Vacation Fatigue

Have you ever heard of the term ‘I need a vacation from my vacation’? If you haven’t, it is when you take a vacation and do so many things that when you get back to your obligations, you are exhausted! Vacation should be a time of rejuvenation, even if you are exploring new things. For me, vacations almost always include my kids and therefore it is much like being home, but in a different setting. There are sibling squabbles and cries of hunger. The inevitable scrapes and bruises, and the ever-present need to keep some semblance of our regular schedule, especially so we can sleep. That last one probably doesn’t apply to many, I know many kids who handle change and flexibility well. My kids do not. AT. All. So, yeah, I went away on a lovely vacation and now that we are back and thrust immediately into camps, friends, and a need to unpack; I need some alone time to recoup my senses. Not going to happen soon, unfortunately, so I just use the times between and after activities to sit and just be. You know, when they let me, because spending time with friends isn’t enough and once home, you still want to interact with me!

What I have learned, is not to over schedule  our summers anymore. I am sure this need to schedule comes from a weird place many of us seem to have these days, that our kids will be ruined and forget their names if we don’t schedule every moment of their summer with the right balance of fun and learning. The super great, Bunmi Laditan, of  The Honest Toddler recently wrote that “I think this generation of parents is the first one to believe they need to create good memories for their kids via structured activities forgetting that childhood, when safe and watered, is intrinsically fun.” She goes on in this cool thread about how she feels the comparison heavy world of social media leads us to feel we must one up the other parents with how many fun activities we can do with our own kids. That last sentence is me paraphrasing and adding my own emphasis to Ms. Laditan’s words. For sure click on the above link to read it yourself, there is more good stuff there. Okay, back to our regularly scheduled programming. I think she has a good point. Not everything good for kids in the past is good for them now. And, I really hate the adage ‘my parents did this thing and I turned out fine.’ So this isn’t that either. But, I had some structured events during the summer, but mostly it was me going outside and finding something to do. Often friends were around, sometimes not. Sometimes this hanging out outside happened at a friend’s house. Either way, my summers felt fun. I remember the time with happiness and when it was time to go back to school and write the inevitable ‘what did you do this summer’ paper, I was rested and ready, emotionally too, to go back. All that to back up why I no longer schedule all the fun into our summers. The first time I did this, I was a frazzled, stressed out mess. Even before the new school year started, I wanted out from under them so I could rest! The kids seemed keyed up too, and I’m not sure if they felt they had even had a break from school when it was all done. I don’t want to feel like that again, so I changed the way I did things.

This summer, we are doing what has been pretty successful the last few years. The kids have 2-3 scheduled events like camp or vacation and otherwise we just go where the mood strikes on a daily basis. Sometimes that is the beach, or a friend’s house, the park, or the library. Dare I say, we even just hang out at home sometimes. And my highly scientific research tells me that we are all happier because of it. We had to jump right into some of those scheduled plans when we returned from vacation which has a lot to do with me feeling like I still need rest. I usually can just hang around and get that vacation from my vacation, not so this time. But, I roll better with it now and my kids are learning to do the same.

Summer Fun, Are You Having Any?


So here we are, while there is still a month until the calendar says summer has arrived, here in Central Florida the 75 days of summer break have arrived. I love those posts about how those of us who came of age in the bygone era of the ’70s and ’80s spent copious amounts of unscheduled and unsupervised time outside. They talk about how we made up our own games, rode our bikes, walked the neighborhoods looking for our friends, and drank from water hoses. We went away to sleep away camp and returned with crafted pot holders, camp fire stories and tales of the horror of being on kitchen duty. Did your summers as a child look like this? With some exceptions, many of mine did, and while I wish for similar experiences for my own children, I’m sure I am forgetting all kinds of problems and only thinking of the fun of freedom from schedules!

As a result of recognizing the overwhelming pattern of scheduling and over scheduling our lives in this day and age, I have spent the last few summers making sure there are limited amounts of must do items and lots of time for what do you feel like items. I would love to send the kids outside to make their own fun, but my kids make this difficult. One has developed an aversion to the sun (“It’s toooooooo hoooooot” he says) and the other has an aversion to being alone (“I want you to watch meeeee” she says)! What happened? When did they start to think I was in charge of their fun? It is all my fault and I am working to break the bad habit. Go entertain yourself, go find you own fun! So, I work on a here are things you can do, go do them and we will be accomplishing this scheduled item type of summer. The other thing I throw in are small school items to keep their growing brains from atrophy. The school items don’t always go over well, but hey, what kind of parent would I be if I didn’t upset the little darlings every once in a while?

So, think of us as we try to live peaceably over the 70 days of togetherness we have left. Let me know what kinds of activities you will be enjoying this summer.