The Bitter Truth: We Don’t Have Time for Play Dates

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Two toddlers playing together during a play date. Play Dates. 

Two words I have very mixed feelings about.

My older child is introverted like me. She loves school but plays alone much of the time. I’m not particularly concerned, given that I was the same and grew into a perfectly well-adjusted adult. However, her teachers have told my husband and me that we should be scheduling one-on-one play dates for her.

Ugh. Don’t get me wrong; I know her teachers mean well and have her best interests at heart.

But, if I’m being completely honest, we don’t have the time for play dates.  

First, there is the simple matter of scheduling.

I have another child, an almost three-year-old, who still naps like clockwork until around 4 p.m. daily. My first child stopped napping before she turned two, and if I’m being perfectly honest, I’m still bitter about it. My son is impossible (and destructive) if he does not nap. I’m not skipping his nap for a one-hour play date. And by the time he’s awake, everyone is making their way home for dinner, so the day is essentially over. During warmer weather, we had friends over to play in the yard while my son napped. But during these colder months, doing that isn’t an option.

Second, I work from home.

Every day, I’m scrambling to clock as many hours as possible. I often rely on our lazy late afternoons to get an extra hour of work while the kids watch television. If we leave for a play date (if anyone is even available), I’ve lost that time I desperately need to work. Most of the time, I have to prioritize deadlines, a simple reality of being a working parent.

Third, my daughter is a hot mess in the afternoons.

Yes, three years later, my kid, who stopped napping before age two, still has zero clue how to rest, let alone sleep, during daytime hours. That means if a friend is even available for a play date after 4 p.m., my daughter (the one I’m scheduling for) will likely be a complete mess the entire time. Why even bother?

Fourth, my kids are a package deal, and my son has to come along.

My kids are, for the most part, the best of friends. However, my daughter does NOT want her brother at her play dates. And to add insult to injury, my son is very social and charismatic, which has resulted in some of my daughter’s friends wanting to play with him instead. Try resolving that conflict. It’s a doozy.

Fifth, I don’t have many free afternoons available in the first place.

Between the kids’ activities and my mom being over to our house twice per week, that leaves only one or two weekdays to schedule anything. If we’re free on Wednesday, it’s not likely our friends will be available either. And I cannot justify taking my daughter to a play date when my mom is over because (a) she loves her Grammy, and that’s their special time, and (b) I’m supposed to be working at those times, as they are my only time with childcare (see above).

So you see, I feel like I’m in a Catch-22. We don’t have time for play dates, but my daughter apparently “needs” them to work on her social skills. Cue the mommy guilt for screwing up my kid since I’m unable to provide her with what she “needs.”

Did I have play dates as a child? Yes. But I’m an only child, and my mother didn’t work. I didn’t have a sibling to play with, and my mom was looking for activities to fill our day. Were play dates good for me? I’m sure they were. I was a shy and introverted kid, too. But that was the 80s when the pressure to be the “perfect” mom was not quite so heavy. Back then, sending your kid to preschool five days a week was more than enough. Nowadays, parents are expected to cram as much as possible into their children’s days to set their kids up for success, and (I’ll again be honest here) I just don’t buy it.

Of course, I want to do what is best for my child. Of course, of course, of course. But I am also juggling mightily every day so that my kids can have me at my best, and my best is when I am working.

Honestly, I’m overwhelmed by all of the “extra” things we parents are “supposed” to do for our kids.

My life at home with two small kids while simultaneously working from home and running a business with my husband is overwhelming enough. While I do agree that my child could benefit from more frequent one-on-one play dates, she (and her brother) are better off with a sane mommy than a frazzled one. Sometimes, taking that extra activity off of my plate is just what I need to get through the week. My kids are happy, healthy, and loved. I’d say we’re doing okay.

And so, if you’re reading this, and I’ve said, “Let’s have a play date,” but haven’t been able to follow through, now you know why. It’s not because we don’t want to or because we don’t like you. We do! We are just in the trenches at the moment and lack the time.

Perhaps twenty years from now, I’ll report back on whether my introverted child grew into a functioning adult despite her lack of play dates. My best guess is she’ll be killing it, and I’ll have worried for nothing.

What are your thoughts on play dates?

4 COMMENTS

    • Hi, Jill! Good suggestion. We’ve actually done that a lot. We also do a lot of activities for the kids on weekends (where they socialize a lot). And then they do special stuff with dad since he’s at the office all week. Scheduling is so hard!

  1. As a teacher, I don’t think I would have suggested that to a parent. Maybe ask the teacher, ” how are you encouraging her to work on social skills in the classroom?” ?

    • Katie, this made me laugh! Funny enough, one of the days I dropped her off last week, the teacher pulled me aside and told me she’s talking to her friends a lot. So either we’re doing a great job at home (or the teachers are actually doing something at school!).

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