It’s About Time We Let Our Boys Be Boys
There was a time when boyhood was wild, unstructured and wonderfully messy. When creek beds became racing channels for homemade boats, hay bales transformed into mountain ranges begging to be conquered and backyard disagreements resolved with wrestling matches and handshakes.
Boys spent afternoons building — and spectacularly failing. Their tree swings broke, bows snapped and tunnels collapsed. But failure was just part of the fun — dust yourself off, adjust and try again.
Underneath the scraped knees, worn-out sneakers and sunburned cheeks, something powerful was taking shape. In these simple adventures, boys were quietly discovering what it meant to be a man.
More than a century ago, George Walter Fiske wisely said:
“Let childhood and boyhood be prolonged,
Let manhood be postponed,
But let manliness be promptly developed.”
Modern culture often denies boys the chance at true boyhood — and true manhood. Today, boys are increasingly encouraged to act more like passive adolescents or less capable versions of girls, instead of embracing the adventurous challenges that forge genuine manliness. Shielded from risk and rough play, they miss the critical experiences that build resilience, confidence and discipline. Without the freedom of boyhood, they get stuck somewhere in between — too passive to fully enjoy boyhood and too unprepared to embrace manhood.
But what if we let them climb higher, run faster and swing those wooden swords a bit longer? Let them test their limits, stretch their courage and dream impossible dreams.
Boyhood is meant to be filled with exploration and imagination — a time when puddles become oceans, fallen logs bridges to new worlds and the backyard is as limitless as the frontier. Boys need this energetic season of discovery to grow in courage, strength and purpose.
“Let manhood be postponed” doesn’t mean boys should dodge responsibility forever. Rather, it recognizes that manhood is not simply an age but a readiness, cultivated through genuine boyhood. There’s a huge difference between adventurous boyhood that prepares for manhood and endless adolescence filled with distractions and excuses.
Manliness, however, must develop early. True manliness — rooted in self-control, disciplined will, integrity, a Christ-centered heart, common sense and courageous purpose — can’t wait for adulthood. It must begin in boyhood.
The boy who fights imaginary dragons today learns courage for real-life challenges tomorrow.
The brother wrestling on the living room floor today learns the strength to stand firm when life gets tough.
The dreamer who creates grand adventures in his mind develops the vision he’ll need to lead and take risks later in life.
The boy who patiently practices slingshot accuracy learns focus he’ll later apply to greater goals.
The boy who insists on carrying all the firewood, despite the ache, learns perseverance.
The boy who shakes hands after a hard-fought match learns honor and respect.
The one learning to control his temper, speak the truth and take responsibility is already becoming the man he’s meant to be.
Today, society often delays manhood without building manliness, leaving boys restless and unprepared. But we can change that.
Let’s return boyhood to boys. Let them explore, conquer, wrestle and imagine.
Let boys be boys — but call them to more. Shape their character, sharpen their will, challenge them to live honorably, serve courageously and follow Christ passionately.
When the day arrives to step into manhood, they won’t simply reach it — they will conquer it, equipped and destined for success.
Mark Hancock is the CEO of Trail Life USA, a character, leadership, and adventure organization that is both Christ-centered and boy-focused. Trail Life USA partners with churches and parents across America as the premier national character development organization for young men which produces generations of godly and responsible husbands, fathers, and citizens. In over 1,250 churches in all 50 states, and over 60,000 members, fathers and sons are connecting, relationships are deepening, and legacies are beginning as a new generation of godly leaders rises.