Well, I’ve got a bit of a different perspective than the posters so far. Playing with your child doing an activity they enjoy is one very real way to fill their love tank. Just like my husband will help me with a project or I will play a game he likes, it’s all setting aside our own selfish interests and investing in another person.
Now, with that said, there are some things I’ve learned over the last few years.
1. The fewer children you have the more you’re called on to be playmate and friend extraordinaire, in addition to mommy, cook, and all the other jobs we’ve got.
2. The more children you have the more people each child has filling their love tank with this ‘play with you the way you want’ investing, so they usually seek out mommy less for this. I’ve got 6 children until the baby arrives in January and they all play with each other most of the time. More often I am the one asking to join in on their play, or inviting a single child to pick an activity for us to do together for a little while.
3. Relationships change. My 3-7 year olds seek me out less as the magic playmate to fill their tank. However my older child (age 10)is beginning to seek me out more, for more ‘big kid’ activities that her younger siblings aren’t quite up for.
4. Another way to really fill up this craving for mommy’s focus is to regularly include your child in your everyday activities, especially chores and cooking. When you’re the one inviting you get to set a bit more of the activity plans, you’re doing something you already needed to, like laundry, and your child feels special because you asked for them to join you. The more you do this the fuller that tank stays and they won’t need as much mommy playtime on their own terms (their activity pick).
Love it. Treasure it. Seek to enjoy it.