BOR-ing Summer Days: Could They Actually Be Good for Kids?
For all of you parents riding the subway to work racked with guilt because your kids are at home with the sitter or at Grandma’s bored to tears, I have good news. Boredom is actually good for kids. Particularly over-scheduled, over-stimulated, over-entertained privileged kids. The problem is, having our kids bored makes us feel like terrible parents. Here’s why it shouldn’t.
Boredom challenges a child’s imagination.
When kids are constantly stimulated with planned activities, movies, play-dates, sleepovers, video games or movies, their minds have little work to do. Rather than thinking about how to fill time and space, kids simply have to move from one spot to another and have fun. The truth is, not having to engage the mind actually gets boring for kids. We need to remind ourselves when our kids moan about having to figure out what to do that this is not only good for kids, it is crucial to healthy psychological development. Without it, their imaginations won’t expand and they will grow into adults who are used to being entertained, not challenged. Who wants to be with an adult like that?
Boredom sharpens their sensibilities
Just like eating too much ice cream dulls our ability to enjoy dessert, constant exposure to entertainment dulls our child’s appreciation for stimulation. When we take them from one activity to another without any “boring” time in between, we blunt their sensitivity to joy of the activity. Kids who are faced with an afternoon without any friends, activities or electronics to entertain them are forced to create fun from nothing. After they have succeeded (and yes, they will if you don’t cave in and plan something for them) then when they go to camp or to a friend’s house for a sleep-over, the fun is amplified.
Boredom Brings a sense of peace
A person who can enjoy his own company lives with a sense of calm. He is not afraid of hearing himself think, doesn’t feel the need to fill quiet with the noise of a television or his Ipod. He can be still alone because he doesn’t fear being alone. The same is true for children.
A child who learns to play on his own learns to enjoy his own company. This is extremely important because if he can’t be alone, he lives with an underlying fear that no one will be around to help him have fun. He becomes dependent on others to make sure that he has fun and he subconsciously feels uneasy because he worries that they might stop one day and then he will be faced with his own inadequacies. Unfortunately, loving, conscientious parents unknowingly put their children in this position because we feel that it is our responsibility to entertain our children. Rather than challenge our kids, we quell their creative powers by stepping in as the director of entertainment. In doing this, we rob them of the deep peace that they need to never fear being left to themselves to find fun.
I challenge you this summer to do something extraordinary for your child. Make room in his life for boring space and time so that he can develop some life changing skills. Here’s how you can start.
- When he cries that he’s bored, resist the temptation to turn on the screen. Whether it’s a video game, television or internet game, keep it unplugged for at least six hours of the day. Make him find a book, a tree, a puzzle or something tangible that will get his imaginative juices flowing. You will be amazed at what he finds to entertain himself and- how much better of a mood he will be in when discovers that he is successful.
- Ditch the guilt and smile more. When your child gives you that face that says you are an awful parent for allowing him to be bored, smile at him. Don’t bite on the guilt bit and remind yourself that you are doing him a huge favor by refusing to be the circus leader 24 -7. Shoo him away.
- Structure his day, but do so loosely. Kids need structure but they don’t need micro-management. So, when he’s at grandma’s three afternoons per week, try to keep a rhythm to his days. The afternoons can be unstructured, but he should know what’s coming from one day to the next. T
- Be intentional. When you plan stimulating activities like an afternoon at the park, a sleepover or a play date, use language that tells him this is special time. Act like going to camp three afternoons per week is a big event. Talk about the other times as normal time so that he gets going on recruiting his creative energies to figure out what he can do when he is home with you in an air conditioned home for the other afternoons.
- Don’t forget chores. Work gives kids a sense of belonging in a family. They need to know that they are contributors and their work is important to the family unit. Schedule household chores for each child to teach them that life is always a combination of fun and work.
Have your kids complained about being bored? What did you do?











5 Responses to “BOR-ing Summer Days: Could They Actually Be Good for Kids?”
Cool advice and a jaunty challenge, although it doesn’t appear as if the author is actually at home this summer faced with a house full of bored kids 24/7 for the next sixty days…. (BTW, it’s 106 degrees in Kansas today). Not feeling like a bad parent (or a bad author), just saying, “It really is very difficult.”
It is good advice and your right it can be hard.I think a good mix is the key. For some kids it might help if you are bored with them to start off with. Dont lead the play but sugest a book or a closet full of old stuff or playing with the dog, and help for a bit then back off. Their imaginations will take over. And yes I do rember a time or two of having to just sit and twiddle my thumbs and but I got through it and learned patience. Parents, you will pull your hair out, a bit, but i will grow back!
As a mother of 5, I fight this all the time. I am tempted to overschedule my kids…mostly for my own sake.
Your advice is right on and much needed! I have found that the more space I create for my kids to take control of their own activities, the better they get at it. Yes, it takes time and yes, it can be very painful initially. But a few weeks into summer and my kids now know (not always, but often) how to entertain themselves.
Thanks for the challenge to rise above survival mode and take the opportunity to teach kids a lifelong lesson.
Hi Meg,
I’m such a fan of your writing, and today it feels as if you wrote this post for me! I view being bored as a symptom of a life that is privileged. No apologies necessary! You’ve given three practical, grounded ways to help our kids steward their time (and attitudes) wisely. Bring on those boring summer days!
Blessings,
Ann
Awesome! I always admire those who are at peace with calmness and silence. When my six year old says “I’m bored” – I try to point out that Jesus or a Saint (St. Francis good one) didn’t have much of anything in material items yet they were of the happiest people in the world. St. Francis even said once, don’t carry books – or something like this.
My older children are very busy with summer jobs right now and I am so grateful that they have them with the way things are today. Nevertheless, yes it is a challenge to keep my six year old content while hubby and I drive the older ones to and from their employment.
I just had my six year older read the titles and sub-titles of this article and tried to explain some of their meanings.