成人快手

This article was first published in October 2019

by Louise Pentland, Author, Blogger, Vlogger

Louise with Darcy and Pearl

Writing has been a lifelong passion of mine so to be writing an article for the 成人快手 is very exciting - thank you for having me here!

I am a 34 year old mum of two, juggling a busy career (writing female-led fiction, vlogging and generally pouring my heart out online).

My daughter Darcy is eight years old and is in that very cheeky (but very funny) stage and my daughter Pearl is one and as you can imagine, keeps me on my toes!

By now our little ones are well in to the first term and whether you were crying bittersweet tears for your child starting their first day or having a silent tear of joy for having some semblance of routine again, we鈥檙e now in the swing of it and finding our feet with the new set up.

I thought I would share some of my tried and tested techniques for making it through the school year as smoothly and easily as possible.

Here we go!

Louise with Darcy and Pearl
Louise Pentland and her children

1. Fill the calendar

It鈥檚 not rocket science but this first tip will really lower your long-term stress levels - hurrah!

Set aside an hour at the start of the school year (it鈥檚 not too late to do it now) and diarise everything.

Sit down with the annual school calendar (you can usually find this on their website or you could ask the school to provide you one) and put EVERYTHING in your diary.

It might seem overboard noting down Sports Day in Autumn but trust me, it鈥檒l come round and you鈥檒l know it鈥檚 there so not only will you make sure you don鈥檛 book a trip, a dentist appointment or a work call, but you鈥檒l actually have a bit of notice to sort out the right colour tee-shirt (our school has house colours) and feel smug that you鈥檙e so organised!

Louise Pentland and her children

2. Join the group chat

I avoided this for a long time because I struggle with group chats (I can feel a bit overwhelmed with how many voices are in there and how many pings about lost trainers and bake sales come through) but trust me, it鈥檚 worth it .

If you don鈥檛 get involved, what will you do about your own child鈥檚 lost trainers and what will you bring to the bake sale? It鈥檚 better the devil you know for this one! I missed out on a lot of social events by not being easy to contact and now I鈥檓 back in the groups, it鈥檚 good to know what鈥檚 going on, even if I do have to look in the school bag for people鈥檚 lost property again, ha!

Louise Pentland and her child reading in bed

3. Prep everything the night before

I know, you鈥檝e heard this a million times, - you have every intention of doing it but then you鈥檙e tired and you say, 鈥業鈥檒l just sort it in the morning鈥, and that鈥檚 a recipe for a morning of pressure and panic, on top of trying to get out and to school in time. I get it, the struggle is real.

To combat this, I prep everything before I am tired. When Darcy comes in, I take ten minutes to go through the school bag and sort. Then I refill the lunchbox and pop in the fridge. If I do all this before dinner/bath/bedtime, I鈥檝e nailed it.

If you work outside the home, you can still ace it! If your child is old enough, teach them how to do a lot of these tasks (like emptying the crumbs from the lunchbox or taking out any letters/forms from the school bag. This will lighten your load when you get in from a long day and still help you keep on top of things. Now go forth and prep!

Louise Pentland and her child reading in bed

4. Take a photo or copy of all the logins

A quick win here 鈥

Each year Darcy comes home with her login details for the Maths app they use and other such things. Each year we lose them and I have to email in for another.

Simple solution 鈥 make a copy of the details and keep them somewhere obvious or take a snap on your phone and voila - nobody鈥檚 crying over fractions homework!

Louise Pentland and daughter

5. Ask short questions

Have you ever picked up your darling child, asked what they did today and been answered with, 鈥榥othing鈥? I have and after a few more attempts with, 鈥楧id you learn anything鈥, 鈥榥o鈥; 鈥榃hat topics did you do?鈥, 鈥楧on鈥檛 know'; it can feel pretty soul destroying when your child doesn鈥檛 seem to want to share their day with you.

A friend of mine once pointed out that those are Big Questions for little children. They did so much, learnt so much and tackled so many topics during the day that it鈥檚 really hard to begin explaining them all.

A better option is to ask Small Questions. These allow them to start rolling with the conversation and then you鈥檒l find they are able to open up about a lot more of the day. Some Small Questions that I tend to ask are 鈥

鈥楥an you tell me something that made you laugh today?鈥

鈥榃hat was hard today?鈥

鈥榃hat did you make today?鈥

You can tailor these to your child鈥檚 age and to the things you know they鈥檝e been up to and in no time at all they鈥檒l be sharing so much more with the Small Questions than they can with the Big.

Louise Pentland and daughter

There you are, my tried and tested top tips!

A couple that only just didn鈥檛 make the list were having a backup pair of school shoes in the next size up in your cupboard so that if the first are ruined or lost (it鈥檚 amazing how often this happens to us - how do they lose so many shoes?!), you鈥檙e covered. Also, have a few easily adaptable dress up items in the wardrobe for those last minute costume days (like a cape, a funny hat or a white jacket 鈥 all really customisable and work for a lot of things!).

I hope that by the time Pearl goes to school I鈥檒l have this down to a fine art but if having children has taught me anything, it鈥檚 that parenthood is a journey and all you can really do is try your best and enjoy the ride!

If you鈥檇 like to hear more from me I upload daily on Instagram (@LouisePentland) or weekly on YouTube (Louise Pentland). Let me know how you get on!

Good luck! x

Pearl walking outside
Louise with her daughters
Pearl and Darcy

Know someone who has recently started school or will be beginning next September? Check out the rest of which has lots of ways to help prepare children for different aspects of school life 鈥 both practically and emotionally.

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