My dining table turns into a tent throughout winter - the kids love it :-)
My dining table turns into a tent throughout winter - the kids love it :-)
opps i pressed the wrong button.....
i was trying to say...........
We have no TV and I have just had my third child . THe first 2 girls are at school now but when they were babies I never found that I had to 'entertain' them. Mornings they had free play where they would toddle around and play best while I got jobs done. We used to bake something everyday from about 18mths of age they would do that with me. We would take long walks sometimes in the pram sometimes them walking, they would stop and investigate every crack smell every flower. Books were only kept for bedtime. Most mornings before morning tea we would have a sing song together. THen winter summer activities, water play, sand play etc.... winter clay, paints, crayons. I find the opposite that when there is no tv they are more likely to be full and happy to really play well, and are less likely to winge and moan, but only if they consistently are not having the tv. We had a tv for many years and there were times that I pulled it out and I would get over them begging for it, they would ALWAYS have a tanti after watching tv.
I had a rhythm of playing, where they would play alone and if they could not get into playing alone they could be with me doing what I was doing. They were great at passing pegs, watering the garden, cleaning the skirting boards, wiping walls, it was all fun for them, and I got my work done. TO be honest our days went so well that I actually wonder how people fit in TV time???? And now at 8 and 6, they can spend the WHOLE day playing just the two of them nothing needed from me, they never need me to take them places to have their needs met, they are confident in the kitchen and they are busting for the weekends so they can play, skip sew cimb trees... we have to drag them in most days it is truly wonderful......
ladybirdflies - you must have more patience than I lol - you can click on the 'edit post' at the bottom of your comment if you need to alter it :-)
Personally, I find kids who are sat down in front of TV/DVDs all day whinge more!
Not hard to entertain kids without TV. You do have to engage with them a lot, which can be boring if you aren't the playful type.
Do some outdoor play, balls and running and swings and slides. Whatever you have at your disposal. Jazz loves her 'clam shell' with loads of small coloured balls, we spend ages sitting in there with her throwing the balls out and then running around and throwing them back in. Bikes are fun. If you have a pet take them for a walk in the morning.
We LOVE baking with Jazz, and she loves it too! Mostly the mixing, touching and tasting part hahahahaha but that takes up a good hour or so! Jazz runs to the oven to check on our baking, and sometimes sits there and exclaims "WOW!". Get them to help make their food, morning tea, lunch etc. Then they're more likely to eat it too!
Painting, fingerpaint, drawing, colouring, playdough, chalkboards are all fun for kids. If you have concrete, draw on the concrete with chalk. Make some 'slime', google it I'm sure theres a recipe. I think its just cornflour and water actually. Get some glue, do some collage. Collect leaves and sand and flowers and collage them onto paper, tissue boxes, egg cartons etc. You can even do collage onto contact instead of using paper and glue, which eliminates the messy glue issue haha and then contact over the top once you're done.
Musical instruments. I am blessed to come from a family that values music so I have a few instruments in my home, plus the extras we've bought Jazz. You can buy little kids music kits with bongos, tamborines, castanets, maracas, and ukeleles for not too much money. Singing songs, nursery rhymes, is always a great hit. You can sing and teach actions, or sing and play instruments. Older kids can learn beats and patterns on the instruments rather than just banging and clanging hahahahaha.
In between the 'playing' with her are always times of her playing alone, exploring and wandering. Often coming back to base (us) but going back out and exploring. It's kind of like she has enough concentration to play alone, but when she uses it up she needs us to play with her again, until her concentration span fills back up, and then she'll break away and play alone! Seems to be pretty common with most kids actually! Thats when things get done around the house.
Housework. Liebling loves to help me at the supermarket, sweep the floor, hand me washing to peg out, cook (not just baking, which we do, but he will cook meals with me), that sort of thing.
We're not completely TV-free but Liebs only really gets it when I'm ill, or when DH is away with work for a week and we have a movie night - or I need an hour to myself.
We also have challenges, like who can build the biggest tower of bricks, or race from the bathroom to the tent, or playing hide and seek (I love this when I'm Liebling'd out; I get loads of time on my own!). We sit in the tent (a baby tent or a blanket over two chairs) and read books. We play pretend. We go for walks, to the park or to the farm.
DS also likes to pretend he's a cat. So long as you stroke him every now and then he's happy. Doctors is another favourite. Pretending to be a steam train. Playing hairdressers. Best to look in a mirror before you go out when you play that one with a toddler.
My favourite is reading. DS and I will sit curled up on opposite ends of the sofa and read. He has his book and I have mine. Joy and peace and setting up good life habits. Poor Liebling gets Radio 4 and back issues of Private Eye some Saturdays. I'd have loved it as a child... maybe not as a toddler. But Liebs loves it because he's being just like me. He likes reading his books to me and is near word-perfect on some of them.
Liebs can play alone now, but he did have to be taught how to do it.
Same here! My kids are big helpers around the house.Housework. Liebling loves to help me at the supermarket, sweep the floor, hand me washing to peg out, cook (not just baking, which we do, but he will cook meals with me), that sort of thing.
We read books, have a stack of toys, bake, my 3yo helps sort the washing because he remembers who the owners of the clothes are.
I think one of the most important ways to get the kids to not need DVD's is to play with them too. They will come looking for my company quite often and the little ones won't play on their own. There are times when a DVD will have to do because I need a break from being the entertainer and that's fine but actually interacting with them is a surefire way to avoid the constant DVD habit![]()
My boys are great at imaginary play. Their fingers are great toysI quite often find some of the funniest questions come out when they are bored, or they learn something new.
I think it's important for kids to know what it is like to be bored, enjoy it, and how to amuse themselves and use the boredom to their advantage. We are so busy these days, kids get caught up in it and it's too easy to pop on a DVD to keep them amused.
I bake with them. They play alot of imaginary games with their toys such as cars and dinosaurs.
We also go to play centres, parks. Go for walks or ride on bikes.
They like to vacuum, dust and help out. Put music on for them and they dance around. Have a pic nic inside. I have just blown up a balloon for DS2 and he is hitting it around and chasing it.
Sometimes they need some down time, so I put a DVD on or they watch ABC kids. It's a 'sometimes' activity.
Bookmarks