Second Grade
            One day, when I was in second grade, I remember thinking to
              myself: "this could be a lot more fun, Bernard." I
              mean, really. I remember thinking how even workbooks used to
              be more fun than having to sit here, at my desk, still, silent,
              with all these kids around me, listening, when we could be mucking
              about with some marvelously educational materials, inventing
              physics. And I'm pretty sure it was then that I began to devote
              myself to the pursuit of what I have decided to call "the
              Playful Path." Because the very next thing I remember was
              me, Bernard, joking. toying. playing, talking a lot. Even sitting
              in the hall, waiting to see the principal, I was always on the
              alert, always looking to make it fun, for me, for anyone I could
              get to play with. 
              
            Teaching and Playing
            By the time I finally graduated college, and graduate school,
              I was pursuing the Playful Path, professionally, even
              though I never called it that. I taught fifth and sixth grade
              everything. Reading, math, science, physical
              education, whatever. It was me and them. So I began making games
              out of everything. No, I began with the fun of whatever it was
              that we were supposed to be doing, with the fun of it. We didn't
              just read, we played reading games. And we played with reading.
              With the sheer fun of reading, o, I don't know, braille, perhaps.
              Or morse code. Or chemical symbols perhaps. 
            And fun was had. And learning was had. And we definitely weren't
              had. Except for once. In one class I taught. Sixth grade. And
              all of a sudden I learned that the kids were going to be subjected
              to a test that would determine whether they would make the academic
              track in high school. It was what they call "the little
              death." No, wait. That's something else. But it did feel
              like something died because of that test. Like, because of that
              test, we had to stop working on inventing our own hieroglyphics.
              And suddenly the whole thing, even teaching, didn't seem like
              very much fun.  
              
            The Theater of Children's Games
            So we, me and my degree, found our way to an experimental, remodeled-factory,
              magnet elementary school called "The Intensive Learning Center,"
              and the title of Curriculum Development Specialist, with our
              own
              parquet-floored,
              carpeted-risers,
              theater-in-the-round
              light and audio booth, within which to develop curriculum for
              the entire school district, in deed. Me, I had to do something
              fun. So I had these 45 minute sessions with kids from all over
              the 5th and 6th floor of a factory building in not-so-upscale
              Northeast Philadelphia. First grade kids. Fifth grade kids. The
              lot. And I decided that me and the kids, we'd reinvent theater
              right then and there. True to my understanding of the playful
              path, I wanted us to start from scratch, from what we know, from
              the collective scraps of the lives we can share with each other.  
             And the kids taught me their theater. And I played with them.
              And we called it "games." 
             A
              curriculum is what everyone else called it, fortunately. Finally,
              the "Interplay Games Catalog." Five
              volumes. One thousand games. Coded according to an elaborate
              system, so that if the kids liked a particular game, the teacher
              could find another they'd probably like as much. 
            And that was it. That was my theater curriculum. And they didn't
              fire me. In fact, they funded research. And I taught it to teachers.
              Games. I did these classes with teachers, and all we did was
              play kids games, and talk about it all, and it became, well,
              deep fun. Sometimes profoundly moving fun.  
              
            The Games Preserve and the Playful Path
             And then we, me, my wife and kids, moved to the country and
              built "The Games
                Preserve," a retreat center for the study of play, where
              I, and anyone else willing to brave the rural realities of my
              25 acres in Northeastern Pennsylvania, could play with an actual
              barn full of games - board games, table games, puzzles, flying
              rings, a sliding board... And there I began to learn and teach,
              not so much games, even though there were thousands, but what
              I came to call the Playful Path. And I had my
              wife and kids and 25 acres as teachers. And guinea fowl, and
              sometimes millions of these bugs.  
            This is where I explored everything I could about the path I
              was on, this Playful one. And where I discovered
              that I not only "channel" the Playful Path,
              but also that I knew how to teach it. It was easy. It was what
              I've been doing all this time. What tool could be better tuned
              to the Playful Path than games? Especially the
              games I liked to teach, and make up. The funny games. 
            This is where Dr. Brian Sutton-Smith used to bring his University
              of Pennsylvania classes. The Games Preserve. Where we built a
              peaceful, profound place for play. In the middle of the country.
              90 minutes from Philadelphia. 2.5 hours from New York. Where
              year after year I thought about, played with, explored, studied,
              discussed, game after game after game. Kids' games. Family games.
              Games for one player. Games for the masses. 
              
            New Games
             Masses.
              Like the approximately 250,000 people who attended the last day
              of the Bicentennial celebrations in Philadelphia. Like
              the millions of people I reached as co-director of the New
                Games Foundation, designer of the New Games Training, an
              alternative to competitive sports that now is taught at almost
              every elementary school in the world.  
              
            Computer Games and Business Games
              And
              our family flourished. And just when we ran out of money, I found
              a job  in
              California, as a professional game designer, for a computer games
              company called "Automated Simulations." This gave me the chance
              to try out my understanding of the Playful Path in a virtually
              virgin computer jungle. 
             I created designs for what we wound
              up calling "Mind Toys."  Jim Connely
              programmed my first game, Ricochet, and Jaron, Mr.Virtual, Lanier
              programmed one of my more bizarre games, Alien Garden.  
            And then I met someone named Dave Winer who had invented something
              he called"FYI" which became "ThinkTank" which
              became "MORE" which lay the groundwork in deed for
              PowerPoint, regardless of what anyone else tells you.  For me,
              for my game design, what I needed most was what Dave gave me
              with his "Outliner" technology. Combining structure
              with fluidity, the outliner allowed me to generate and organize
              my thoughts, to whatever level of detail necessary. It allowed
              me, in fact, to play with my thoughts, exactly in the way I thought
              I should be playing with then. And so fascinated did I become
              with what this did for my thinking that I began to use it to
              facilitate group thinking. I used to go to meetings with my lap
              top and spare drive, and a 60 pound projector, and maybe a printer.
              And made it possible for people to play with their thoughts together.
              And, from time to time, it was a beautiful thing, how powerfully
              and clearly they could build a shared understanding. 
              
            Technography
             And
              so I developed a method called "Technography" and
              an official, you can-get-hired-as role called "Technographer" complete
              with recommended equipment. See, I wanted to make it possible
              for people to start from scratch with this whole meeting game.
              Make all the rules anew. And I figured, given what shared technology
              can do, what a perfect opportunity to learn where the Playful
                Path to Collective Success might lead. And, considering it
              was only me, I was remarkably successful. I acted out the role
              I developed myself and got to work with the Stanford Research
              Institute, and EDS, Apple and Atari, all over the world, even. 
            Oddly enough, after ten years, it stopped being so much fun
              for me. I guess I got impatient. Seeing as the reality I envisioned
              in my book Connected Executives was a reality that would
              require about 20 years to manifest, at least 20. I mean, it worked,
              the concept, and they worked, the people, all right. People accomplished
              amazing feats together. With the technology they had 20 years
              ago. And today, here and there in pockets throughout the world,
              are people still discovering how essential the ability to play
              is to their ability to work.  
              
            Junk, Thing-a-ma-bots,  and New Games, cont'd
            The 2004 publication of my book, Junkyard
              Sports proved to be just the opportunity I had hoped it would
              be - an invitation to the sports and physical education establishments
              to come out and play. Based on the tradition of backyard, street,
              and sandlot sports, Junkyard Sports are traditional sports, reinvented.
              Sports redesigned, where the players make their own equipment out
              of whatever they can find, and adapted so they  can be
              played
              wherever
              the players happen to be, with whomever happens to be there. In
              other words, sports, like new games, get played for fun, for everyone.
              Played playfully. 
             And
              all the while I was involved in designing more games for some
              more companies. Did I mention Ideal Toys, Children's Computer
              Workshop,
              CBS Software,
              Time-Warner. And I worked with Mattel Media. And just this year
              my very first commercially produced competitively silly card
              game, "Thing-a-ma-bots."  
             Recently, more
              than 25 years after the first New Games Tournament, I found myself
              on the adjunct faculty of the Multimedia Division
              of the USC School of Cinema-Television, teaching the principles
              of New Games, watching my students create what had to be the
              world's first Giant
                Human Card game/event., my book, The Well-Played Game,
              now required reading amongst the computer gamerati thanks to excerpts
              published in Salen and Zimmerman's Game
                Design Reader.  
            Today, through my programs and
              publications on this DeepFUN.com website, Majorfun.com and Junkyard
                Sports, I do what I can to help people
              from all over the world reclaim their playfulness.  
            Some comments
              from participants in Bernie's programs follow. 
             
              Bernie probably knows more of a practical nature about
                how to use games in a healthy way with children, adolescents
                or adults than anyone I know. -Brian Sutton-Smith
             
             
              Bernie is one of the most inspiring and ingenious teachers
                I know. He is also a master of his subject -- learning
                through play. -Herb
                  Kohl
              
                
                  - Life without fun is not worth much -- as many people
                    who have achieved success and wealth at the expense
                    of stress and depression realize. It should be easy
                    to have fun -- yet most of us have forgotten how to
                    play, how to invest life with enjoyment. Bernie is
                    the only person I know who not only knows about play,
                    but knows how to teach it. May his efforts prosper,
                    for they help us all. -Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
 
                 
             
               
              
            
              - "The pace was gentle and easy. I usually go to workshops
                where the work is hard and deep and it is all about learning
                through pain, so often. IT was lovely, really just what
                I was hoping for, to remember and experience learning that
                happens in a loving and laughing way." Magdalena
                  Cabrera
 
             
            
              - "Fun has definitely been restored! It has been a
                little over a week since I have returned from Bernie's
                seminar and I have found that fun, just as we suspected
                in class, is contagious, infectious and unlike a virus
                a spontaneous utterance of the joyful heart. When I finally
                returned to work last Tues, my boss said that I looked
                radiant, like a school girl were his words. On Wed he said
                that it was good to have me back, where upon I assured
                him that even though I would be showing up to work on time
                and doing my job, my head and my heart were still at Esalen,
                with Bernie and our amazingly playful group. On Thursday
                he said that my laughter and fun were infectious and that
                everyone around me was happy. On Friday when I left work
                he said whatever Esalen was, I could have time off to go
                there as often as I wanted, because he was so happy to
                have the old Janet with her smiles and laughter back. (In
                all honesty my life for the last year had been very tough
                and I cried more than I laughed.) I assured him that my
                Esalen experience with Bernie was here pointing to my heart,
                but that I would take him up on the offer and assured him
                that the Janet he remembered was back to stay. " Janet
                  Monolias 
 
             
            
              - 
                
The biggest thing for me and that I still keep remembering
                  is the people are more important ( the fun community)
                  than the game....That as you know is lost in our society
                  and that is the unique gift I felt you gave the group
                  and can give the world!! SO let people know that this
                  really is BEYOND games, it is about life!!  It is
                  about how to bring more happiness into daily life. Elizabeth
                    Doenges 
               
              - One of the greatest take away's for me was totally personal
                but touching and that was connecting with a group of likeminded
                people who really supported each other and you created
                the atmosphere of safety for each one to come out and be
                played with. I cried as I drove away. Lynne
                  Law
 
             
            
              - I've been trying to put my / our experience into some
                sort of description since we returned. I get as far as
                a trusting, safe, non competitive, loving atmosphere in
                which we do silly and very profound things. Which require
                all of the above to succeed. (except of course for Estray
                  Bonjour) .What stays with me is the feeling of family,
                warmth, and as I said the day we parted "a whole new
                group of friends" built out of the above and your
                guidance...the experience is the warmth and caring that
                developed amongst us. When I've found myself getting uptight
                and too serious about things I've reminded myself that
                it doesn't have to be that way. Actually the words "Estray
                Bonjour" could be printed onto a card and flashed
                before me several times a day to prevent anything to serious
                or bleak from lodging in my mind. The other side of the
                card could have a photo of your smiling, adorable face.
                You have created something wonderful that should be shared
                and spread. It's so hard to explain or define what actually
                took place .I love you for it .Gwen
                  Mahoney
 
             
            
              - Lovely and affirming quotes, aren't they? What did you
                expect, dearie??? Certainly no smidge of venom after our
                hilarity and connection at Esalen.I too had a great time.
                Being one who already has oodles of fun in my daily life,
                I sometimes feel a bit apart from the rest of humanity.
                Our experience together with you encouraged me in the conviction
                that even those of us who have horrendous events in our
                pasts and even not-so-lighthearted temperaments to begin
                with can make a Fun Community come alive. Thank you, Bernie!  Cody
                  Kirkham
 
             
            
              - We speak often and lovingly about you and the group.
                We gained much more than just fun and games. It would be
                nice some day to sit and philosophize with you. Feels like
                we have known you a long time. Lee appreciates your kindness
                and all the space you gave her. It will help her do the
                same for others. Lessons come in odd ways. Lee
                  and Marvin Silverstein
 
             
            
              -  Great! Such fun! An exquisite blend of joy, celebration,
                looniness, community, etc. Delicious and soul opening. Al
                  McLeod
 
             
            
              - It was outstanding in every way - the teacher, the group,
                and Esalen. Bernie took us on a Shamanic journey into the
                world of fun .Bob
                  Doenges
 
             
            
              -  Thanks Bernie! I think the whole RLF group enjoyed and
                learned from your presentation... We are all so busy these
                days that it is a luxury to step back and learn how to incorporate
                fun back into our work environment and get into the "FLOW".
                We now have point in time we can all relate back to on how "Jack,
                Bernie or other RLF members" called the meeting! Thanks again
                for a great presentation and a few moments of laughter. Life
                is so short we need to take a moment to enjoy each other
                as people, too! - Edmund Gee, Deputy Forest Supervisor, Lake
                Tahoe Basin Management Unit Office
 
             
            
              - Bernie's work is subtle, gentle and effective. He made
                me feel special and included me from the first night. I
                will recommend him and his work to others. I am glad I
                took his workshop.
 
             
            
              - Bernie has a deep and important message - the power of
                fun. He is a creative and wise leader and this is a workshop
                that should be repeated time and again. Not only is is
                a fun week, it is also deeply enriching.
 
             
            
              - Bernie helped us form a play / fun community within the
                group. His passion, dedication and knowledge of fun and
                community-building, as well as his acceptance of all made
                these five days outstanding for me.
 
             
            
              - The class was well-presented, educational, fun and funny.
                A forum that felt safe as well as gave permission to step
                out of certain activities. I had more fun than I have had
                in years - as well as created a space that was very loving.
                I learned to take away activities I can share with others.
 
             
            
              - Fantastic! Bernie is a loving, warm (and very funny)man
                who not only taught us multiple fun games so that we had
                a ball, but to grow close to each other and learn how to
                go back home and create new communities of fun.
 
             
            
              - Excellent! I have never laughed so much and had as much
                fun. Absolutely an incredible workshop. Bernie was a very
                good leader!! We had such a wonderful community of fun
                and learned at least 40-50 silly games.
 
             
            
              - I found the workshop light and it was all right.
                I would do it again and again and again....
 
             
            
              - Fabulous! I was able to open my life and enjoy my playfulness,
                spontaneity, innocence of childhood. And, at the same time,
                we were able to relate it to how these qualities can be
                used to restore fun in daily life.
 
             
            
              - Wonderful! Very supportive atmosphere. A safe space to
                explore fun and flow.
 
             
            
              - Great! Inspiring! !informative! Well led!
 
             
            
              - Bernie is a great teacher. I had a lot of fun and laughter.
                It also helped me to understand why I've never liked games
                - as an adult - and what I can do to make playing enjoyable
                and safe for me.
 
             
            
              - Wonderful! I wish I had taken this before now. Highly
                recommended class, especially for business people. Well
                led. Inspiring.
 
             
            
              -  "I wanted to tell you that I sent your note about
                safe play to many of my friends. We all needed to believe
                that the world is still a place were we can play. Even
                if we have to just pretend. I also wanted to thank you
                for the wonderful weekend. I continue to work through many
                of the ideas that you introduced and reintroduced to me.
                I came home so relaxed that it took me days to get back
                to my desk. Even now I continue to be able to reenter that
                peaceful state. Thank you. Jay
                  Beckwith (see Jay's article on "Complexification")
 
             
            
              - "This weekend's laughter, learnings about flow,
                fun, alone & together, & growing sense of community
                will reverberate in my life for a long time. Bernie is
                a master at silliness as a path to Oneness." Nancy
                  Young 
 
             
            
              - "DeepFUN takes
                me to a place where I can describe myself as 'plays well
                with others.'" Nan
                  Fox 
 
             
            
              - "Just a reminder about how much I love what you
                are doing. Probably the most
 
                profound for me is your unequivocal shaping of the positive side. For 
                years I have been telling friends that I am looking for the guru who sees me 
                as whole and helps me extend my joy, beauty and "fun" instead of
                the other 
                way around. So guess you could say I've found my guru, though you need not 
                take it to heart because I actually don't believe in guru's". - Marah 
             
            
              - "An uplifting, joyful experience. We learned how
                to better our lives through enhanced 'fun.' Bernie gave
                us a set of tools to make our lives more enjoyable and
                how to bring this gift to others. This program is a 'must'
                as a mainstay at Esalen. - Cal
                  Todd 
 
             
            
              - "I found the games so much fun. Bernie...was so
                caring and sensitive to the group. I had an outstanding
                experience." - Marilyn
                  Todd
 
             
            
              - "Surprising, bouncing, laughing, listening, discovery,
                learning, connection, play, freedom, balance, peace & new
                friends." Ariel
                  Green 
 
             
            
              - "A time for silly, giddy giggles in a safe, supportive
                cocoon. It was an incredibly joyous, connecting experience
                with a group of open and warm friends. Bernie made me laugh
                and let go of inhibitions and play with such fun - he's
                a special person who promotes safety and fun." Bettina
                  Gantsweg 
 
             
            
              - "You need to know about the flow. Bernie shows you
                where to go." Michael
                  Bell 
 
             
            
              - "Bernie , yes it was fun! Can't tell you how great
                it was to get out of our "heady" routines. Its amazing
                how we lose the ability to play. Your workshop gave us
                that moment in time to capture that feeling of joy. We
                have missed it since we returned to Texas and our new home
                (jobs -work) and volunteer commitments. But those moments
                of frolicking on the floor are alive in our memories and
                we both want to encourage it in our family and friends
                gatherings. We loved not using any equipment that weekend.
                Just want you to know we were frayed and fragmented when
                we came to your workshop but when we left, we had feelings
                of joy which we hopefully can keep sharing with others.
                Thanks for the memories. Lynne
                  and Mark 
 
             
            
              - 
                
"Bernie's level of teaching, attention to individual
                  needs and efficient planning of classes were astounding." 
               
              - 
                
"I thoroughly enjoyed every aspect of this workshop.
                  This was truly deep fun."  
               
              - 
                
"The synergy of the group was incredible, the exercises/games
                  really made that so."  
               
              - 
                
"Bernie is very humorous and approachable. It was
                  nice to have some theory mixed in too."  
               
              - 
                
"Enjoyed it immensely. Bernie allowed/showed us
                  how to gain enjoyment from virtually everything we do,
                  while still maintaining our responsibilities." 
               
             
              
              
            Bernie is a lifetime member of The
              Association for the Study of Play and the 2006 winner
              of the Ifill-Raynolds award from the North American Simulation
              and Gaming Society. 
            Interviews with Bernie: 
                        
            
              
                
                    
                      Bernie 
                     
                         | 
                   
                      Bernie's programs and retreats are explorations
                        into the deeper reaches of play. For professional players (artists,
                        actors, writers, athletes), they are invitations to the fun
                        that their lives are centered in. For the rest of us, they
                        are invitations to a life that is centered in fun.  
                    Thirty-five years ago, while developing a curriculum
                      in theater for elementary school kids, Bernie made two discoveries
                      that changed his life and some small but significant parts
                      of the world:  
                    
                    Bernie eventually discovered that there was a direct connection
                      between the experience of alienation, and the amount of fun
                      people were having - that the more alienated people were, the
                      less fun. Realizing he could help people make anything more
                      fun - their jobs, their relationships, the things they make
                      and do - Bernie set about creating his scheduled and private DeepFUN training
                      retreats.  | 
                 
               
             
            
              
                | 
                     Playing and reflecting participants learn how to bring a new
                      level of vitality to themselves and each other, to their significant
                      others and all they signify, to those they care for and care
                      for them. They learn: 
                  
                      -  about the art and science of FUN. 
 
                    -  how to make things FUN together. 
 
                    -  how to make each other laugh the kind of laughter that creates
                      wholeness, individually and collectively. 
 
                   
                    
                   Bernie teaches about:  
                  
                      
                         | 
                        Learn many Funny Games,
                          in depth, for the fun of it. Funny Games are games
                          that are literally pointless. No score. No particular goal
                          other than to have fun. Which, of course, turns out to
                          be very pointworthy, in deed.  
                               | 
                       
                      
                         | 
                        Discover how creating a FUN Community helps: 
                            
                              -  extend your playfulness and
 
                              -  celebrate those who bring FUN to
                                your life
 
                              | 
                       
                      
                         | 
                        Explore the experiences of CoLiberation and
                          its impact on the FUN community.
                          Learn how to extend the gift of FUN to
                          your:  
                            
                              -  selves
 
                              - friends
 
                              - family
 
                              -  community of healers
 
                             
                             | 
                       
                      
                        
                              Playground Meditations
                         | 
                         Build an imaginary swingset. Let Serious discover how
                          much fun Silly can be. Learn how to create a "Recess
                            for the Soul." 
                               | 
                       
                   
                    
                    
                  
                      
                        
                            I was just taking some little bits and pieces of
                              papers out of my journal and I found the following
                              hard-copy of something your brother-in-law wrote to
                              you: "I find many if not most people today are not
                              in a particularly "fun-seeking" mood. They are preoccupied
                              with finances, war, the economy and personal problems.
                              Fun, however, is a vital therapy no matter the circumstances.
                              The release of life's anxieties cannot have too many
                              channels, in my view. I....have a need to communicate
                              via Fun to people. I may not want to enter that Fun
                              because I cannot overcome the 'troubles of the day'
                              without major incentives to do so. Fun may be good
                              for me but I can't seem to allow myself to enter in
                              anyway. Perhaps I don't see fun as the solution but
                              rather as an escape from solving the problem(s). Funny,
                              when people most need the releases, they are less apt
                              to seek them."  
                          I am touched again by his honesty and his insight.
                            I too feel unable to enter into Fun when so much feels
                            wrong and sad and overwhelming in the world today,
                            everyday. I forget your teaching, so to speak, that
                            Fun IS part of the solution and not just a form of
                            denial, an escape, a narcissistic indulgence at the
                            expense of others who are not as fortunate as I am. 
                           Just thoughts, which bring me back to the mindfulness
                            practice that DeepFun is for me. It is the practice
                            of Little Fun all the time,
                            despite the trying external circumstances on this beautiful
                            and fragile earth I love and despite the woe I see.
                            And as I practice this path, I want to change my paradigm
                            and begin to really believe that having fun, living
                            fun, teaching fun, being fun, can transform this world,
                            that it is part of the solution to the distress. IF
                            not the world at large, it may have the power to transform
                            MY little world, my circle of influence, I hope. And
                            that is a step in the right direction. 
                          Magdalena Cabrera 
                          | 
                       
                   
                    
                  
                      - 
                        
Finding Fun - further, deeper,
                          more detailed reflections from retreat participants
                       
                   
                    
                     | 
               
                           
           |