Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad used to have a no whining sign for the car (I think it was a postcard) that he would put up.
Oh okay, just put up a sign. It's as easy as that! As if a child is going to stop whining because dad posted a sign.![]()
As for the metal music and people calling OP a troll, this happens a lot (driver picks the music). I once tagged along on a road trip with BIL driving and he played either thrasher metal or 70s rock most of the way. It was miserable (at least, the thrasher metal was). This stuff happens.
Anonymous wrote:Valium
Anonymous wrote:My dad used to have a no whining sign for the car (I think it was a postcard) that he would put up.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. We don't travel much, and covid stopped us doing anything for a few years. We do one travel by flight once a year, so far we have gone to boston, toronto & south carolina. We will fly to CA this summer, and we plan to go to Asia/Europe one day once they can put up with longer flights. This is our 2nd road trip. Kids have many commitment likes games/practices/rectials, and we parents have to work. We plan to travel more
Anonymous wrote:Op here. This is our 2nd road trip ever with kids. All of our relatives & grandparents live local, within 30 min. drive. Their schools are a few minutes away drive from home, and all of camps/classes are within 5 min to max 1 hr drive. I think the biggest 2 problems is DH listening to his favorite metal music while driving & the 6 year old talking nonstop/bothering 9 year old. I can't complain much because he is the driver, and he says that he wants to enjoy his drive listening to his music. No one loves that heavy metal music in the car, except him.
We are flying to CA from DC in August, and I have to make sure that they both have window seats to look at clouds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As others said, download movies, audio books, etc before hand. Audio books connected to the car system that we all listened to really worked well.
Use your phone’s hotspot to give them internet access if they want play games online.
Snacks. I pack their usual snacks just more of them, and get a few different ones so that they can snack. It sometimes really helps with the bickering when they’re busy eating.
Travel more often. Your kids are not used to it, if they’ve only been in a car ride longer than 1.5 hours once in 3 years, of course it’s new to them and boring. So travel more often, they’ll get their groove.
Ignore the bickering. Learn to shut it out unless they start physically fighting, the bickering gives them something to do.
They’ll grow out of it. So don’t let the bickering stop you from going places.
Agree with you mostly. But honestly, if the kids don’t travel and can’t find anything to observe out the car window over the course of a relatively short drive, OP has bigger issues. We are talking about elementary school aged kids, not toddlers.
Anonymous wrote:As others said, download movies, audio books, etc before hand. Audio books connected to the car system that we all listened to really worked well.
Use your phone’s hotspot to give them internet access if they want play games online.
Snacks. I pack their usual snacks just more of them, and get a few different ones so that they can snack. It sometimes really helps with the bickering when they’re busy eating.
Travel more often. Your kids are not used to it, if they’ve only been in a car ride longer than 1.5 hours once in 3 years, of course it’s new to them and boring. So travel more often, they’ll get their groove.
Ignore the bickering. Learn to shut it out unless they start physically fighting, the bickering gives them something to do.
They’ll grow out of it. So don’t let the bickering stop you from going places.