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sammichez's avatar

I make space for it by letting my children be bored. With nothing to be preoccupied, they are forced to create something: a game, a make-believe story, a comic book, art, and the latest - play-doh slime (oh boy!) It cultivates their critical thinking abilities, too, and that cannot be taken for granted these days. I spent a lot of my childhood with not much to play with and not much to do (dial-up didn't exist yet and we didn't have a home computer until I was a teenager) so I got creative and used those things around me and made things…often a mess (an organized one!), to my father's chagrin…but that helped shape my creativity for the rest of my life. And I'm forever grateful becausemy creativity drives some aspect of my everyday life and I'm giving my kids space (and grace with all the messes) to let theirs do the same.

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Stephanie Dee Smith's avatar

Love this. I also take my grandchildren, particularly my 5 year granddaughter, to art museums, and show her pictures of art. She makes things everyday. Mixed media is her jam. After seeing Andy Warhol, she cut the label off of a soup can and taped it to a piece of paper, and hung it on her gallery wall. She was proud of it. And so was I. Again, she's 5.

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