In less than 3 weeks, school is out. Children will be home full-time for the summer. I can’t figure out if I’m thrilled or terrified.
No more frantically getting children out the door to the bus in the morning.
No more papers to sign and return or send emails about when I lose them.
No more volunteering at the school and putting books in to ziploc bags for two and half hours straight.
No more packing lunches.
No more backpacks and their contents scattered on my kitchen floor.
versus:
No more one-on-one time with the kids when their staggered school schedules send them out and bring them home at different times.
No more quiet, alone time for 6 blessed hours a week when they were actually all in school and preschool at the same time.
No more leaving my children’s education and daily schedule up to some one else.
No more dealing with them in shifts. It’s all three, all day, every day.
Yah, it’s a tough one. I acknowledge this makes me a total mom wimp. I had all three at home all day for several years and a few summers after that, but you know how it is. Once you’ve tasted the sweet flavor of freedom, it’s hard to go back. I admit there’s parts about it I enjoy, but I’m determined to have a plan. I need a routine in place or we will all drive each other absolutely nuts. “Mom, I’m bored. What can I do?” I’ll be able to face that first week they’re back home if I know how the summer will go. Here are my ideas so far:
- 30 minutes a day of summer reading
- 30 minutes a day of workbook pages or writing exercises
- daily chores
- Some kind of scheduled activity each day of the week, probably mid-day, some spilling into the afternoon. Ideas for now: 1. Library and lunch (picnic or eating out), 2. Creative Projects (art, crafts, sewing, gardening, etc.), 3. Meal planning and grocery shopping (I’m going to let each child choose one dinner recipe a week and buy all the ingredients for it at the store. Then the day we eat it, they can help me make it.), 4. Service (I’m looking for some kind of formal volunteer opportunity we can all do together. Hoping for Meals on Wheels.), and 5. Outings (preferably free. Parks, canyons, walks, …. any suggestions here?)
- Free time and play time in the afternoons. Hopefully lots of sunny days for swimming and outside play.
- Quiet time (ha! I’m really going to try) while I’m fixing dinner. Kids in own rooms doing reading, listening to books or music, quiet play, etc.
- I’ve been tossing around the idea of teaching them some Spanish this summer. I was a darn good Spanish teacher in my pre-kids life and I’ve got all the materials I need. I should do it.
- We’ll do one family camping trip a month. It’s hard work, but we love it.
- I also thought about making a “bored box” with ideas in it that they have to pick out and do if they ever tell me they’re bored.
Some people will think all that’s just craziness, but it helps me a lot to have a blueprint to work with. There will be lots of flexibility. Plans will change on any given day due to weather, sickness, laziness, holidays, calendar events, or children spending half the day in time-out (I’m a realist.).
What are some of your summer plans and strategies? I’d love to hear them. Are you excited? Worried? Seriously, are you torn too?