36 Solo-Parenting Ideas for Expat Moms (Bad Weather Edition)

36 Solo-Parenting Ideas for Expat Moms (Bad Weather Edition)

36 Solo-Parenting Ideas for Expat Moms (Bad Weather Edition)

Are you an Expat Mom who often finds herself solo-parenting, while your partner is working long working hours or traveling?

This is an all too common scenario in many expat families, leaving the woman in charge of the kids most of the time: throughout their daily lives, during the holidays, or maybe due to recent developments like schools closing due to the pandemic.

Back home, you may have had a larger support system, made up of grandparents, siblings and close friends with children to have playdates with. But this just might not (yet) be the case at your current destination.

I personally can come up with plans and excursions when the weather is nice… but where I live, it rains a lot. The weather is not always on a solo-parent’s side: depending on where you’re based, it may be too cold, too hot, too polluted…. etc to go outside. If your kids are anything like mine, spending a whole weekend indoors will end with everyone being exhausted, annoyed and in a bad mood!

So I have collected 36 incredible tips that I’ve received from other solo-parenting expat moms and I want to share them with you so that you can be fully prepared for your next solo-parenting experience!

solo-parenting

Things to do with your kids abroad (indoors):

  1. Visit an indoor playground

  2. Go to the swimming pool 

  3. Play Bakery: bake cakes, muffins, cookies and then decorate them 

  4. Move furniture to build a home gym and play gym class

  5. Play card or board games 

  6. Go to a shopping mall

  7. Visit a car dealership and look at cars

  8. Allocate cushions on the floor and jump around 

  9. Build a cave (with help of tables, chairs, drying racks, cushions, blankets. Then put in a torch, books or audiobooks and snacks for them to play in it 

  10. Theater performance: make Flyers and tickets and then perform

  11. Read books or invent stories 

  12. Games like: „I spy with my little eye…“, guessing people etc

  13. Drawing, painting and coloring 

  14. Make slime or salt dough for modeling (2 cups of flour, 1 cup of water and 1 cup of salt)

  15. Have a picnic on the floor

  16. Take a wool knuckle, pass it around and create a big spider web. Then have the kids climb through (without touching the web)  

  17. Put on a raincoat and boots and jump in muddy puddles

  18. Build a Lego- / Playmobil- / Brio world

  19.  Play dress up, paint their faces

  20. Crafts (cutting, gluing, coloring….) Then put the works of art in a frame – and you have a great gift for grandma! 

  21. Visit a museum

  22. Movie afternoon: have the kids help you make a Pizza or Popcorn, then watch a family movie with them 

  23. Go to the movie theater (you can limit screen time tomorrow)

  24. Paint stones 

  25. Organize the toys together – they may find some they thought they’d lost or haven’t played with in a while. The toys they don’t use anymore could be given to charity. 

  26. Make seasonal decor and decorate the house (e.g. paint Easter eggs, make Christmas wreaths, paper flowers etc)  

  27. Turn the hallway into a bowling aisle: play bowling with empty bottles or Tupperware 

  28.  Form figures, food, animals etc with Play Doh – and then sell them in your ‘little shop’

  29.  Carry out age-appropriate experiments (e.g. what floats / what sinks in water? A baking soda / vinegar volcano…) 

  30. Sensory Play with shaving foam – you can even add food coloring!

  31. Play party games: Pass the parcle, sleeping lion, a treasure hunt around your home, musical statues etc

  32. Out of large and empty (moving) boxes, create a playhouse – cut out windows and doors, then paint it. 

  33. Body Painting

And don’t forget: 

34. Grant yourself small breaks in between to drink your cup of coffee or even one glass of wine 😉 

35. Get a babysitter to recharge your batteries for a few hours

36. Treat yourself afterwards! (yes, we know reward systems are inherently flawed, but I think there’s nothing wrong with getting yourself a little gift and thank yourself for being such a #superwoman 😉 because as Solo-Parenting Expat Moms, we really, REALLY are! 😀 )

 

Further Resources for Solo-Parenting Expat Moms

Listen to my Podcast Episodes:

 

I’d like to thank all of the Expat Moms who have contributed to this list again!

What would you add? Let us know in the comments below!

Know someone who would benefit from this list? Then please share this blog post with them!

 

PS: Sometimes the weight on your shoulder can get a bit much…. I feel you. Let’s talk about it in a complimentary consultation I’m offering – click below to book your call:

trust in your future abroad

trust in your future abroad

The Expat Identity Crisis (and why it might be a great thing!)

The Expat Identity Crisis (and why it might be a great thing!)

Are you experiencing an Expat Identity Crisis?

One thing many people struggle with when they move abroad is their perceived loss or change in identity. Have you experienced that too?

You knew exactly who you were (and who you were not) when you lived back home. There were clues all over the place that sent out a message to yourself and to others about who you were: because of the family you grew up in, the school and university you went to, the people you hung out with, the neighborhood you lived in, the profession you had and so forth. All of these things made up your identity, your self-image, they provided the context and that gave you a great deal security. 

But when you moved abroad, all of a sudden these things lost meaning. Now, no-one knows the schools and places you went to, you may no longer continue in your line of work and due to the language barrier and lack of social connections, you may have gone from ‘social extrovert’ to a seemingly ‘quiet loner’.

Having an identity crisis and feeling misunderstood, lost and insecure seems like the logical consequence. But what if I told you that this could actually be a good thing?

Reframing the Expat Identity

Our “identity” and self-image can also hold us back from doing many things we would actually really love to do. The reason for this is the following: throughout our childhood and youth we learnt that in order to belong to and be loved by others, we had to abide by certain rules. We had to disown certain parts of ourselves that were considered “too much” or “weird” and adapt.

Belonging is one of the strongest needs of the human species and as children our survival depends on it! So we go to great lengths in order to feel like we belong and to safeguard our role and our place.

We learnt that if we were too nerdy, daddy would prefer to play with our sister. If we were too loud, we’d be ‘too much’ for others. If we were too sensitive, our friends would make fun of us. And if we pursued our passion and became an artist, our family would be disappointed. 

So we put layer over layer on top of our true, authentic selves. We make important life choices, not according to what our heart says, but to what our loved ones, society or culture says – and we don’t even notice! It’s a sacrifice we think we need to make, in order to be safe and loved.

Our self-image is self constructed

What we call our identity, is actually an extension of our ego. It’s a self image we’ve developed and cling to, because we thought it allows us to belong.

There comes a point in everyone’s life where keeping up at least certain parts this self-constructed identity, becomes draining. You may feel like throwing in the towel but by now, it’s difficult to do that: so many things and people depend on you to be the way they’re used to, and for you to keep doing the things they’re used to.

Also, by the time that voice inside you gets louder and points out what’s not working for you, you’ve probably already distanced yourself so much from that innate wisdom of who you are, why you’re here, what your unique gifts are and what truly brings you joy. This can make it hard to find alternatives.

And that’s precisely why leaving your old identity behind like many expats do, can be a great way to discover what else is there for you to discover about yourself. To peal back those layers and see who you are at your core.

expat identity crisis

How to discover your authentic self abroad

Tool no. 1: Re-thinking your true identity
If someone were to take everything away from you: your gender, nationality, race, profession, material things etc: what would be left of you? Now, keep it hypothetical please – don’t think about how shocked you’d be if someone robbed you of that; just try and identify who you would be if it weren’t for all of those things? That will give you great insight into your essence.

Tool no. 2: Who would you be and what would you do if no one was watching?
Really, think about it, because the answers might surprise you! I, for instance would be singing and dancing much more, possibly on a stage. My clients have told me things like: I’d finally start that Blog or Vlog without fearing any negative backlash. Or: I’d stop collaborating with this association because I don’t enjoy it at all! Or: I’d finally have the courage to start my own business even though no one believes I have what it takes. 

What comes up for you? Can you incorporate these things into your daily life abroad?

Tool no. 3: What did you dream of doing when you were younger?
Can you add elements of these activities and dreams into your daily life for more joy?

Tool no. 4: Check in with your body
What activities, what opinions, what people, what decisions make you feel light, and what others make you feel heavy? Pay some attention to that in the coming days. Go with your gut feeling, that’s important.
You may not always be able to opt for the things that make you feel light but at least knowing about them will be very revealing to you!

As a next step, you can try and add more of the “makes me feel light” things and people into your life and reduce more of the “makes me feel heavy and drained” things.

Conclusion

If you struggle with your loss/change of identity abroad; if you miss the person you used to be back home; if you feel misunderstood and not seen abroad…

-> Allow for the possibility that your identity is not fixed and final. There might be much more to YOU, this beautifully unique YOU, that you have yet to discover. There may be things out there for you that you haven’t considered doing but that would make you so happy. There may be ways for you to share your unique gifts with the world (which you didn’t know you had) and that you didn’t have the chance to before you moved. 

So let me ask you: What is one thing you’d love to do with your life if no one was watching?

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For more content specifically designed to help Expat Women THRIVE, listen to The Empowered Expat Woman Podcast!


Do you resonate with the Expat Identity Crisis?

If you’d like to take uncovering your authentic self to the next level, book a complimentary consultation with me today!

trust in your future abroad

trust in your future abroad