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In Praise of Doing Nothing: Why Kids Need a Slow Summer

Author(s):
Pallavi Poojari Mohindra, The Nurturant

Every May, without fail, someone asks:
โ€œWill you run a summer camp this year?โ€

And every May, my answer is the same:
No.
Not because I lack โ€œbusiness senseโ€โ€”
But because it doesnโ€™t make developmental sense.

As educators, we donโ€™t follow seasonal trends.
We follow the science of the developing brain.
And neuroscience is clear:

After months of emotional growth, exploration, problem-solving, and social regulation, the brain needs rest.
It needs sleep. Slowness. Boredom. Unstructured play.
These arenโ€™t luxuriesโ€”they are critical for consolidation, for learning to settle, for connections to deepen.

Because the brain doesnโ€™t grow only in moments of input.
It grows exponentially in the pause.
In the quiet.
In the boredom that births imagination.

Children need:
Slow mornings
Lazy afternoons
The time to be bored, to get frustrated, to figure it out
Time to water plants, visit family, climb trees, eat slow meals, laugh at silly jokes, and do absolutely nothing

In a world that tells them to be โ€œbusyโ€ or at least appear busy,
Letโ€™s teach them how to be.

Because if we want to raise thinkers, creators, emotionally secure and self-directed childrenโ€”
We need to offer them something that the world has forgotten how to give:
Down time. Boredom. Stillness. Space.

This is not a guilt trip for working parents. I was (and am) one too.
This is simply an invitation to consider that doing less may actually give your child more.

Hereโ€™s what I did with my daughters when they were preschoolers, while I worked full-time:

We travelledโ€”to farms, hikes, forest trails. Not fancy, just real.

while I worked, they joined whatever the conveninece of a condo living offered – swimming, jhoola parks, skating in the stilt parking โ€” not to win medals, but to move, breathe, and be

They tried horse ridingโ€”not for sport, but to learn care and love for animals.

They dabbled in musicโ€”not to perform, but to play and tinker with sound.

We read. Again and again and again. And we put every book through the lens of philosophy.

And they played. All day long. Indoors. Outdoors. In lift lobbies. Was the house a noisy mess? I was willing to overlook that because while I worked, the joy of listening to their laughter in the background and being interrupted on every zoom call is priceless and I know I will soon miss these summers.

Today, they ride competitively. They sing and dance and play multiple instrumentsโ€”many of them self-taught. They are voracious readers. Self taught artists and gymnasts. And boy do they negotiate – with such calm and articulated thoughts as though they were born to be professional negotiators in a high risk kidnapping situation.

Why am I sharing all this with you?

So when the world offers you FOMO,
I want to offer you HOPE.

That sooner is not always better.
That faster doesnโ€™t mean deeper.
That doing โ€œnothingโ€ might actually be everything.

Letโ€™s raise children who know how to be.
Because that, too, is a skillโ€”
And the most radical one we can gift them.

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