Blech! We are smack dab in the middle of the “mid-winter blahs” in our house. Maybe you’re experiencing it, too: the utter lack of motivation to do absolutely anything. Normally we are a pretty productive and active family…but not so right now.
Between the snow and the gray-colored days and the getting up in the morning while it’s still dark (oh, and the sun setting well before the supper hour!), my get up and go….well, it’s gone somewhere I can’t find it and I am left wondering if it will ever return. I am so tired in the mornings, I need my carafe…er..mug of coffee just to get going. And popping vitamin D like it’s candy doesn’t seem to be helping me even a tiny bit!
These mid-winter blahs hit us all eventually it seems–kids too! My 7-year-old son, Dexter, loves swimming, taekwondo and I think he even loves piano, too, (most days) but right now he doesn’t want to do any of it! When I say, “It’s time for taekwondo”, he says, “I’m not going.” When I say, “It’s time for swimming”, he says, “I’m not going.” When I say, “It’s time to practice piano”, he says, “I’m not doing it”. He tells me he wants to quit it all…all the time. Sometimes, between my own tiredness and lack of motivation and his stubbornness, I think I will lose my mind! And then I realize, it’s just that time of year. Did you know that January and February have the highest drop-out rates for piano lessons? Many start the year off with so much zeal, but then the busy days of Christmas arrive and tire us out and the gloomy days of January arrive and tire us out and that does it! The students quit and the piano is put up for sale! (Incidentally, if you are in the market for a piano, now is the time to buy! Seriously!)
So, how do we stay motivated? Well, I find for myself that this is a great time of year to introduce some incentives (especially for my music students). As an adult, I enjoy a little incentive every now and then–the promise of a London Fog from Second Cup can get me through almost anything and even my dear friends will entice me to workout with them with the promise of coffee and good conversation after the physical torture–so it stands to reason that our children just might like that, too!
We are definitely the house of experimental incentives. Some work brilliantly, some not so well. For this month, we have told our children to put a sticker on the calendar for each day they practice. If they each have 25 stickers on the calendar by the end of the month, we will do a special activity as a family. What will that activity be? I have no idea!! But considering it’s almost the end of January, we should probably figure that out! Most likely we will go together as a family and see Gulliver’s Travels at the “cheap theater”….but we could also do a skating outing or swimming….as long as it’s a family activity we all enjoy, it will be a hit! (Actually, not revealing the reward ahead of time has made it much more exciting for them.) We try as much as possible to make the rewards time spent together…rather than monetary. But I have to confess, we have done a monetary reward (we are human after all).
During the summer we spend a good part of July camping in the Okanagen. It’s safe to say that no practicing gets done during this time. So, when we got back in August this year we thought a little incentive might be in order to get back into the swing of things. My hubby taped a twenty-dollar bill to the bathroom mirror and told our kids that if they did double piano practice every day for the month of August with no nagging from us and no whining from them, they would each get 20 bucks at the end of the month. If they forgot and missed a day or two, they had the option to restart from that day for another 30 days. Did it work? It sure did…well…kind of. After a couple of days, Dexter thought the best way to do double piano practice, would be to practice double the speed…not exactly a quality practice. When I reminded him he needed to slow down and do a careful practice he said, “But, Mum, then it will take me twice as long!” Um, yes, that’s kind of the idea. Well, they stuck it out and at the end of the month they each earned their 20 bucks, but when we offered them the same deal for September they simultaneously said, “No thanks!” So, I guess we learned that paying kids to practice is maybe not the ideal way to go. Yes, it accomplished what we needed it to: to get back into the routine of practice and keep up those valuable skills over the summer, so I wouldn’t call it a failure. But, it didn’t teach them to practice just for the enjoyment of playing the piano. Although, I guess when it really comes down to it, that’s kind of the nature of incentives they are a temporary fix. That’s not to say they don’t have value, but it’s good to be creative with them and use them only occasionally.
And be prepared that there are some times when they won’t work at all. There have been occasions when I have offered incentives to my youngest to no avail. So then, I must confess, I have resorted to trickery. A couple of months ago, no mount of cajoling (um,I mean encouragement) or bribery would get Dexter up to the piano to do his practice, so I sat down and started playing the right hand of one of his pieces. I tried to make it sound like so much fun and asked to come play a duet with me. He suspiciously came over and slid onto the bench, then finally he tried the left hand. We giggled a bit over our duet and tried it again, then we traded places, dancing around the piano bench as we switched places. It was fun….we tried it with his other pieces and even his scales and before we knew it we’d played everything a few times each. Suddenly he looked at me and said, “You tricked me!! We just did my piano practice!” With wide-eyed innocence I replied, “What? How did that happen?” Yes, he’s onto me but I’ll never admit it!
Through it all, I think the best thing we can do to motivate is just to be there and cheer them on. Let them know how important it is to you and how proud you are of them. My husband is always telling the kids how he wishes he could play the piano and is always asking for impromptu recitals at home. If you are a single parent, recruit a favorite aunt or grandparents to do this for you. Take them to the Kids’ Symphony or other musical performances to inspire them. My daughter and I just recently had tea at Rutherford House and she was allowed to play on Mrs. Rutherford’s piano from 1880….in fact she was asked to by one of the staff members as it helps to keep the piano in tune. Then after she played for a while, the staff peeked in the door and said they could hardly believe that was her playing and that they should hire her. What a great boost to her self-esteem and inspiration to keep plugging (or plunking) away, and it made me think: maybe this would be a good reward incentive….reward a great month of practicing with a special family tea at Rutherford House and a little mini performance in the parlor! The possibilities are endless….
So I do confess I use it all to try to keep this household inspired: incentives, trickery, encouragement. It’s all trial and error at times after all I am only human and I certainly don’t claim to be a motivational expert. Although, I guess, if you are a friend, parent, sibling or teacher then maybe that title just goes with the job description.