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If you consider yourself a busy pediatrician and haven’t seen a Fidget Spinner, you are either a neonatologist or have been on maternity leave for the last 3 months. Because I no longer see patients, my introduction to Fidget Spinners came via my 10-year-old grandson, Peter. Last week, I was tasked with meeting him after school and accompanying him on his bike ride to our house. Instead of a hi-grampy-smile he shouted, “Look what Jonah gave me!”

Peter held in his hand a collection of stainless steel nuts, a bolt, and a pair of roller blade wheel bearings that had been epoxified together so that they would spin with the flick of a finger. This was a homemade Fidget. This wasn’t a “gadget,” a term that would imply to me that it might have some function. No, this was a Fidget, and its sole purpose was to keep the user’s hands busy, usually by spinning it.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff
Before we climbed on our bikes for the ride home, Peter pointed out a half-dozen schoolmates who were twirling store-bought (or more likely Internet-purchased) Fidgets. According to Peter, Fidgets first appeared in his school after the recent spring break, and they were now all the rage.

Of course ,within days of my enlightening, I discovered articles about the Fidget tsunami in several national newspapers. The most complete chronology of the Fidget’s trajectory from its unheralded birth in the 1990s to its explosive entry on grade school scene in the last 6 months appeared in the New York Times. (Alex Williams. “How Fidget Spinners Became the Hula-Hoop for Generation Z.” May 6, 2017).

For a brief period of time, Fidget Spinners were touted by some “experts” as calming devices for both adults and children who have been labeled with ADHD. I assume this unsubstantiated benefit was in part based on the aphorism attributed to St. Jerome that “idle hands are the Devil’s workshop.” However, when Fidgets escaped from their niche for the distractable and inattentive and entered the mainstream, educators and school administrators quickly realized that, what might have been a cure for some students, can become an intolerable distraction for the entire classroom. Not surprisingly, hastily enacted rules and restrictions have only made the spinners even more popular, must-have items.

While Fidget Spinners are the latest rage for the grade-school crowd, the attraction between palm-sized objects and young children has probably existed since the first Neanderthal infant picked up a shiny stream-polished pebble or a dried seed pod that rattled. I suspect that, if you begin keeping a record, you will discover that, on an average day, at least half of your patients under the age of 4 years have arrived with some temporarily treasured object clutched in their hands – a smooth stone, a matchbox truck, or a Lego or Playmobil figure. These treasures are not to be confused with the plushy and soft security or transition objects that are primarily sleep associated.

What I’m talking about are the recently found items that fulfill a primordial need of little hands to hold something ... anything. For the most part, they are ephemeral and will be replaced in a day or a week with another palm-sized tactile companion.

This compulsion to hold something seems to persist longer in boys and becomes stronger when they are exposed to objects that spin, roll, or make noise. Even Peter, at age 10, invariably shows up at a restaurant with a fidgetable item in his hand to help him endure the interminable wait for his pasta or pizza to arrive at the table. As distracting as it may be to his fellow diners, it certainly beats the alternative of kicking his sister under the table.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Email him at [email protected].

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If you consider yourself a busy pediatrician and haven’t seen a Fidget Spinner, you are either a neonatologist or have been on maternity leave for the last 3 months. Because I no longer see patients, my introduction to Fidget Spinners came via my 10-year-old grandson, Peter. Last week, I was tasked with meeting him after school and accompanying him on his bike ride to our house. Instead of a hi-grampy-smile he shouted, “Look what Jonah gave me!”

Peter held in his hand a collection of stainless steel nuts, a bolt, and a pair of roller blade wheel bearings that had been epoxified together so that they would spin with the flick of a finger. This was a homemade Fidget. This wasn’t a “gadget,” a term that would imply to me that it might have some function. No, this was a Fidget, and its sole purpose was to keep the user’s hands busy, usually by spinning it.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff
Before we climbed on our bikes for the ride home, Peter pointed out a half-dozen schoolmates who were twirling store-bought (or more likely Internet-purchased) Fidgets. According to Peter, Fidgets first appeared in his school after the recent spring break, and they were now all the rage.

Of course ,within days of my enlightening, I discovered articles about the Fidget tsunami in several national newspapers. The most complete chronology of the Fidget’s trajectory from its unheralded birth in the 1990s to its explosive entry on grade school scene in the last 6 months appeared in the New York Times. (Alex Williams. “How Fidget Spinners Became the Hula-Hoop for Generation Z.” May 6, 2017).

For a brief period of time, Fidget Spinners were touted by some “experts” as calming devices for both adults and children who have been labeled with ADHD. I assume this unsubstantiated benefit was in part based on the aphorism attributed to St. Jerome that “idle hands are the Devil’s workshop.” However, when Fidgets escaped from their niche for the distractable and inattentive and entered the mainstream, educators and school administrators quickly realized that, what might have been a cure for some students, can become an intolerable distraction for the entire classroom. Not surprisingly, hastily enacted rules and restrictions have only made the spinners even more popular, must-have items.

While Fidget Spinners are the latest rage for the grade-school crowd, the attraction between palm-sized objects and young children has probably existed since the first Neanderthal infant picked up a shiny stream-polished pebble or a dried seed pod that rattled. I suspect that, if you begin keeping a record, you will discover that, on an average day, at least half of your patients under the age of 4 years have arrived with some temporarily treasured object clutched in their hands – a smooth stone, a matchbox truck, or a Lego or Playmobil figure. These treasures are not to be confused with the plushy and soft security or transition objects that are primarily sleep associated.

What I’m talking about are the recently found items that fulfill a primordial need of little hands to hold something ... anything. For the most part, they are ephemeral and will be replaced in a day or a week with another palm-sized tactile companion.

This compulsion to hold something seems to persist longer in boys and becomes stronger when they are exposed to objects that spin, roll, or make noise. Even Peter, at age 10, invariably shows up at a restaurant with a fidgetable item in his hand to help him endure the interminable wait for his pasta or pizza to arrive at the table. As distracting as it may be to his fellow diners, it certainly beats the alternative of kicking his sister under the table.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Email him at [email protected].

 

If you consider yourself a busy pediatrician and haven’t seen a Fidget Spinner, you are either a neonatologist or have been on maternity leave for the last 3 months. Because I no longer see patients, my introduction to Fidget Spinners came via my 10-year-old grandson, Peter. Last week, I was tasked with meeting him after school and accompanying him on his bike ride to our house. Instead of a hi-grampy-smile he shouted, “Look what Jonah gave me!”

Peter held in his hand a collection of stainless steel nuts, a bolt, and a pair of roller blade wheel bearings that had been epoxified together so that they would spin with the flick of a finger. This was a homemade Fidget. This wasn’t a “gadget,” a term that would imply to me that it might have some function. No, this was a Fidget, and its sole purpose was to keep the user’s hands busy, usually by spinning it.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff
Before we climbed on our bikes for the ride home, Peter pointed out a half-dozen schoolmates who were twirling store-bought (or more likely Internet-purchased) Fidgets. According to Peter, Fidgets first appeared in his school after the recent spring break, and they were now all the rage.

Of course ,within days of my enlightening, I discovered articles about the Fidget tsunami in several national newspapers. The most complete chronology of the Fidget’s trajectory from its unheralded birth in the 1990s to its explosive entry on grade school scene in the last 6 months appeared in the New York Times. (Alex Williams. “How Fidget Spinners Became the Hula-Hoop for Generation Z.” May 6, 2017).

For a brief period of time, Fidget Spinners were touted by some “experts” as calming devices for both adults and children who have been labeled with ADHD. I assume this unsubstantiated benefit was in part based on the aphorism attributed to St. Jerome that “idle hands are the Devil’s workshop.” However, when Fidgets escaped from their niche for the distractable and inattentive and entered the mainstream, educators and school administrators quickly realized that, what might have been a cure for some students, can become an intolerable distraction for the entire classroom. Not surprisingly, hastily enacted rules and restrictions have only made the spinners even more popular, must-have items.

While Fidget Spinners are the latest rage for the grade-school crowd, the attraction between palm-sized objects and young children has probably existed since the first Neanderthal infant picked up a shiny stream-polished pebble or a dried seed pod that rattled. I suspect that, if you begin keeping a record, you will discover that, on an average day, at least half of your patients under the age of 4 years have arrived with some temporarily treasured object clutched in their hands – a smooth stone, a matchbox truck, or a Lego or Playmobil figure. These treasures are not to be confused with the plushy and soft security or transition objects that are primarily sleep associated.

What I’m talking about are the recently found items that fulfill a primordial need of little hands to hold something ... anything. For the most part, they are ephemeral and will be replaced in a day or a week with another palm-sized tactile companion.

This compulsion to hold something seems to persist longer in boys and becomes stronger when they are exposed to objects that spin, roll, or make noise. Even Peter, at age 10, invariably shows up at a restaurant with a fidgetable item in his hand to help him endure the interminable wait for his pasta or pizza to arrive at the table. As distracting as it may be to his fellow diners, it certainly beats the alternative of kicking his sister under the table.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Email him at [email protected].

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