My children visited a bookstore on the last day of summer. Their behavior was shocking.

We spent the last day of summer on the Connecticut shoreline. Among our choice of activities was a visit to our favorite bookstore, R.J. Julia in Madison, Connecticut.


image 


Elysha and I once spent hours in bookstores, but when our children entered our lives, that changed. We tried for a while to do some tag-team parenting.  One parent relaxes while the other stops the monsters from ripping every book off the shelf.


It wasn’t fun.


But something happened on that last day of summer. I brought the kids upstairs to the children’s section of the bookstore, and within a minute, with no intervention on my part, this happened:


image image


Not only did they plop themselves down and start reading, but they remained this way for a full 30 minutes.


Just imagine how much better it will be when they can actually read!


I probably couldn’t leave them unattended and descend to the adult section, but while my wife browsed below, I browsed the children’s section, which I sort of love anyway. I’ve written a few picture books that I am hoping to  eventually sell, and I missed out on these books as a child, so I still have lots of catching up to do. 


Even if this weren’t the case, this is a huge improvement over chasing them around, shushing them, and returning strewn books to the shelves.


This is good.


There is hope for the future.

 •  1 comment  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 16, 2014 00:54
Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Ken (last edited Sep 23, 2014 05:49AM) (new)

Ken Kugler I often see, in the children's room at the library the same thing. I have also seen children who can not read, making up stories that they think goes with the pictures to themselves and others.


back to top