Two year old is bored with all his toys

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
A whiny two year old who can't figure out something fun to do sounds an awful lot like a two year old who still needs a nap...

I agree.


I would enforce "quiet time" at the least. Is he still in the crib? I've known a lot of crappy nappers (and had one) but only one kid who truly entirely gave up the nap at 2 - 2.5 yrs.


Another agreement here. If my kid is whiny and can't find something that interests her, it's pretty much always because she is tired. Quiet time in a dimmer room with some quiet toys will give your kid a chance to recharge. Bonus if the room has a bed in it so he can fall asleep if he needs to.
Anonymous
Agree that he seems tired instead of bored. Every morning he is in over drive and when he gets home, he is tired. Most 2 year olds still need a nap.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Likely issues, all of which have been addressed, but to distill:

1) Too many toys. It's overwhelming! Hard to know where to start and easy to get distracted. Also, if he sees them out all the time, they're like visual white noise he doesn't even "see" anymore.

2) Possibly too much screen time. Can reduce attention span for other things and make toys seem "boring." Totally disagree re: introducing screens if you haven't. The implication here is that he has "outgrown" toys and needs something "harder." He's 2, FFS, I promise that is not the issue.

3) Possibly that he's extroverted and needs/desires a little more direction/interaction from you. Conversely, that you never leave him to entertain himself (screens don't count) and he could use a balance of both mom-involved time and time where you are busy and he needs to entertain himself (although don't expect it to last more than 20 minutes, if you have an extrovert). This could go along with #1, though, if he has a billion toys and you're expecting him to "go play," it's possible he needs a little more direction.


Let's add what other helpful PP's have said:

4) He needs quiet time even if he doesn't nap.

And one more that I didn't see:

5) Going out with him every single day for child-centered entertainment until 2 p.m. (!!!) has perhaps had the same effect on him as #1 and #2, above. He doesn't know what to do with himself because he spends every day in adult-led activities (including the adult-created play spaces of playgrounds). Wouldn't you both be happier if you found a great babysitter for a few mornings a week? He could spend more time at home figuring out what interests him, and you could spend time getting the social interaction or break or exercise or whatever you need without him attached...


I absolutely agree with PP, especially #5. OP, you're creating this problem. A 2.5 yo should have a lot of free play and that doesn't necessarily mean toys.
Anonymous
See if you can schedule a play date once in a while.

Also, open ended toys--blocks, dress up, hand puppets, action figures, vehicles/trains, musical instruments
Anonymous
Introduce books, real books. My 2 yo son asks me to read for hours, and he likes to switch between books.

Also give tasks - helping you cook, or do groceries, make lists of things to buy, and go buy, and cut/mix etc.. Kids find this incredibly fun.

In short, do what you think is fun, large projects, the kid will join in
Anonymous
Honestly? I think you are trying too hard. No child needs to go out everyday all morning until 2pm and get home and be entertained by his caregiver because he is "bored " with his toys.

Let him be bored. It is good in the long run as he will learn to entertain himself. It is a lifelong skill to have.

On another note, your child needs a nap or at least quiet time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I stay at home with my almost 2.5 year old, but he will be starting preschool this fall 3 days per week. We are out of the house all morning every day of the week, and home around 2 pm, but he is just incredibly bored in the house when he is home. (He also no longer naps so the day seems really long). He has two playrooms filled with toys, including puzzles, sticker books, coloring books, trucks, a train set, magnet board, blocks, etc. and seems bored with all of it. Even after a fun morning out going to the playground, indoor gym, playgroup, Mommy and Me preschool class, etc. he comes home and is whiny and bored until dinner time.

He doesn't like any kind of arts and crafts or sensory play. Doesn't like Play Doh, or cooking-related activities either.

There are no kids his age in the neighborhood so unfortunately we can't do afternoon playdates on a consistent basis. I also don't know many other SAHMs.

How can I help him be less bored in the afternoons? Even playing outside doesn't hold his interest, because our back yard doesn't have the great play equipment that the playground does. He'll go outside, run around for 10 minutes and then want to come back in.


Take away 2/3rds of toys and rotate. Encourage independent play. You're not Cirque de Soleil to entrtain him 24/7, neither is life. Self-occupation is a wonderful skill.
Anonymous
Do you give him a lot of guidance on how to play? Don't get dirty and only play with toys the "right way"? If you give a lot of direction, that could be the reason why he's bored. If my kids aren't doing something dangerous or truly destructive, then I don't give them direction. I only step in when they ask for help. They're very good at entertaining themselves. My old one always wants someone to play with him, but luckily his sister will follow him anywhere. She's better at playing by herself.
Anonymous
2 pm is likely too late to start his nap. Try 1 or even 12:30.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:1-get rid of half or more of the toys. Kids with too many toys are overwhelmed and cannot play as deeply. Strange them nicely on the shelves. Shelves should not be crowded. When they are crowded, it's too many toys.
2-rotate the toys


Yeah. He's likely to play with the toys more if there aren't as many.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Cardboard box?


+ 1

Or pin a few bedsheets and cover the dining table so that he has a tent.

Anonymous
I think being bored is ok. I would get rid of half the toys, or at least hide them away from his sight in some sort of toy library where he can choose a new one toy once he's put another toy away. I just read "Simplicity Parenting" and it really hit home. We don't need to be offering tons and tons of options. Give him a little shovel and some sand, pull out his blocks and help him start to build something, make a batch of dough and let him knead it and then eat it for dinner.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I think being bored is ok. I would get rid of half the toys, or at least hide them away from his sight in some sort of toy library where he can choose a new one toy once he's put another toy away. I just read "Simplicity Parenting" and it really hit home. We don't need to be offering tons and tons of options. Give him a little shovel and some sand, pull out his blocks and help him start to build something, make a batch of dough and let him knead it and then eat it for dinner.


I agree with the Simplicity Parenting rec. It's a good, quick read.
Anonymous
My kids about that age spend a lot more time with simpler, open ended toys then they do with their train set, etc. So like sidewalk chalk is a huge hit (and they are not really into indoor crafts). Balls of all sizes, a water table and sprinkler, and especially a set of old gardening trowels and a set of kid garden tools and an old bucket.

I think these toys hold their interest longer for 2 reasons. First, we come up with our own stories and games. So like with the chalk, a lot of times we'll draw a road, or "bases", or stars, or whatever, and then "race" on the road, or jump over the pond. Etc. They get more into these little games then they do manipulating regular toys.

Also, I think kids at that age really like to be big helpers. So with the garden tools, they like to help me plant and water flowers and herbs. And then they do their own gardening- just digging holes, making dirt piles, filling things with water. It takes 4 times as long with a kid helping, but working on a project together also seems to hold interest.

Honestly another activity could be to just go for a walk. If your kid won't nap at home, he can ride in a stroller and doze for a bit. If he doesn't sleep, you can play a bit of I Spy.
Anonymous
OP here. Thanks for all the suggestions, they are very helpful!

Re: the nap, he stopped napping when he turned 2. He would refuse to go down for his nap, which used to be 2.5 hours every day. We do quiet time instead, where I put books and toys in his crib (but he immediately tosses all of them out), and he stays in his crib for one hour in the afternoon. However, instead of resting he does gymnastics in his crib, jumps up and down, etc. for that hour. No not exactly resting and he doesn't nap at all.

I have a very long day with him--I am a SAHM and I'm with him from wakeup until spouse comes home around 6 pm or later. He wakes up at 7 am (spouse is already at work by then). I prefer for us both to be out of the house every morning, and now that he no longer naps we can stay out longer, so we usually eat lunch out after the playground or whatever and are home by 2 pm.

Our morning activities are going to the playground several times per week, library, gymnastics class, Mommy and Me preschool class, and weekly playgroup. We do quiet time from 2-3 pm. Then it's the long afternoon after quiet time when he is the most bored and whiny. So from 3-6 pm seems like a really long period of time to fill until dad comes home, or sometimes dad isn't home until 10 pm, so I have to entertain him until bedtime.

I will try rotating the toys, that is a good idea and something I haven't tried.

Most of his toys are blocks, cars, trucks, trains, balls, plastic animals and dinosaurs, etc. but he gets bored with those really easily.

In the afternoons we often take walks in the neighborhood or yard but we don't have any retail, library or anything within walking distance to walk to.
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