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  • Summer Dread: What To Do (And What Not To)

    I can't possibly be the only person staring down the end of the school year (Friday! Crap!)  with a good bit of anxiety, right?
    I'm pretty much selling a kidney to get her in the summer program at her preschool, so three days a week she'll be with her friends and letting Mama work instead of wandering into my office nook every three minutes informing me "It's a hard time to wait," luckily. But my friends with older kids are dreading the inevitable "I'm bored" whining that comes with summer.
    "Parenting expert" Michelle Borba answered iVillage readers' questions about how to handle their kids come summer. Unsurprisingly, it seems...

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  • Kids SHOULD Be Bored, and So Should You

    watching cloudsRecently I took a vacation of my very own. First time without kids. Ever. So there I am with my love, sitting in a tiny condo in Whistler, B.C. We've hiked all the trails, went canoeing on the lake, went bike riding in a light rain. What else is there to do? 

    Er, besides the obvious, there was...nothing. I found myself looking out the window, just looking at the trees, the view, letting my thoughts simply wander where they may. There was nothing to do, yet at the same time, there was no need TO do anything. It was wonderful! I remember the same thing from childhood, long summer afternoons watching the clouds slowly morph in shapes, watching an ant crawl up a grass blade over and over.

    Geek Dads thinks kids should still have days like that. And you, too. Creativity is found through boredom, they say. I agree with that; my time up at Whistler was one of the most creative I've had.

    So don't be tempted to try to fill up your kid's days. Let them be bored; they'll soon enough find something to do, and if it doesn't involve setting the cat on fire or shaving each others' heads, why not let them? (actually, the head-shaving thing would be okay)

    Oh, and this also absolves you of any obligation whatsoever to entertain your kids. If you needed permission, that is. So go stare out the window awhile; I promise it'll do you some good! 


  • Best Weapon Against Childhood Boredom? Imagination

    The Washington Post writes a piece this week about the importance of childhood imagination, particularly as an antidote to the baleful cries of  I'm boooooorrred."

    Like many parents, I have dreams of instilling in my kids a love of reading, a desire to be physically active, and a sense of silly funniness that often ebbs away once one becomes, say, a parent.

    Can you fathom how proud you'd be if this quoted your child? "If you have imagination," Claire says.., "a box could be a racing car."

    Turning off the television is only just the beginning of encouraging the naturally expansive imagination of your kids.  Equally important is free time (aimless days) during which to express their own bizarre sense of wonder.  

    [Photo credit: Washington Post



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