Saturday, February 4, 2012

Mommy and Daddy Centers

I had light bulb moment a couple weeks back.  It occurred to me that all three of my girls work in centers during their school day.  Since they all obviously understand the concept, I figured there must be a good way to use a center format on the home front.  And it was in that moment that Mommy and Daddy Centers were born.

Each weekend, Alex and I have a 30 minute center which each of our three girls.  We meet with the girls individually; without phones, sisters, or any other distraction that has helped to develop the great multi-taskers that we are. 

It works like this - one girl is with Mommy while one girl is with Daddy.  The third girl is in the alone time center.  In one and a half hours, each child gets a solid 30 uninterrupted minutes of uninterrupted with each parent as well as quiet play time.

They LOVE it.  When we tell them to start thinking about what they want to do for their center, their eyes widen, smiles brighten and often we see some jumping up and down with the clapping of hands.  These centers could possibly be the most productive 1.5 hours in my week.  There is no stress, no confrontation, and no rush.  Just pure one on one enjoyment.  There is no doubt in my mind that my girls walk away from the centers with full buckets - tanked up with love!  It also is a time that fosters great conversations.  Whether we talk about Adeline's make believe world of Play-Doh sandwiches that talk (that was today for me) or I am encouraging Lila to try and create something that she is afraid will not turn out right, we are talking!  Please God, let the talking continue for years to come.

Today's centers looked like this. 


Savannah and I painted silhouette trees and she and Daddy enjoyed some Lego time.
Lila Grace and I played with Play-Doh (clearly, having your hair done before you start centers in not a requirement.) and after, Lila made Rice Crispy Treats with Daddy.

Finally, Adeline and I played Play-Doh (originally, it was going to be drawing together but after seeing Lila's creations spread across the table, Play-Doh became much more enticing.)  During her time with Daddy, she worked on perfecting her miles of track she laid in the basement during last week's Daddy Center.


After completing our centers, Alex and I are always in awe of how simple and EASY  it is to fill our kids with love and make them feel important.   In the past we have always hired a babysitter and taken a child out for some one on one time.  This involves money and a time window.  After doing centers at home, it is more than clear that the girls prefer one on one time in our house.  How often have I promised 30 minutes of uninterrupted play time with Barbies?  Uh, never - until last weekend rolled around.  These centers take 30 minutes a child, cost nothing and are so rewarding.

I hope that I don't look back on this post and ask myself, "Whatever happened to Mommy and Daddy Centers?"  I hope that my kids look back on their childhood and remember these times together.

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