I remember my childhood summers fondly. Days in which I
would leave the house after a still sleepy, leisurely breakfast of cereal that
I made myself and come home only for lunch in the middle of a day spent
entirely outdoors. We did not live in town and, thus, playmates were limited to
siblings and the cousins who lived down the road. Our backyard became the
playground in which our imaginations would run wild- turning those few acres
into magical forests, the tiny creek into a raging river and our trusty dog,
Rex, played the many roles of horse, monster and any other creature that we
children did not want to play. By the dreaded end of the three months of summer
break we were tan from our hours in the sun, full of the memories of a thousand
magical moments and bonded to our siblings in a way that winter’s forced
hibernation never seemed to connect us.
Today, I live on the same acreage that I did as a child. My
children have the blessing of having the same grassy patches to scratch their
bare feet as they run through it, the same creek to stomp through and catch
tadpoles, and not the same dog, but their very own energetic pup to imagine
away the days with.
However this is not the same world as twenty, thirty years
ago. There are screens everywhere in the house to demand attention- televisions
with hundreds of channels, computers with access to a thousand entertaining
sites, tablets stocked with apps. There is also no longer the expectation of a
stretch of an unscheduled three months. Their school friends tell competitive
stories of elaborate vacations, spending time weekly traveling to all of the
local attractions- various parks, the zoo, the science center, all the festivals,
which come breezing through town. On the very first day of school they will be
asked to list their favorite activities of the summer and no longer are the
lists filled with things like finding old barn wood to make a bridge over a
creek or a day spent in imaginative play with their siblings.
Our children have become used to being entertained every
minute. In our house, we have limits on electronics and kick the kids outside
on a nice day just as our parents did before us. Yet, the new cry of childhood
seems to be “I’m bored”, which is certainly not a new childhood expression but
now has seemed to have morphed to not really just mean “I’m bored”, but “Please
find something to entertain me, as I no longer can entertain myself even for a short period of time”.
We have made a choice in this household to do what is no
longer expected of children in many households. We refuse to spend our days
scheduling our children’s every hour. There will be many days with no plans at
all, when they will be sent outside with only the grass and the trees and their
own imaginations to entertain them.
The screens will be turned off and our children will find
that times of quiet can be just as entertaining, or even more so, than brightly
colored graphics and cloying music leaping off of a screen. They will bond with
their brother and sister, making memories that they will replay in their minds
well into adulthood. Even though sunscreen will be religiously applied, they
will leave summer with a glow on their skin, which will also sport the bruises
that scrapes that come from climbing trees, stomping through creeks and chasing
the dog the field.
This summer I will be giving my children the greatest gift
of all- boredom. For inside boredom is the gift of getting to know your own
mind, of finding solace and joy in nature and in the realization that the
greatest gifts are experiences, not things. And, maybe- just maybe, on that
first day of school list my children will write at the very top of the list one
of the simple joys found in a summer’s day spend outdoors, no screen in site.