I Need Help Filling Our Days

Updated on August 19, 2008
K.V. asks from Fenton, MI
9 answers

It seems that when I was young, I wasn't entertained by my parents, but my children seem so bored that they start to bug one another. I find that there are jsut too many empty hours in the day. I need some suggestions for things that we can do at home. Right now I feel like I am just trying to fill empty space in our lives and it isn't very fulfilling. Does anybody have a "schedule" that works for them. So that the kids can gain some predictability and we can achieve some sort of order?

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So What Happened?

I forgot to mention, the 14 yr old is at his Dad's in the summer, so it is just the toddlers.

Thanks for all of the great advice. I think that my daughter would thrive from having a known time for this and for that. Right now we just kind of float, we do have patterns, but not a schedule. I think that I will sit down and write down a schedule and use your ideas to fill in the blank spots between meals and naps. Thank you for all of the ideas.
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L.O.

answers from Detroit on

I cant help much with the 13 year old..

I have a 2 1/2 and 1 year old..

We have a pretty predicable schedule.. get up, dress, eat breakfast - play at home or go somewhere to play, lunch, nap and then snack play dinner bath (not every day) playtime and bedtime.

One thing that helps us... the basement playarea.. when the kids get bored with the upstairs toys we go in teh basement to play with different toys..

we also go out somewhere most weekdays... playgroups. the library the park.. just get the kids out and about between breakfast and lunch and life is much better.

1 mom found this helpful

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M.W.

answers from Kalamazoo on

Hey K.,

Here's the loose schedule that my 18 month old and I follow.

I try to get up before she does, around 7:00, which doesn't always work out. ;) But I try to get some Me time in with email, devotional, etc...

Once I'm done with that, or she's up and needing attention I get her up, changed, etc... and eat breakfast together.

Once we're done eating, I let her run around the downstairs and play with toys there while I clean up. She's kind of needy (physical touch/quality time child) and often gets irritable when I do this, but I'm trying to teach her to be patient and entertain herself, so I feel doing these chores while she's underfoot is helpful for her.

Once that's done we head upstairs to her room where I give her some quality time. She loves to bring books to read, build with blocks, play with noisy toys... Once we've spent and hour or so doing this, then I start cleaning up the toys and she's learning to help me do this pretty well. We clean up her room and then get her ready for her nap (its usually somewhere around noon) and put her down. I make sure to give her at least 30 minuets of undivided attention, with two kids that can be tricky, but sometimes you can do things that work for both kids. If its a busy morning with lots of email/internet search stuff, I do some of that after I've given her quality time. My computer is in the next room from her bedroom, so she usually brings me all of her toys while I'm on the computer, and sometimes will play with them on the floor. Sometimes she gets into mischief, like today she tore up a nearly empty roll of toilet paper ... it was getting too quiet. :) I try not to get upset with her, since I should've remembered to close the bathroom door, but I do make her clean it all up, even if it takes much longer.

She naps between 2-4 hours (this might be totally unusual, but its where we're at) and then I get my downstairs housework done, cooking, phone calls, cleaning (except for vacuuming - which I'd do before going upstairs in my kitchen cleaning time)

She wakes up and I bring her downstairs. If its a long nap, then its getting near time to eat again. If I'm still cooking then she wanders around the kitchen with her sippy cup of water while I finish. We eat dinner as a family.

After dinner she plays downstairs again while I clean up the kitchen. Sometimes her Daddy helps, if he's not on call, keeping her occupied. When I'm done cleaning up then I try to give her some more undivided attention. This is also a good time to go outside and play. We don't have a much of a yard (we're in a townhouse), but we'll hit the parks or go for a walk.

On days with errands, we hurry the morning and skip the cleaning stuff before heading out. I usually end up staying out past her nap time, so she needs a snack to keep sane (usually fruit and cereal/bread). I try to keep my errands to one day a week, and if there are emergency items try to get my husband to pick them up on the way home if possible, or wait until they're down for the night and he's home, so I can run out and get them.

I try to have some toys that light up or make noise for her to play with when I'm busy. With two kids this is harder as they'll probably fight over them, but maybe you can build a make shift barrier and let them play on opposite sides of it if they refuse to share. I like toys that are creative, meaning its not something that you just push a button and a light goes off, but something that you can change the way you play with it each time. (Legos, building blocks, dolls, sandbox, you get what I mean) A lot of toys are so unimaginative that they get boring quickly. That might be an area for more research.

Finally, I'd start inventing some chores for your 2 year old. There are lots of things they can do to help you, or at least think they're helping you. Giving them lots of praise for trying hard helps, even if its not done right. picking up toys, clothes, books... That sort of thing. It keeps them busy while you're dealing with your younger child. Also they start to learn that life is work, and not JUST about playing. If they learn to take small responsibilities now it will make adding them when they're older much easier.

Best wishes! Having a child is what got me organized, the first year I was working 4 hrs/day at home, so I needed to get her on a napping schedule so I could get some work done, and by 5 months she was on a 3 hour schedule, eating every three hours and taking 2 2.5 hour naps. It was a HUGE blessing and I only wish I'd started it sooner.

2 moms found this helpful
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N.W.

answers from Detroit on

The age differences of your children make this hard. How about a camp or some sort for the 13 year old?

Trips to the library for everyone?

Plan out a little schedule. Up, breakfast, dressed.
Outside for a walk, play time? Story hour. The 13 year old can help and read to the younger kids. A craft or game. Lunch. Have everyone help. Naps. Up and back outside to play, for a walk, whatever. Snack. Activity or free play. Dinner.

Letting your 2 year play in the sink always helps keep them occupied while you are in the kitchen.

Have the 13 year old read. Or join a volunteer program in the community.

There are sooooo many free activities in this area, take advantage of them. Plan a day at a local park and pack a picnic lunch.

Make cookies or muffins.

Have them help with laundry and cleaning.

I work full time...but when I am home I never sit down. There is so much to do...just be creative.

1 mom found this helpful
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J.J.

answers from Detroit on

Hi K., I just gave another mom some tips on fun activities for kids, so I thought I'd share with you too. These activities are good for all ages, so take a look and enjoy:

I am the marketer for Disney On Ice and Ringling Bros. Circus and I have some fun and educational activities below.

I have a couple websites I can share with you to use, they are free and have been recognized from the President's council for health and fitness. Also, on our show websites we offer fun games and activites. I've listed them all below, please have fun with them and pass along to your friends as well.

Also feel free to contact me with any questions you may have. Thanks!

www.circusfit.com
www.circusworks.com
www.ringling.com
www.disneyonice.com
www.disneylive.com

1 mom found this helpful
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L.N.

answers from Benton Harbor on

Like one mom said, I have different toys upstairs and downstairs. When they get bored with the livingroom (or outside), I send them up to their bedroom to play for a little bit.

~L.

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S.S.

answers from Detroit on

Oh the joy of a teenager in the house! Unfortunately, this is probably something you will have to ride out. The 13 year old isn't likely to enjoy anything that you schedule right now. I'd work on keeping yourself happy and the little ones will follow.

Do you have a church where your teen can be involved in youth group? That way you would be able to keep them busy and know that they are in God's hands.

Good luck.

S.

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K.S.

answers from Detroit on

Hi!

Our schedule isn't much different than what has already been written. However, I do try to plan something each day, either to do before lunch or after nap (sometimes both), that the kids enjoy. It can range from having a friend over, taking a walk or bikeride, making playdough, playing in the kiddie pool,renting a movie, going to the beach or packing up lunch and heading to a playground. We live in fenton too....and we like to take advantage of all the great beaches and playgrounds! I can give you a list....just drop me an email!

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H.M.

answers from Detroit on

There are literally thousands of ideas out there on the web!!! This is a cool list of 101 Things to Do with a Toddler:
http://www.wvdhhr.org/choices/101_activities_to_do_with_t...
I also subscribe to an online newsletter that has ideas that may be good for the 2 yr old and 13 year old.
Family Fun Newsletter by Disney: familyfun.com
It has craft and food recipes as well as many more ideas for the entire family.

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H.B.

answers from Detroit on

I have a suggestion for the 13-year-old. I have two teens and realized they were annoying each other because they had too much free time (just like you're thinking), so I instituted something my hubby and I call Lifeskills Training during summer vacation and longer school breaks.

Basically, that's just a fancy way of saying we put those older kids to work! Not all at once, of course, but teach the 13-year-old to vacuum, dust, clean bathrooms (including toilets!), sweep floors, do the dishes, plan and cook some family dinners, do the laundry, etc. It goes a bit slow when you start teaching a new skill, but they catch on quick and it gives them something productive to do, gives them a little confidence, and helps out the family at the same time.

And the bonus is because they're busier, they don't seem to bug each other much at all. Even the two-year-old could learn to "dust" or wipe off chair legs or whatever!

Good luck!

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