Makes you feel put on the spot, right? You might even feel like you're a
bad parent. Most of us feel responsible when we hear this from our children and
want to solve this "problem" right away. We respond to our kids’
boredom by providing technological entertainment or structured activities. But
that's actually counter-productive. Children need to encounter and engage with
the raw stuff that life is made of: unstructured time.
Why is unstructured time for
children so important?
Unstructured time gives children the opportunity to explore their inner and
outer worlds, which is the beginning of creativity. This is how they learn to
engage with themselves and the world, to imagine and invent and create.
Unstructured time also challenges children to explore their own passions.
If we keep them busy with lessons and structured activity, or they
"fill" their time with screen entertainment, they never learn to respond
to the stirrings of their own hearts, which might lead them to study the bugs
on the sidewalk (as Einstein did for hours), build a fort in the back yard,
make a monster from clay, write a short story or song, or organize the
neighborhood kids into making a movie. These calls from our heart are what lead
us to those passions that make life meaningful, and they are available to us
even beginning in childhood, when we are given free rein to explore and pursue
where our interests lead us.
It's also essential for children to have the experience of deciding for
themselves how to use periods of unstructured time, or they'll never learn to
manage it. One of our biggest challenges as adults, and even as teenagers, is
learning to manage our time well. As Nancy H. Blakey said:
“Preempt the time spent on television and organized activities and have
them spend it instead on claiming their imaginations. For in the end, that is
all we have. If a thing cannot be imagined first -- a cake, a relationship, a
cure for AIDS-- it cannot be. Life is bound by what we can envision. I cannot
plant imagination into my children. I can, however, provide an environment
where their creativity is not just another mess to clean up but welcome
evidence of grappling successfully with boredom. It is possible for boredom to
deliver us to our best selves, the ones that long for risk and illumination and
unspeakable beauty. If we sit still long enough, we may hear the call behind
boredom. With practice, we may have the imagination to rise up from the
emptiness and answer.”
Why does
"I'm bored" become a constant refrain for so many kids?
Most kids given unstructured time rise to the occasion (after some minor
complaining) and find something interesting to do with it. Kids are always
happiest in self-directed play. That's because play is children's work. It's
how they work out emotions and experiences they've had. Watch any group of
children playing (outside, when screens are not an option) and they will
organize themselves into an activity of some sort, whether that's making a dam
at the creek, playing "pretend" or seeing who can jump farthest.
When kids simply can’t find something to do, it’s usually because:
- They're so used to screen entertainment that they aren’t practiced at looking inside themselves for direction.
- Their time is always so structured that they aren’t used to finding fun things to do with their “free time.”
- They need some parental attention. All kids need to check in with their parents for refueling during the course of the day.
Unfortunately, our society is raising a whole generation of children who
are addicted to screens. That's because electronics (Ipads, phones, computers,
game boys) are designed to produce little "dopamine" rewards in our
brains as we interact with them. That's so enjoyable that other experiences
pale in comparison.
But children need all kinds of other experiences, from building with blocks
(motor skills, perceptual abilities) to engaging with other kids (learning how
to get along and partner with others) to creative pursuits (becoming a doer,
not a passive observer). Children also need to be physically active, or they
can't focus to learn. That's why it's essential to limit screen time.
When children say they are bored, how can parents
respond?
First, stop what you’re doing and really focus on your child for five
minutes. If you use this time to connect, just chat and snuggle, your child
will probably get the refueling he needs and be on his way fairly quickly.
If he doesn’t pull away from you, and you need to get back to work after a
few minutes of fully connecting, consider that maybe he needs a little more
time with you. Most of the time when children are whiny and unable to focus,
it's because they need more deep connection time with us. Offer to involve him
in what you’re doing, or take a break from your work and do something together.
Once you’re confident that your child has a full “love tank,” you can
revisit the “what to do” question. By now, he probably has some ideas for
something he’d like to go do. If not, tell him that figuring out how to enjoy
his own time is his job, but you’d be happy to help him brainstorm about
possible activities.
What about when kids really do need help coming
up with a boredom-busting activity? How can we help...while still making them
responsible for staying busy/engaged?
Most of the time, kids left to their own devices end up doing something
interesting, but sometimes they really do need our help, especially if she
suddenly has more time on her hands than usual, or if you’re newly limiting TV
and electronics. (Once kids get used to limitations on TV and electronics, they
become good at entertaining themselves, and more creative at play.)
Even if you need to help your child come up with ideas for “what to do,” shift
the responsibility to her by creating a Boredom Jar stuffed with ideas written
on pieces of paper. Whenever a child says she’s bored, she picks three pieces
of paper from the jar and chooses one of the activities.
Here are some examples of ideas that might be in your Boredom Buster Jar:
- Make a book of jokes
- Build a fort with blankets and pillows
- Write your Grandma a letter
- Cut out paper dolls and costumes for them
- Get a magnet and make a list of everything in your house that is magnetized
- Get a ruler and measure things in your house, recording their length
- Run around the yard three times
- Put on some music and dance
- Make a laser obstacle course in your hall with yarn or tape
- Wash the mirror with a sponge
- Write down ten things you love about each person in your family
- Brush the dog
- Draw a tree
- Make a dollhouse out of cardboard
- Learn a tongue twister
- Make homemade ice cream in a baggie
- Dig a hole in the back yard
- Give the dog a bath
- Find shapes in the clouds
- Make paper airplanes and fly them
- See how many times you can dribble the basketball
- Cut a guitar out of cardboard and add rubber band strings
- Paint a picture
- Play capture the flag
- Wash the car
- Make a birthday card
- Plan a treasure hunt, with clues
- Ride your bike
- Make a scene in a cardboard box
- Use boxes to build a castle
- Use an eye dropper to drop vinegar tinted with food coloring onto a pie pan filled with baking soda
- Start a journal
- Make homemade wrapping paper
- Mix ivory soap, kleenex and water to make clean clouds on a cookie sheet
- Organize your room
- Write a story
- Create a play with costumes
- Make paper bag puppets or sock puppets
- Cut out pictures from magazines and make a collage
- Use plain white paper and envelopes and decorate your own personalized stationery
- Cut up old holiday cards and make holiday stickers for next year by coating the back with gelatin glue, let dry (dissolve 2 tsp gelatin in 5 tsp boiling water.)
- Surprise your mom by making lunch
- Make a zoo for your stuffed animals
- Have a lemonade sale
- Make & decorate a calendar of the summer, with important dates marked.
- Put juice & cut-up fruit into ice cube trays to make ice cubes.
- Create a family newspaper/newsletter
- Make dessert
- Use masking tape to make a race track for your cars all over your living room
- Play Tag or Freeze Tag
- Start a collection (leaves, rocks, buttons)
- Hang a clothesline in your room and clip photos to it to make an album
- Create a circus performance
- Learn a new card game
- Make a potion lab outside with food coloring and jars (wear an apron!)
- Set up a shop and be the shop keeper
- Make your room into a rainforest
- Make a sculpture from pretzels and peanut butter
- Write the story of your life
- Do a something kind for someone, in secret
- Make an obstacle course
- Play Simon Says
- Bowl in your hallway with soda bottles or toilet paper tubes
- Make a placemat (just laminate it at the local copy shop)
- Write some limericks or haiku
- Decorate an old teeshirt with cool buttons & fabric pens
- Start a club
- Make rock candy
- Plant a terrarium
- Make a daisy chain
- Decorate a rock and make a house to keep it as a pet
- Use old cardboard tubes and boxes to build a marble maze.
- Make "funky junk" art out of old jewelry
- Read a book
- Make snow globes or calming jars with glycerin and glitter
- Have a water balloon fight (outside!)
- Memorize a poem and recite it for your parents
- Make a boat using a plastic soda bottle base & popsicle sticks (use duct tape) for the top, then float it at the pond.
- Draw a picture of a desert island with all the things you would want on it
- Blindfold your sibling & take them on a tour of your house & yard, then trade places.
- Play a board game
- Play Mother May I
- Make a fairy house for your garden
- Cut out a crown, tape into a circle to fit your head and decorate
- Create your own board game
- See if you can draw a picture with your foot.
- Draw on the sidewalk with chalk
- Play hopscotch
- Set up a restaurant and serve pretend meals
- Play jumprope
- Play with bubbles in the sink
- Plant some seeds
- Make a windsock
- Use the hose and a tarp to make a slip and slide on your lawn
- Paint your toenails
- Play dodgeball with a soft ball
- Make a curving line of dominoes and knock the first one so they fall down in a row
- Weed the garden
- Make puppets with old socks, buttons & markers.
- Make a list of fun things you can do without a grownup
- Mix liquid hand soap, cornstarch and food coloring into paint and paint the bathtub.
- String beads to make friendship bracelets.
- Use the hose, pvc pipe and soda bottles to construct waterways in your yard
- Use pipe cleaners to make animals
- Use pipe cleaners to make an indoor ring toss game
- Use a basket and string to rig an elevator to hoist stuffed animals up your stairwell
- String a necklace out of pasta
- Practice kicking a soccer ball
- Glue popsicle sticks together to make picture frames, decorate.
- Make and fill a bird feeder
- Make playdoh
- Paint sea shells or rocks
- Make bean bags
- Blow bubbles
- Give your dolls or stuffed animals a bubble bath
If it really does seem like there is nothing to
do, is using electronics and TV ever an acceptable solution?
The problem with using TV or electronic games to alleviate boredom is that
it is one of those temporary solutions that digs you into a deeper hole.
Studies show that kids who regularly use electronics are more likely to feel
bored when not doing so than other kids. Even after eliminating the habit, it can
take months for them to find other activities about which they're passionate.
But don't give up -- you're doing their creativity an enormous favor!
If your child can read, there is never "nothing" to do. There is
a whole world of books just waiting. Of course, you will need to schedule a
weekly library trip to find wonderful books. And you will have to
"hook" your child on a book by beginning it with her. Choose a book
she can read, but might not choose on her own -- a simple chapter book, rather
than a picture book, for example. Read together until you have to answer the
phone or start dinner, but a minimum of a quarter of the book, so your child is
hooked. Then tell her it's time for her read-alone time. It’s her choice. Does
she want to keep reading the book you've just gotten her into, or read
something else? Most kids grab the book and finish it themselves. (If she
doesn't, you may need to drop back a level to a slightly simpler book.) Keep
choosing engrossing, slightly harder books. If you need ideas for fascinating
children's books, there are many wonderful lists online including 5 Star Children's Books.
If your child CAN read but has been reading all day and needs a break, and
you have just spent half an hour with her and can't spend more, and there are
no playmates around, and your child can't find anything to do in the boredom
buster jar, she needs a special project that she can get passionate about. This
is the time to pull out something special you've tucked away. For me, it was
toothpicks, mini marshmallows and gumdrops, which could be fashioned into
wonderful sculptures and of course held special appeal because some found their
way into little mouths that didn't get much sugar. This may be a compromise you
wouldn't make, but every child has something they would find fascinating for
half an hour that you can arrange for those emergency situations.
If your child cannot yet read, but you are available, there are thousands
of wonderful things you can do with your child. You are likely to draw a blank
in that moment when your child is whining, so it's worth making a list in
advance. Again, there are many wonderful lists online of parent-child
activities. I highly recommend games that are designed to bring you closer to
your child, because these will fill his cup, after which he will be more able
to figure out what else to do. (They also deepen your relationship, which makes
kids much more cooperative and makes you both happier.) Here are some examples:
Games to Play with Your
Child for Connection & Emotional Intelligence.
So those times when there really is "nothing" to do are mostly
when your child cannot yet read to herself well enough to stay engrossed for an
hour, and you are otherwise occupied. If you can include your child in your
activity, your problem is solved. Small children love to wash windows, cook
dinner, help you fold laundry, etc. If they can't be directly involved (for
instance, stirring a pot on the stove or cutting the onions), set them up with
a child-sized table in or next to your kitchen, give them a plastic knife and
some soft fruit, and let them make a fruit salad for dessert. You will never
see such a proud child. Or let them "wash" the porch with water while
you vacuum inside. Or "clean out" the cupboard where you keep your
pots and pans.
If you are doing something that precludes your child helping or even being
in the same room, such as sweeping up broken glass, put on some music. Most
preschoolers and toddlers love music, and will happily dance to it, or march
around beating a rhythm on a pot, and singing to the music. Of course, that's not a quiet activity!
But let's assume you are doing something where they can't be involved, such
as nursing the baby to sleep, and your toddler or preschooler needs to be kept
busy and quiet. Preschoolers can often happily occupy themselves for an hour
with water or sand (set them up in the bathroom with a baby bathtub of water,
ice cubes, pouring toys, etc, or a small plastic tub of sand with small toys),
and if you have a monitor, you will be able to hear if he needs you.
Another wonderful option is a book on tape or cd. A good one will mesmerize
your child, and unlike visual screens, they stimulate the imagination and
encourage a love of books and stories.
But the real issue with young children is that they need supervision. In
such a case, when you can't supervise them, is it so terrible to put your two
or three year old in front of a screen for half an hour? Of course not. Choose
a tape that is limited in length so there's a natural ending to eliminate
fights when you turn it off, and to keep your child from seeing commercials.
Give your child something to look forward to afterwards
"Once the baby is asleep, you and I will spend some special time
together"
And just be sure you turn off the screen once you're available, rather than
taking advantage of it to finish "just one more thing" on your
computer!
Source:
http://www.ahaparenting.com/
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