Monday, June 16, 2008

Summer Vacation

School's out or is getting out and that means happy kids and parents who have to figure out what to do with them for summer vacation. For parents who work outside the home that means finding daycare or a sitter for the summer. It means researching what are the best options for your child and finding a place or a person that will provide for all the needs of your child. Daycare can mean a place where all kinds of neat activities and events are planned, where your child will go on field trips, the cost is all inclusive and every day will be full. It means you go home with tired kids and a clean house.

However, for the parent who stays home with their children in the summer, it means you plan the activities and events, fork over money every day for those activities or have bored children and your spouse comes home to a not so clean house. Because invariably one of the kids will have found a way no matter how busy you keep them, to undo anything you may have done. They have lots of time to think of new and exciting ways to entertain themselves. It starts out calmly enough and you have big plans to make this a great summer where you bond with your children and spend time doing neat new things.

It’s summer vacation. Your spouse comes home and you try to explain. Everyone was up and dressed and had breakfast, faces were washed and you had big plans for the day. But first you had to clean up those breakfast dishes; while you were at it you decided to go ahead and start the timer to clean the oven and throw a load of clothes in the washer. The kids were to play while you got everything ready for the wonderful crafts you had planned for them. The phone rang and the insurance company had questions that were only going to take a minute, you explain to your husband. After thirty minutes on the phone you looked around for the kids. You found one in the backyard playing which you figured was relatively safe. When you walked outside you discovered the beautiful flowers you had planted and the brown patches of dirt that had given way to green grass had now become a makeshift battle ground with foxholes dug in various places. Not just small holes but huge wide and deep holes that a small child could hide in. After all he couldn’t be seen by the enemy, which had actually now become you. You were proud of that back yard. Your spouse crosses his arms and waits impatiently and waves his hand to indicate that you need to move this story along.

So you tell him that you instructed your child to fill in the holes. Then it was time to think about lunch, so you made sandwiches with cute little cut out faces, you put the dirt covered child in the tub for a bath, you called them all to eat only to discover wet carpet and water overflowing in the tub with a variety of beautiful colors of boats floating on top and cascading to the floor. Boats can’t float on dry land the children said. You spent the next hour mopping up water, washing and drying all of the towels from the bathroom that you used, feeding the children in between and getting everyone down for a nap. You cleaned the dishes from lunch, the kitchen and finished cleaning the oven, then got the kids up from their naps and to have a snack. Your husband has sat down by now and put his head in his hands. But it isn't over; you continue and tell him that when you got the children up one had gum in her hair and one had taken water to bed with him and spilled it in the bed. You spent two hours getting the gum out of the hair and washing the bedding.

In the mean time the crafts haven’t been touched, it was time to start dinner, the kids were bored and you were exhausted and that was just the first day of summer vacation.

“Tomorrow.” You say. “I’m putting the kids in daycare and I'm going to look for a job, because this is no vacation.”

Have a great day in the Lord and a great summer vacation.

3 comments:

kristi said...

Was that story just an example or was it past experience?

kristi said...

I told several in our class about your blog post...the subject of kids being out for the summer came up in our class ;o)

Cathy Jones said...

Summer vaation was a combination of past experience and examples I've heard from others. Life with four kids can be very entertaining.