“Mom, I’m bored.” Have you heard that recently?
“Put the iPod on the dock please!” An admonition I’ve said many times to all my kids when they’re bored and find a screen.
Of course, I’m not immune to screen overuse either. But life exists beyond a screen, solitude, even, and we have to find stuff to do that isn’t tapping on the screen (which I am, hilariously, doing RIGHT now.)
And how do I deal with homeschool boredom beyond pacifying our kids with screens?
In our culture, any boredom, homeschool boredom or mom boredom, is hard to come by because they are easy to quell.
For anything genuinely clever to emerge in our society, like new technology or book plots, new music, or scientific discovery, huge swaths of time are necessary.
We need to allow ourselves to feel boredom.
It’s a practice to accept our uncomfortable feelings.
But when we allow them, when we sit with them, when we get comfortable with them, we can learn from them.
When our kids were younger, we spent a good portion of our homeschool days living in new surroundings as we traveled a lot. Adjusting to a new locale was slow in the beginning. So we had to find ways to fill time in creative ways.
Once upon a time, I might have said, “If you’re bored, there’s always something to clean.” I certainly heard that as a child.
Now, I say, “Boredom is good: free time to come up with new ideas and activities.”
Allow your kids, and encourage them, to follow their random curiosities.
Because now they have free time to…
- Meet new friends…equine, canine, or otherwise…
- Bake pies
- And coffee cakes
- And bread
- Play chess
- Garden
- Play dress-up
- Hoola hoop & give the younger siblings horsey back rides
- Visit neighbours
- Paint an outdoor stage and create a child version of Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice
- Plant seedlings
- Prepare picnics & hot dog roasts
- And find a place to hike, cross-country ski, or bike
Expect kids to go outside.
Plan for it. Make it part of your daily routine.
But don’t prescribe what they’re doing.
Just let them explore the wonders of the great outdoors. Let them fill in the blanks.
Open space in our schedules breed a bounty of curiosity and fun.
Teresa Wiedrick, author of Homeschool Mama Self-Care: Nurturing the Nurturer
Big Emotions Journal for the Homeschool Mom
Introducing the Homeschool Mama’s Toolbox, a resource to help homeschooling mothers manage emotions and enhance mindfulness. It includes Dr. Amen’s three questions for self-reflection. Daily meditation practices and a Thought Care Checklist aid in handling challenging situations. Sharpen your mental tools and improve your homeschooling journey today!
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