Extra-Curricular Activities Can Pose Extra Stress on Families
November 19, 2009 by Administrator
Filed under Family Time
By: Jody Johnston Pawel.

It is a common issue…we want our daughters to spend their non-school time wisely, but they often watch more TV than then we would prefer. In spite of activities to structure their time we have to look at other ways to keep kids busy so they are not caught in the TV trap.
Parents are wise to limit their daughter’s TV watching to a couple of hours each day. It’s a difficult limit to stick to, but if parents can establish this habit early on, it’s easier. Selective TV watching prevents children (and adults) from turning into couch potatoes with withered brain cells.
Many parents turn to activities to keep their daughters busy. They often live in their cars and have forgotten what their spouse looks like. Parents fall into the over-scheduling trap for variety of reasons. The first motive is the healthiest and the last is the most damaging:
• Parents want their children to use their time wisely, but accidentally take on too much.
• Children want to do everything. Parents don’t want to disappoint them or hear endless nagging, so they let them.
• Parents keep children busy so they won’t get into trouble, instead of teaching children how to make planned responsible decisions to be “good” children.
• Some parents want their children to experience every opportunity – all at once, which is overwhelming.
• Now and then, parents expect their children to be super-achievers, whatever the cost.
To determine whether your family’s schedule needs to be scaled back, ask, “Does my daughter want to do all these activities or do I want them to?” When parents register their daughters for activities without asking child first, it’s a huge red flag that parents need to back off. If children want to do everything, think “moderation” and remember that responsible parents do not give children everything they want.
The reality is that when anyone adds too many kettles to the fire, they are bound to get burned out. Over-scheduling often affects children’s schoolwork, quality family time and increases the stress levels of the girls and parents involved. The long term result of over-scheduling is a generation of stressed-out workaholics who don’t know how to set priorities, say “no,” focus on one task, and have balance in their lives. What? WE are part of a generation of stressed-out workaholics?
Then we need to break the cycle. Our daughters need “down time” as much as we do. They need time to play and just be a kid – even teens. Will they get bored? Probably. But they need to learn how to use their imaginations to handle boredom creatively and responsibly.
To regain control of your family life and reduce scheduling stress, establish a policy of two activities per season. Have your daughter rotate seasonal activities or reach one goal, then strive for another. Also, families need time together when they aren’t eating, driving or discussing schedules and life-changing issues. Weekly family time is one activity worth scheduling.
Setting limits on activities teaches children important skills and values that benefit them as adults. They learn how to budget their time and responsibilities and to handle disappointment. These children know how to set priorities and concentrate on doing their best at a few chosen activities. Rarely are activities “once in a lifetime” opportunities. Usually, there is a time and season for every activity. We and our children just need to pace ourselves, instead of racing to do everything all at once.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Jody Johnston Pawel is a Licensed Social Worker, Certified Family Life Educator, second-generation parent educator, founder of The Family Network, and President of Parents Toolshop Consulting. She is the author of 100+ parent education resources, including her award-winning book, The Parent’s Toolshop. For 25+ years, Jody has trained parents and family professionals through her dynamic workshops and interviews with the media worldwide, including Parents and Working Mother magazines, and the Ident-a-Kid television series. Jody currently serves as the online parenting expert for Cox Ohio Publishing’s mom-to-mom websites and also serves on the Advisory Board of the National Effective Parenting Initiative.





















Good advice! We used the two-activity rule last year when my oldest was in kindergarten and wanted to sign up for every flier that landed in his backpack. Two honestly was a stretch, and that was with a half day of school. I’m seriously thinking of limiting him to one now that he’s in school longer and has more homework. I might consider one sport and one non-sport, though.
Okay -I agree about the time and running issue- I have 4 kids- my last one does not want to do any activities- no dancing, sports, karate- nothing- I feel that she is stuck in a rut- I want her to be out of the house a little bit- and all she does is say “I am bored”- so we have resorted to crafts, baking and games and movies- I hope this is a good way to go!