Coronavirus–Kids at Home

Lots and lots of kids are spending lots and lots more time at home right now.  And without getting into all the emotions and concerns and craziness of the current reality, I know that this kids-at-home thing is a very new thing for a lot of people.

As homeschoolers and living in a new place, our day-to-day is a lot of time at home and together.  A LOT.  So, there is a little bit of weirdness to suddenly hear people entering what’s been our reality for the last seven years.  I wish I could say I was some sort of expert at staying calm and sane and thriving being home all day with kids, but that is, sadly, not the truth.  It’s something I feel I am constantly working at.

I do know there are basic things that need to happen for sanity.  I don’t always feel like I do them all or do them all well, but I’ll just give my quick list:

–Get outside!  Alone and together.  Even if it’s standing on a front porch or balcony to take a breath.  I always think I need to plan a bunch of “fun” activities for the kids outside.  I love collecting ideas and making lists.  But the big truth, for us anyway, is that our kids always come up with way better stuff in the moment than I ever could have planned.  If we can get past the enormous battle of clothes and socks and shoes to step out the front or back door, then we are in business.

–Eat well.  Stress eating is a very real thing, and bad eating can quickly lead to a downward spiraling mood.  I know available fresh food is at a premium, but the best choices possible right now will help everybody’s health and emotional well-being.

–Alone time is key.  If your kids are anything like mine and will barely let you go to the bathroom alone, then this can be a challenge.  Some parents can miraculously wake up a bit before their kids to squeeze in alone time.  Our kids wake whenever I do with almost no exceptions.  But sneaking away for a shower or a breath outside or a phone call can be sanity savers when they’re possible.

–Together time is also important.  Sometimes I feel jealous of parents who work away from home, imagining that they can devote their full attention to their kids when they are together in a way that I just feel I never do.  I know that isn’t true, but I do remind myself that I need to just go all in at certain points during the day and really BE THERE.  Not doing dishes or trying to get work done or trying to respond to a text or trying to see what’s going on in the world, and just really be present for Legos or dolls or board games or reading or whatever is going on.  It’s not only important to have that connectedness, but, for us anyway, it truly shifts the kids’ moods away from tantrums.

–Movement/exercise is also very important.  I know with gyms closing their doors this will have a huge impact on many people’s routines.  But nobody has banned walks or runs or hikes, as far as I know.  Also, simply dancing with your kids or playing tag in the front yard or balloon volleyball in the living room can all be ways to get your heart rate going.

–Limit screen time, but be flexible.  I know how tempting it can be, especially if you’re trying to work from home to just use the screens.  And, on the one hand, I say, Please, please try to find alternatives.  Kids are really good at making their own fun when you give them the chance and the right tools.  But, it is also a time to be flexible.  Try to pick shows or movies you feel good about and then let go a bit and realize your kids will be ok.  Talk about plots and conflicts or movies at dinner time.  Ask them what they learned on their favorite vlog.  Have them write fan fiction or act out a scene.  Too much screen time can be dangerous.  But, making it work in a way that you can all feel ok about, isn’t a horrible thing during this time.

 

The list could probably go on and on as to what “key” things make a sane and happy day.  (I haven’t even mentioned “social interaction” (whatever that is right now) and doing “the things that bring you joy” and all those…)  But, the good news, in my experience, is that once I start to do even one of these things fairly well, the other areas usually have a way of magically falling into place.  Not always, but often enough that I can trust it.

 

The Leprechauns

I first heard about the leprechauns when I was helping in a first grade classroom years ago.  Those little mischievous guys and gals would sneak into the classroom at recess and lunch and mess with everything.  They’d put all the chairs up on the desks or hang posters upside down.  It was all rather silly.  In fact, the students discovered many leprechaun tricks that we adults didn’t even know about.  They were on the lookout for anything out of the ordinary.

The leprechauns do visit our house every St. Patrick’s Day; we invited them.  They don’t get too elaborate, but the kids like their visit.  The leprechauns write in green on mirrors and tubs and toilets (they find that green whiteboard markers work well).  Mostly, they just leave tiny green footprints.  Sometimes they write in their special leprechaun handwriting things like, “You can’t catch me!”  All very silly.

Here are some other simple things the leprechauns do when we aren’t looking:  (They have to be pretty obvious since our house usually looks pretty chaotic in its normal state…)

-put chairs backwards or on the table

-hang wall pictures or fridge pictures upside down

-put green (food coloring) in the toilets

-put our silverware upside down in the drawer

-hang calendars upside down

-put the pillows at the foot of the bed

-switch toothbrushes around

And so on.  But what I love about our leprechauns is that they always clean everything up when they finally leave late St. Patrick’s Day night.

Kid Lit Women

Kid Lit Women is:

“A podcast of interviews and essays focusing on women’s and gender issues, including non-binary and gender fluidity, in the children’s literature community and all its intersectionality!”

There were 100 episodes posted from July 2018 to June 2019, and while I’m unsure if there are any plans to add more, I’m so excited to visit all these recorded podcasts.  I am a huge Grace Lin fan, but I only just recently discovered this podcast, so I have many, many more episodes to enjoy.  I’m delighted to hear these issues being discussed, and when I realized episode 3 was a conversation between two of my favorite authors, Shannon Hale and Grace Lin, I almost couldn’t believe my ears!   I think Grace Lin is super rad for taking the initiative on this, and I love that so many authors stepped up to have this discussion.  Thank you all! (…she says, on the very off-chance any of these amazing people visit…)  =)

Run Like a Girl!

I’ve been listening to the KidLitWomen podcast, and it reminded me of this video commercial I had seen.  I tend to miss the viral videos, but I am SO grateful to have seen this one.  I cry every time.  And I LOVE that this notion of “like a girl” is being revisited, rethought, and embraced as something strong and powerful.

(When my friend and I separately asked our daughters to “run like a girl,” they both responded like the young girls in the video.  Huzzah!)

Our Tooth Fairy

Our tooth fairy made her first visit back in January.  For years, I had wondered what our family’s tooth fairy would be like and what she would leave in exchange for teeth.  I didn’t necessarily like the idea of money, as I’d heard the amounts get out of control and was afraid she might be out of the right amount on the night a tooth fell out.  I had heard of some tooth fairies leaving seeds, which I loved in theory, but didn’t see us doing much with at this point.  So, finally I realized our tooth fairy would be bringing beads.  She collected many fun and decorative beads to have on hand, and she also promised a fairy doll which the beads could be sewn onto.  (I’m sure beads could also be made into necklaces or sewn onto small doll pillows as well.)  Our fairy, Flora, left a bead and small fairy skirt her first visit.  Her next visit brought another bead and a tiny fairy wand.  She was going to continue like this, bringing things like wings, tiny slippers, etc, each time, but life became busy for sewing all these, and so she left the doll on her third visit.

Our tooth fairy writes in very tiny writing, and thanks to many questions left in notes by our daughter, she also has a very elaborate backstory.  She realizes that teeth like to pop out on trips and such, and so she always plans by writing some notes ahead of time and traveling with beads.  But were she to ever miss a tooth, I’m sure she would have a very understandable explanation the next night.