| We like sleeping in, making late breakfast together, and planning weekend activities around our moods and the weather. Definitely avoid activities that regularly meet in the weekend for our kid, though that doesn’t mean we never have weekend commitments. It just means we don’t sign up fir soccer or swimming on a weekend morning. Tho DD has expressed an interest in doing t-ball next year so that might go out the window then. Still, I love our lazy weekend days. We might go hiking, see a movie, have a picnic in the park with friends, drive to the beach, or spend the afternoon baking something fancy to take to our neighbor’s BBQ later. We’re good at coming up with stuff on the fly and we like mixing it up. |
Or maybe she means what she says and she’s sick of her parents overscheduling her every day of her life. |
Your imagination is pathetically limited. |
Right?? My 8th grader and I are counting down to this coming weekend where we have nothing planned!! (She’s not in sports or a regular weekend activity we have just had 2 busy weekends in a row) We are going to read, we will take turns switching the laundry, we’ll probably order in Mexican and watch a show, go to the pool for a few hours one day. She may meet a friend at the park in walking distance. It’s our idea of a perfect weekend |
| A good compromise can be doing seasonal activities. My kids (at least for now when I have more control…) do sports fall and spring, which leaves the late fall/winter/summer weekends open for more family time, camping, etc. |
In your warped mind nothing = not sports? That's a you problem. Because nothing means moping around and being a couch potato, like literally nothing. I would think a black and white thinker like yourself could figure that out. |