affects their center of balance.

SPEAKER_00

And the BDNF is just locking all that physical data in after just a few tries.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So if play accelerates learning this efficiently, it brings up a huge question about the tools we're providing them.

SPEAKER_01

The toys.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. I mean, there is an enormous amount of societal pressure to buy the flashiest, most expensive educational toys on the market.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, for sure.

SPEAKER_00

You know, the ones that light up, connect to an app, sing the alphabet in three different languages. Do caregivers actually need those complex systems to trigger this neurochemical cocktail?

SPEAKER_01

The American Academy of Pediatrics provides a resounding answer to that. And it's a hard no.

SPEAKER_00

Really? No batteries required.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell They stress that the best toys for togglers actually do not have batteries. The fundamental rule in child development they point to is this the more a toy does, the less a child's brain has to do.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The more a toy does, the less a child's brain has to do. Okay. So an iPad app or a plastic toy that flashes lights when you press a single button is actually short-circuiting the process.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. Because the toy is doing all the heavy lifting. The child just presses the button, it's a sensory reward, and the transaction is just, you know, over.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell It creates a completely passive observer.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus Right. There is no cognitive stretching required. Contrast that with handing a child a set of simple plastic Tupperware.

SPEAKER_00

Oh yeah. Because there's no script with Tupperware. No. They have to figure out volume. They have to understand nesting, like which container actually fits inside the other one.

SPEAKER_01

Mm-hmm. And they learn cause and effect by banging them against the floor to see what sound they make.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So simple objects force the brain to invent the parameters of the game.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And this maps perfectly onto how the developing brain naturally progresses through the stages of play. At the very beginning, you see what we call solitary play.

SPEAKER_00

That's the stage where they are completely focused on like a single piece of lint on the carpet, right? Yeah. And a literal marching band could walk through the living room without breaking their concentration.

SPEAKER_01

It looks entirely passive, but they are actually building their foundational attention span. They're wiring the neural pathways required to sustain focus on a single input without getting distracted by all the background noise.

SPEAKER_00

Which is huge.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And as that circuit strengthens, usually around age two, the brain looks for a new challenge. So they transition into what developmental psychologists call parallel play.

SPEAKER_00

Now, I always found parallel play incredibly awkward to watch.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it really is.

SPEAKER_00

It's when two toddlers are sitting maybe two feet apart, completely facing away from each other, and they will totally ignore one another for two straight hours.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, the classic play date.

SPEAKER_00

Right. You invite a friend over and the kids act like the other one doesn't even exist. To an adult, it looks like a failed social interaction.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell But developmentally, it is a massive leap forward. Because they are actually observing each other intensely out of their peripheral vision.

SPEAKER_00

Really? So they are paying attention.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, very much so. They are listening to the sounds the other child makes. They're mirroring their block stacking rhythm. They're learning the concept of social proximity, but without the overwhelming neurological pressure of an actual interaction.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, that reminds me of why adults go to work in a coffee shop.

SPEAKER_01

How so?

SPEAKER_00

Well, you specifically go to the coffee shop because you want to be immersed in the energy and the hum of other people. Right. But you absolutely do not want anyone to come up to your table and talk to you. You want the proximity, not the pressure of engaging.

SPEAKER_01

That is a brilliant analogy. It's driven by the exact same nervous system regulation.

SPEAKER_00

Wow.

SPEAKER_01

Because direct social interaction requires a lot of cognitive processing. You have to read facial cues, predict behavior, formulate a response.

SPEAKER_00

And the toddler's brain just isn't ready for that.

SPEAKER_01

Right. They can't juggle all of that while also trying to figure out how a toy works. So parallel play lets them dip their toes into social waters while staying safely engaged in their own cognitive tasks.

SPEAKER_00

That makes so much sense.

SPEAKER_01

And from there, the brain is ready to handle constructive play.

SPEAKER_00

Building the towers, stacking the cups, making those giant structural messes.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. This is where those simple toys like Tupperware or wooden blocks become absolutely vital. Constructive play is pure foundational math.

SPEAKER_00

Math and engineering.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, engineering, spatial reasoning. The child is testing structural integrity and balance. They're learning through trial and error why a wide base holds up a tower and a narrow base collapses.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but mastering those physical rules, I I mean, that paves the way for the most complex stage, which is pretend play, right?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, pretend play is the peak.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell I struggle to bridge the gap here, though. I understand how playing with blocks builds engineering skills, but pretend play is when your toddler decides that you, the adult, are a baby cat. And they force you to sit on a couch cushion and eat invisible fish for 45 minutes straight. I mean, how is that chaos building brain architecture?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell As exhausting as it is to sit there and eat invisible fridge, what your toddler is actually doing is practicing executive function.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Executive function.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Executive function is basically the brain's air traffic controller. It's housed in the prefrontal cortex, it manages information, regulates behavior, and solves complex problems. Okay. In pretend play, the toddler has to invent a rule in this case. The rule is mom is a cat, and then they have to hold that rule in their working memory.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Oh, wow. So they are actively suppressing the reality that I am a human adult.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yes.

SPEAKER_00

And they have to constantly regulate their own behavior and reactions to match this alternate constructed scenario.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. It requires incredible cognitive flexibility to sustain an alternate reality for an extended period. Psychologists actually call it dual representation.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Dual representation. What does that mean exactly?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell It means that like a wooden spoon is physically a spoon, but in the child's mind it is simultaneously a magic wand or a microphone or a thermometer.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I see.

SPEAKER_01

And a battery-operated toy that is rigidly designed to be one specific thing, it doesn't allow for that dual representation. The brain just doesn't get to stretch.

SPEAKER_00

That is so interesting. Okay, so if toddlers are naturally wired to learn the sufficiently, if self-directed play is this neurochemically rich environment that turns 400 repetitions into 20, what is the caregiver's role in all of this? Because there is a huge trap here where we feel the need to turn every block stacking moment into a rigorous academic lesson.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, the instinct to intervene.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The instinct is to interrupt and say, what color is this block? How many blocks are there? Can you say block in Spanish?

SPEAKER_01

Right, which is actually counterproductive. The source material addresses this directly by providing three specific science-backed strategies for caregivers to encourage effective play.

SPEAKER_00

And this is our main focus.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And the underlying theme across all three strategies is about intentionally removing adult-imposed friction so the child's biological processes can just take over.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so what's the first strategy?

SPEAKER_01

The first strategy is simple in theory, but very difficult in practice. It's follow their lead.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning we need to stop micromanaging the experiment.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. Let's say you buy a toddler, a beautiful, highly detailed wooden train set. You spend 20 minutes setting up the tracks perfectly in a figure eight.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I've been there.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But when you bring the toddler over, all they want to do is chew on the smokestack of a locomotive and spin the back wheels with their thumb.

SPEAKER_00

And the immediate adult instinct is to correct them. We want to say, no, sweetie, the train goes on the track. Watch me push it on the track. We want them to use the toy the way it was designed to be used.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But by intervening and correcting them, we are hijacking their learning process. We are literally shutting down their internal curiosity in favor of our adult agenda. Oh wow. When they are spitting that wheel with their thumb, they are steady rotation and friction. When they're chewing on the smokestack, they are learning about texture, density, and the physical boundaries of the object.

SPEAKER_00

It comes back to the cliche of the kid ignoring the expensive toy to play with the cardboard box it came in, doesn't it?

SPEAKER_01

It really does.

SPEAKER_00

Because the cardboard box is a blank canvas, the toddler's imagination can project any set of physical rules onto it. But the prescriptive toy track is a script.

SPEAKER_01

A very rigid script.

SPEAKER_00

Right. It tells the kid exactly what to do, which completely limits their curiosity. When we step back and just follow their lead, we validate their scientific process instead of interrupting it.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Which logically leads to the second major strategy for caregivers create a yes space.

SPEAKER_00

A yes space.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And this is grounded in some very compelling neurological data regarding how toddlers process the word no.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, the sources point out that the average toddler hears the word no anywhere from 200 to 400 times a day.

SPEAKER_01

It's a lot.

SPEAKER_00

Which makes sense. I mean, no, don't touch the oven. No, the dog is not a horse. No, please don't drop my phone in the toilet. Like we have to say it to keep them alive.

SPEAKER_01

We do, absolutely. But we also have to understand the physiological impact of that frequency. Hearing a sharp no from a giant authority figure is perceived by the toddler's nervous system as a threat. A physical thrill. Yes. It spikes their cortisol levels, which is the body's primary stress hormone.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so how does cortisol actually impact the learning process we talked about earlier? If BDNF is the miracle grow, what is cortisol doing?

SPEAKER_01

Cortisol triggers the amygdala, which is the primitive survival center of the brain. When the amygdala lights up, it diverts resources away from the prefrontal cortex, which is exactly where learning and executive function take place.

SPEAKER_00

So it shuts down the learning center.

SPEAKER_01

Essentially, yes. A brain flooded with cortisol physically cannot produce the dopamine and BDNF required for that rapid 20-repetition learning cycle.

SPEAKER_00

Wow.

SPEAKER_01

Evolutionarily, if a predator is chasing you, your brain doesn't want you focusing on learning a new skill. It wants you focused on survival. So chronic stress from constant policing actively inhibits neuroplasticity.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so the yes space is the physical solution to this biological problem. Basically, this is a completely baby-proofed zone where literally everything within their reach is safe to touch, safe to put in their mouth, and safe to throw against the wall.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it might be a gated-off corner of the living room or an entirely stripped-down and baby-proofed bedroom. The defining characteristic is that when the child is inside that physical boundary, the caregiver never has to utter the word no.

SPEAKER_00

The environmental friction is completely removed.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. It gives the toddler an uninterrupted sense of autonomy.

SPEAKER_00

And the sources note that implementing a yes base drastically reduces the frequency of tantrums.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

Because the child's nervous system isn't constantly bracing for correction. They actually feel in control of their environment.

SPEAKER_01

It is a profound relief for the child. But um, we also have to acknowledge that these strategies are fundamentally about protecting the caregiver's sanity too.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, 100%. Constantly hovering and policing a toddler is an exhausting, hypervigilant state for an adult.

SPEAKER_01

It's draining. A yes space replaces that policing with safe, autonomous exploration. The caregiver can sit on the floor and just observe the scientific method unfold without having to intervene every 30 seconds.

SPEAKER_00

So if the yes space is about creating a safe, frictionless environment, the final strategy pushes that idea to its absolute limit. And um, it is arguably the hardest one for adults to stomach. Oh, definitely. Strategy three is embrace the mess.

SPEAKER_01

It requires a serious tolerance for chaos.

SPEAKER_00

Like what kind of mess are we talking about here?

SPEAKER_01

We are talking about deep sensory play, squishing cooked spaghetti in their fists, smashing their hands into mud puddles, pouring cups of water onto the floor, mashing up bananas and rubbing it all over their arms.

SPEAKER_00

See, my immediate reaction to that is just pure anxiety about the cleanup. Why is allowing this level of mess clinically important for their development?

SPEAKER_01

Well, when a toddler squishes a handful of spaghetti, their brain is furiously mapping complex sensory inputs. They are registering the ambient temperature of the pasta. They are noting the distinct smell. Okay. It is a massive multi-sensory influx of data that helps calibrate their nervous system to the physical world.

SPEAKER_00

And the sources actually mention a very specific clinical correlation here regarding diet, right?

SPEAKER_01

The picky eating data.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Research shows that children who are allowed to engage freely in messy sensory play are significantly less likely to become picky eaters.

SPEAKER_01

The mechanism there is desensitization. Picky eating is often rooted in tactile defensiveness. You know, the child's nervous system rejects an unfamiliar or slimy texture because it feels unsafe or overwhelming.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The texture is scary.

SPEAKER_01

But if they have already experimented with those textures on their own terms with their hands, they have mapped that data. The nervous system recognizes the input as safe before the food ever gets near their mouth.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, that is wild. They aren't afraid of the texture because they've already run the physics experiment on it.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

So the practical advice for the caregiver is to just let them be a saucy little monster.

SPEAKER_01

Pretty much.

SPEAKER_00

Just strip them down to their diaper, put a large plastic tablecloth under the high chair, give them the bowl of pasta, and let them explore the physical properties of the food without interrupting with the napkin every five seconds.

SPEAKER_01

Right. You just hose them down later.

SPEAKER_00

That's amazing.

SPEAKER_01

It's all about removing the adult-imposed friction. You follow their lead, you provide a space where their internal curiosity isn't constantly met with the word no, and you allow them to deeply experience the tactile mess of the world.

SPEAKER_00

And those three strategies optimize the environment for that neurochemical cheat code to work its magic.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, they do.

SPEAKER_00

All right, let's summarize the core takeaways from today's deep dive. Toddlers are not just chaotic little roommates who don't pay rent and break your stuff.

SPEAKER_01

No, they definitely are not.

SPEAKER_00

They are brilliant, rapidly developing humans engaged in high-level cognitive lifting. And play is their primary biologically wired tool for understanding the universe. Whether they are ignoring another kid at a coffee shop style playdate, turning a cardboard box into a spaceship, or mashing peas into their own hair they are learning.

SPEAKER_01

And they are doing it with an efficiency that is just staggering.

SPEAKER_00

It really requires a profound shift in perspective from the caregiver, doesn't it?

SPEAKER_01

It does. But once you understand the underlying neurobiology, once you see the BDNF forming synapses in real time, it changes everything about how you interpret and interact with their behavior.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Next time you find a piece of dog kibble inside your shoe, you know, just respect the science.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Which actually makes you wonder about our own brains, right? If play is this biological cheat code that reduces the repetitions needed to learn a new skill from 400 down to 20, you know, by flooding the brain with dopamine and BDNF.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

At what age did we decide we were supposed to stop learning this way?

SPEAKER_01

That's a great question.

SPEAKER_00

Like, could adults tap into this exact same neurochemical shortcut to learn complex new skills at work? Or have we, somewhere along the line, tragically engineered play out of adult learning entirely? Keep that in mind the next time you're grinding through a 400 repetition task.