Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yall are nuts and glad I moved out of this area. Activities every day of the week is insane.
I grew up having activities every day of the week and lived in New England and New York. It's not the area, it's the family lifestyle.
It’s weird
It was actually totally normal in both areas where I grew up. I also thought everyone went to camp for eight weeks each summer. I was in 9th grade before I made friends with someone who'd just hung out at home all summer.
There have always been activities and camps, but I don't believe that kids were always this busy. What's wrong with being home in the summer? I had my neighborhood friends til the begging of high school. No, we weren't swamped with activities, but that didn't mean we sat around doing nothing. Free time I'm some people's minds always equates lazy or trouble and I just don't get that.
Dunno what to tell you. I was born in ‘76 and everyone I knew went to camp all summer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yall are nuts and glad I moved out of this area. Activities every day of the week is insane.
I grew up having activities every day of the week and lived in New England and New York. It's not the area, it's the family lifestyle.
It’s weird
It was actually totally normal in both areas where I grew up. I also thought everyone went to camp for eight weeks each summer. I was in 9th grade before I made friends with someone who'd just hung out at home all summer.
There have always been activities and camps, but I don't believe that kids were always this busy. What's wrong with being home in the summer? I had my neighborhood friends til the begging of high school. No, we weren't swamped with activities, but that didn't mean we sat around doing nothing. Free time I'm some people's minds always equates lazy or trouble and I just don't get that.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - wow this is way more than I'd been thinking. For my rising 1st grader I'm planning activities too afternoons a week + one game on weekends. He's pushing for a 3 activity and I was debating fitting in swim lessons but both of those would probably also be on weekends and i'd only add in one at most.
Not saying that's the right answer (or there is any right answer) - I tend to think of things negatively and only see the down side in every option (eg if they don't do enough activities they won't have the change to find what they like / build the skills in time to keep up when older / explore things beyond sports like scouts / music / art etc....but if they do too many activities they'll be over programmed and not know how to entertain themselves and spend too much time being shuttled around in a car etc etc....so its good to hear all perspectives and why you feel they're right for you)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yall are nuts and glad I moved out of this area. Activities every day of the week is insane.
I grew up having activities every day of the week and lived in New England and New York. It's not the area, it's the family lifestyle.
It’s weird
It was actually totally normal in both areas where I grew up. I also thought everyone went to camp for eight weeks each summer. I was in 9th grade before I made friends with someone who'd just hung out at home all summer.
There have always been activities and camps, but I don't believe that kids were always this busy. What's wrong with being home in the summer? I had my neighborhood friends til the begging of high school. No, we weren't swamped with activities, but that didn't mean we sat around doing nothing. Free time I'm some people's minds always equates lazy or trouble and I just don't get that.
Anonymous wrote:We generally let them pick 3 activities a season - so if one of those is year round, they have two more slots they can fill. There is some overlap and we don’t make it to every practice or game but do as much as possible. I don’t steer them towards anything in particular, they are 1st and 3rd and I’ll happily take them to whatever interests them. Right now they don’t want to learn an instrument so we don’t have lessons.
Last Fall it was chess club, rec soccer and flag football. This Fall it will be club soccer, baseball and hopefully a Lego class if they offer an after school one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yall are nuts and glad I moved out of this area. Activities every day of the week is insane.
I grew up having activities every day of the week and lived in New England and New York. It's not the area, it's the family lifestyle.
It’s weird
It was actually totally normal in both areas where I grew up. I also thought everyone went to camp for eight weeks each summer. I was in 9th grade before I made friends with someone who'd just hung out at home all summer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid doesn't really have weekday downtime after school. It's a lot with two working parents, but honestly, at home she is generally clamoring for TV, and I would much rather her do an activity than get sucked into that.
This is us. Downtime for her equals iPad and so I'd rather her be busy in an activity so I can avoid that fight. I think there's plenty of downtime on weekends, even with the two sports plus swimming lessons that she does.
There are other alternatives for kids besides an iPad or an organized activity coordinated by another adult. Maybe try spending time with your child -cook dinner together, have them help with the grocery shopping, read a book together, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid doesn't really have weekday downtime after school. It's a lot with two working parents, but honestly, at home she is generally clamoring for TV, and I would much rather her do an activity than get sucked into that.
Ah. Pp here. Different for us. Downtime is all creative play and crafts, legos and reading whatever the latest book the oldest is into and playing with her sibling. By choice and very much like her parents at that age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid doesn't really have weekday downtime after school. It's a lot with two working parents, but honestly, at home she is generally clamoring for TV, and I would much rather her do an activity than get sucked into that.
This is us. Downtime for her equals iPad and so I'd rather her be busy in an activity so I can avoid that fight. I think there's plenty of downtime on weekends, even with the two sports plus swimming lessons that she does.
There are other alternatives for kids besides an iPad or an organized activity coordinated by another adult. Maybe try spending time with your child -cook dinner together, have them help with the grocery shopping, read a book together, etc.