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Slow down…one home day is worth much more!

As my middle child, my lion moves towards the end of his first term at school, it still has not reached its climax, we are only beginning to crescendo as we begin to enter into December.  My lion cub is 4 years and 9 months, starting school 6 months earlier than his elder sibling due to birthday months but yet school and society expect so much of such a young child and at times so do we as their parents.  A child starting school is set to task on learning their phonics, writing and reading, managing their behaviour and social skills around their peers, older children and all in the absence of their parents (think of that first day learning a new job role, driving lesson, uncomfortable social experience…and how mightily exhausting they are!) But our 4 year olds do this every day for many many weeks…to be topped off with the run up into Christmas….it feels like an unwieldy messy sprint of survival, parents and children alike! This sprint seems to commence with the learning of christmas songs and lines for a play (baring in mind that your child only started to put three phonic sounds together last week!) the school christmas fair, inclusive of donations, christmas shows, daytime and evening, including costume rehearsals, making costumes, church service, disco…..to end the school term a mere 5 days before Christmas Day! (Clearly adding any adult social events, work commitments or younger/older children would just be impossible….wait a minute actually that is …..life!)

Once we retrieve our children at the end of the term from the demands of school, they enter into another arrangement of routines, standards, travelling, lack of sleep, expectations, different food and routine!  If at any point our children rebel or complain or indeed are just very tired and a little grumpy, we are quick to condemn them…What have you to moan about, ITS CHRISTMAS’

I have unravelled this as something to be mindful of over the next month or so, because I believe the growing expectations of wanting a perfect Christmas and ‘doing more = better’ is hard on children as well as adults, and children have not developed the emotional resilience that most adults have.

In the midst of the school term the weekends become, for most families, THE opportunity to do things together.  I had my lion and zebra who are 4 and 3 at home last Saturday by myself, I suggested to them over breakfast that while daddy and monkey were out for the day we travel into the city, look at the huge pretty sparkly Christmas tree and pick daddys Christmas present…my lion cubs response was an exclamation that Christmas is not daddy’s birthday and that he wanted to stay home in him pyjamas. I responded “you would like a home day?” He answered “I want to stay at home and play in my bedroom with my toys”  This was agreed!

This challenged me, as I think I knew that actually my children needed to do that, they needed time to relax and play… real play, the spontaneous stuff were you only get disturbed because lunch is ready.  Where expectations are low and your child’s brain has a mini ‘time-out.’  I also felt a subconscious pressure (probably media/society driven) that if I was to take my children out and show them pretty Christmas lights that I would somehow be better fulfilling my parental role and enriching their learning.  I was also slightly concerned that staying at home all day would make my job harder, that I would have to personally provide more, in terms of their demands or that I would be constantly sorting their disputes.  Neither of these were the case.  My children played all day. we did some things all together and some things individually; we read, played, coloured, talked, danced, watched and none of it cost money!!!  I also had a nagging doubt that they could not entertain themselves without external input for the whole day, but children can and mine did, shops/brands/leisure parks etc would like us to believe that we can’t!! However if we don’t expose our children to having to entertain themselves or allow them the time to play in their own homes then they too will get caught up in the need be continually stimulated by external devices/sources.

As we read ever more popular books about ‘being mindful’ and ‘mindfulness’ I hope we as adults and parents can practise it with our children over the Christmas time and not get caught up in the need to provide enriching/extracurricular experiences and activities to further exhaust them before their next school terms begins.  So before you start planning…just stay in your pjs and go nowhere!!

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Spark festival

Although today proved to be ‘one of those’ days, I still don’t know what triggers ‘those’ type of days but it did result in a curtain pole being brought down mid tantrum and far too many unkind words between siblings and too many tears.  One of ‘those’ days normally leaves me with the dilemma to either tough it out solo at home or risk an improvement in behaviour by going out somewhere, which is risky if you do not like getting disapproving looks from others while you try to deal with challenging behaviour.

We opted to go for risk 2 and together with friends visited Leicester’s New Walk Museum who are participating in the Spark Festival. Today’s exhibit/workshop was called ‘diversions’ and involved lots and lots of huge sheets of cardboard on one level of the museum combined with imagination and some sticky tape resulting in some fabulous constructions.  When we arrived there was no large sheets left/free for use, my eldest son initially skulks then we find some small boxes and together make a dragon, out of three boxes, masking tape and two treasury tags. The twenty minutes of one to one interaction was just what we both needed and made the trip out worthwhile, a simple experience that I will treasure far beyond the life of the cardboard dragon! (the opportunity was helpfully aided by the youngest sleeping and the middle one with friend!)

Earlier at home we had played with pom poms, recycling items and pegs and made spiders and cane oh’s.  

I think it is worth remembering that regardless of what the latest television adverts try to convince you, that play and toys do not have to be financially expensive although are likely to be more costly in terms of your time, interaction, patience and imagination but experience shows me that this type of play has the greatest rewards for both adult and child and kinder on the bank balance. (The fabulous constructions today were a great demonstration of this interaction…you don’t think that was all the children’s handiwork, do you??!!)