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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be dreading the summer holidays

160 replies

EmptyBoxesss · 29/06/2025 18:35

I have a son I adore, more than anything, but I never know what to do with him. I really struggle with entertaining him! He’s 6. I take him swimming and to the park and on his bike and we do the library and crafting, but there are 12 hours in a day for 7 weeks! It’s so long I run out of ideas and I find it so hard. We will visit my family for a week but that’s 6 other weeks of the two of us and it’s so overwhelming. I’ll try and book in a couple of okay dates but I haven’t got links with many of the other mums to be honest, I’m trying to change this.

Is it just me? How do people keep their kids busy every day?

OP posts:
chatgptsbestmate · 29/06/2025 18:37

Holiday club?

EmptyBoxesss · 29/06/2025 18:38

chatgptsbestmate · 29/06/2025 18:37

Holiday club?

I can’t afford it

OP posts:
chatgptsbestmate · 29/06/2025 18:38

I think making connections with other mums so that you can organise lots of play dates, is a good idea

chatgptsbestmate · 29/06/2025 18:39

EmptyBoxesss · 29/06/2025 18:38

I can’t afford it

I can understand that.

Set up a replica holiday club at home and invite his friends over ?

SunnySideDeepDown · 29/06/2025 18:40

Yep, it’s a LONG time! You’re not alone in loving their kids but dreading the holidays!

Figgygal · 29/06/2025 18:41

Do you not work op?
I know that brings its own challenges in holidays but to be able to be that available in the holidays suggests you don't or maybe you work school/term time.

NapoleonsToe · 29/06/2025 18:45

Lots of professional football clubs run free events over the summer. Google Kelloggs football camps to find them.

LadyKenya · 29/06/2025 18:45

Let him entertain himself. Get him some comics, so he can practise his reading, look at the pictures, colouring in books etc.

Birch101 · 29/06/2025 18:46

Send him to clubs

Gymnastics, coding, swimming camps, forest schools, trampoling etc

Pick a project that will interest him and make goals around it, e.g. a project book on dinosaurs, reaearch at local library, use different art media to make pages for different types of dinosaurs, go to the natural history museum

Do a weekly cooking/baking class and then go and donate some of the goodies to a care home or local fete?

EmptyBoxesss · 29/06/2025 18:47

Figgygal · 29/06/2025 18:41

Do you not work op?
I know that brings its own challenges in holidays but to be able to be that available in the holidays suggests you don't or maybe you work school/term time.

I work reduced, flexible hours so I will work after bed time during school holidays, so the days are just the two of us

OP posts:
LlynTegid · 29/06/2025 18:47

I don't blame you at all for feeling as you do.

The alternative of shorter summer holidays would mean much higher prices for those able to go away, and you could be having holidays with less daylight or worse weather.

Swonderful · 29/06/2025 18:50

Does he cope OK with being bored? I remember days of watching TV, reading, playing with toys etc.

Tryingtohelp12 · 29/06/2025 18:54

Lots of walks, beaches (we live near one not sure if you do), play dates with friends, day to day jobs and also letting him entertain himself (harder with one maybe? Mine just play together for hours with not much input needed aside from occasional refereeing!)

i try and think of ways to do things with purpose e.g. go to the woods for a walk, but plan to do some den building while there. Go to beach and collect shells as part of our day out, and the next day do a craft with the shells/stones.

join all the local facebook groups, there will be free activities happening, post on class what’s app asking people to share ideas they may have some interesting ideas!

some local place round here do summer passes eg trampoline parks let you go for one hour everyday for a really reasonable price so there might be something similar local to you.

good luck and enjoy! 🙂

concreteschoolyard · 29/06/2025 18:57

For my 6yo who hates clubs and sports, I am planning to make a menu of options for her to choose from each day. These will include:
Library
Playpark
Splash park
Paddle in river & feed ducks
Arts & crafts (The Works do great value kits)
Baking (plus walk to shop to buy ingredients)
Cinema
Playdate with a friend

Most of these don’t cost much to do and can be spun out for a couple of hours. We will also try and do some reading and maths each day. She’ll also have to come along to my boring supermarket trips, sort the washing out with me etc. All the stuff I had to do as a child!

CostelloJones · 29/06/2025 18:57

I don’t know where you are/if your son would enjoy this sort of thing but we have found museums a lifesaver over the holidays. So many of them are free and a bus journey is cheap and takes up a nice chunk of time to get there (for some reason my kids love the bus!?) Many often out interesting kids activities on in the holidays too

CostelloJones · 29/06/2025 18:59

And look at the silver lining: weeks of NO SCHOOL RUN. Outweighs all the cons in my eyes 🤣

MyUmberSeal · 29/06/2025 19:00

I don’t think you have to spend every hour of every day entertaining him. He’s a little boy, I’m sure he has toys, Im sure he has an imagination, and I’m definitely sure you need to cut yourself some slack and know that children should be kept safe but they don’t need to be saved from boredom.

Stanislas · 29/06/2025 19:04

Tent in the garden . Look on Freecycle for things that might help.Have a routine like a school timetable with break times . Definitely cooking and picnics.

NuffSaidSam · 29/06/2025 19:04

It's hard when you have an only.

Make a plan is my advice. It's much easier when you don't have to think of things on the fly. I'd usually go with something like two days a week and all day trip out and then other three days a trip out in the morning and chill at home in the afternoon. I would try and see other people on at lest two of those days (ideally kids, but even other adults would help I think).

Try and organise as many opportunities for him to see other kids as possible. Playdates, group trips out, low cost camps, free/low cost activities.

Check out all the special summer events in your area. There'll often be free activity days and stuff on in the holidays.

Don't be afraid to tell him to entertain himself for periods of time on your chill out afternoons. You don't need to be entertaining him for every waking hour.

Theroadt · 29/06/2025 19:08

Figgygal · 29/06/2025 18:41

Do you not work op?
I know that brings its own challenges in holidays but to be able to be that available in the holidays suggests you don't or maybe you work school/term time.

Why is it relevant? She already says she is with her child all thd time in the holidays

PumpkinPie2016 · 29/06/2025 19:08

My son is a bit older now, but things we used to do at that age (and some we still do!) As I teach so always have the hols off;

Library weekly visits (ours had colouring stuff as well) look at books there and borrow one to take home.

Park

Local walks on bridal paths - take a picnic, just what you would have at home so no extra cost.

Cheap baking at home

Lego building

Swimming at leisure centre

Look in your area for free activities over summer.

Any free museums? I am in Greater Manchester so we did MOSI and the GMP museum- both free and we went on the train.

Might sound weird but tesco (or other) cafe - relatively cheap for a lunch and means mess elsewhere.

Have a friend round to play.

Depends what he is into toy wise but my son used to love taking his toy cars outside - make a little circuit using sticks/stones etc. Taking teddies outside for a picnic, dinosaurs/figures etc.

It may help you to make a bit of a plan for each week? Then it won't feel so daunting.

PumpkinPie2016 · 29/06/2025 19:10

Meant to add, there's also nothing wrong with some days/part days just at home playing with toys.

School is tiring and he will need down time too.

SkibidiSigma · 29/06/2025 19:12

A lot of local councils run cheap sports and crafts activities for kids. When my older 2 were young we used them a lot, we did all sorts - trampolining, dance, football, roller skating etc. is there anything like that in your area?

I'm similar now in that I have one 6 year old and don't really know many mum's (other 2 kids are grown up), but I'm lucky in that I work 3 days a week so it's not constant and DS gets a variety of people to see when I'm at work

allofusare · 29/06/2025 19:12

A lot of parents on here claim to adore them, why wouldn’t you want to spend all day every day with your child, no rush to get up and out on the school run (I always wonder if I’m the only mum who feels like nine o clock is practically midday!) but I’m with you.

I do a lot with mine; more than many people I know and I’ve already started to fill up August with activities BUT it’s relentless and exhausting (and expensive.) So yes I shall be glad when September rolls around!

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