Posted by
James on Wednesday, July 22, 2009 4:31:23 AM
The summer holidays are a difficult time for parents. Keeping children amused for six weeks or more, both at home and away, can be difficult to organise, exhausting and expensive. But it does not have to be that way . . . Actually, it perhaps does own to be that way, but as a parent there are repeatedly corners to be cut, liberties to be taken and small duplicities to employ. Here are my top 10 rules for a somewhat lessened disastrous summer, based on a larger number of than a decade's experience of getting it wrong.
1 Encourage boredom
We all want our children to become re-acquainted among simple pleasures, or to develop a curiosity on the expected world, but this is never going to happen if you keep trying to distract them in on engaging and exciting trips. Let them spend the mainly week of the holidays at structure staring at their shoes. Offer only dispiriting chores as an alternative. Eventually, their boredom will drive them to invent games of the own, that in turn are able to lead to enhanced creativity, increased self-confidence and, in most cases, grim water damage. A small price to pay for not having to take them to Legoland.
2 Stop all pocket income until September
For many of the year children's spending habits are curtailed by additional commitments – school, homework, after-school clubs, games and lessons. They simply do not hold the time to get slumping to the shops. In summer, however, pocket money becomes dangerously empowering. Children suddenly have all day to browse sweets, toy weapons, unsuitable DVDs and unwanted pets. "It's my money, so I can buy what I covet with it," they say, as if they're quoting from the Human Rights Act. I own never carried on able to counter this argument effectively, and end up with it a great deal easier to choke off the flow of currency at its source, ie me.
What rationale you provide for stopping their pocket money is up to you. You might pronounce that students, desire teachers, do not do our utmost during the summer and therefore do not get paid. Of course, teachers do get hired in the summer, but your kids perhaps don't can identify that. Sometimes it's simpler to withhold the currency on a week-to-week basis as a punishment for some fresh infraction or other. There's repeatedly something.
3 Never notify your children where you are more than likely until they are in the car
In my experience, a successful summer outing requires the coyest possible precis of your itinerary. Do not say: "We're going to spend two hours in a boring gallery, followed by lunch at a restaurant you can not like, followed by a long walk with the park in a enduring drizzle, followed by – if you behave yourself, and I'm betting you will not – an ice-cream." Just say: "We're going for an ice-cream. Put your seatbelt on." Once the car is moving, you can fill them in on the details.
4 Eliminate one child on the equation
If you have two or more children, you will know that for all practical purposes you have got one too many. When confined together for any time period of time, either in a tent, or a holiday cottage, or in the coming back of a hired vehicle, siblings will fight over as good as anything. Swapping one of your children for someone else's kid for the day (or the week, or the summer) will ensure a calmer social dynamic. If your friends don't have children of similar ages to yours, you seek new friends.
5 If you go on holiday with friends who also have children . . .
. . . bear in mind the in the event of any altercation between this child and your child, you must always insist which your child was absolutely at fault. To do otherwise will mark you out as overprotective and deluded. If such a kid tries to drown your kid in the pool, you when and if say: "Well, I'm sure he was asking for it." Don't worry right about looking callous; it's just the form, and should be reciprocated. It is as well contemplated unseemly to discipline an extra person's child in public. Better to corner the youngster later and issue a calm, expletive-laden threat.
6 Remember: hungry children are biddable children
Yes, they may be grumpy and short-tempered, but they are in addition weak and open to suggestion. If you're trying to coax your kids along a cliff walk, or into a medieval church, or from one airport terminal to another, do not, beneath any circumstances, feed them first. Sustenance of any brand is apt to give out them high-spirited, rebellious and unmanageable. By all means keep them hydrated, but save feeding for those times when it's safe for all crap to break loose.
7 Always underpack
I speak not as a person who is ruthless when it comes to editing one's luggage, but as someone who routinely packs a spare tent just because it's more than likely to cram it into the car, and repeatedly ends up sorry for it. Never in the troubled history of my own family summer holidays has one of my children come up to me and said, "You appreciated what? I really wish we'd brought my other jumper." Forget everything you figure you need: your child will not practice the violin in France, you are not going to read thre books in 10 days ,and there is almost no retreat destination on globe where they don't sell cheap footballs. Having small children is no excuse: travelling with a bottle steriliser is want taking your rice cooker on holiday.
8 Beware of hidden costs
Certain supposedly budget-friendly summer pastimes can turn out to be surprisingly expensive. A visit to a pick-your-own farm may sound like a cheap day out, but in my experience it is perfectly possible for 3 small children to pick £70 worth of raspberries in under an hour, and you will not put them returning on the plant. A car boot sale, on the a good deal more hand, is able to keep them busy for just as for a while for as little as £3 apiece. Make assured you tell them it isn't pocket money, but an advance on future earnings.
9 Ignore all child-unfriendly proscriptions
If you are planning on remaining in the British Isles the current summer, odds are you will at some rate find yourself in an firm at which your children are either implicitly or expressly unwelcome, be it a pub, a restaurant or your place of work. This is not a time to be abashed or embarrassed about having kids; it is a time to be passive-aggressive. When faced with a choice between a pub that welcomes children with open arms and one that seeks to make you feel awkward and uncomfortable, presistently opt for the latter: the food will be better. Then sit down and pretend that you don't understand the nature of anyone's objections. Pretend you're German if you have to. If confronted by a good deal more patrons, try to express yourself in language that suggests that, while you understand why some purchasers might not need to share the organization of several noisy and badly behaved children, at currently precise moment in time you don't care: "Yes, I'm sure they are spoiling your quiet drink, madam – they're furthermore spoiling my quiet drink, and I have to take them residence with me when I'm finished."
10 Take your own nit comb
If you're travelling to the continent, be prepared. Do you know how to say "nit comb" in Spanish? Me neither.