Beds Are For Jumping and Other Everyday Sensory Activities

Beds are for jumping in our house! Chalk it up as just one more of my own rules that I now break on a daily basis in an effort to provide a sensory enriched environment for my son to sneak in everyday sensory activities.

Since discovering my son’s sensory differences we have made MANY changes like this to our home routines, rules and just about everything else in the house.

Learn some simple secrets about how to fit in everyday sensory activities to meet your child’s sensory diet needs and keep your child balanced — just from using the household furniture!

Today, sensory mom Wendy from Not a Cookie-Cutter Mom, who is a former Early Intervention supervisor and teacher, is sharing her insight.

Want more sensory ideas? Be sure to check out our other fun sensory activities for kids!

Beds Are For Jumping Sensory Activity - everyday sensory activities

This post is part of the Sensory Summer series, hosted by Mommy Evolution in partnership with The Sensory Spectrum.

I encourage you to follow us all summer and visit our Sensory Summer landing page to get the latest sensory fun for your kiddos! This post contains affiliate links.

Be sure to learn more about Sensory Processing Disorder and my parenting tips on how to support your child with sensory challenges.

Everyday Sensory Activities

One quirk about me is that I am not a very creative person.

I also tend to err on the side of “keep things simple.”

I also tend to be very cheap.

I am also a HUGE proponent of integrating sensory activities into our daily lives because, well, I have a kid who certainly needs it.

Rather than letting myself get caught up in creating sensory activities, I allow the activities to create themselves naturally with the things we have on hand which are available at any given moment. 

The sensory activities around here may seem a little ho-hum BUT they work!

Some of the most powerful sensory activities are bouncing, swinging, and inverting the head, which were all listed above.

All of these require little to no set-up/clean-up, they came at no extra cost, and often times my children can do them on their own.

That in itself is a HUGE bonus for me because I feel children are more empowered when they listen to their bodies and take action accordingly on their own.  

Jumping on the Bed - Sensory Benefits and everyday sensory activities

Considering my previously mentioned traits, so here are my SUPER EASY, child-directed, very cheap, rule-breaking, powerhouse sensory activities we do here at home:

Jump on the Furniture

Couches and beds are made for jumping. Jumping provides great vestibular and proprioceptive input, supports attention to tasks and promotes calmness, organization, and self-regulation.

Use the Pillows for Sensory Diet

Pillows are made for pillow fights, wrestling pads, huge jumping forts and any other activity the kids can think of.

These sensory activities are great for deep pressure and rough play without harming other people.

Take the Cushions Off the Couch

Couch cushions are made to be taken off and put back on the couch.

You can stack them up to make high mountains or line the cushions up to create a padded walkway.

What a terrific way to get in the heavy work of lifting, shifting and stacking, which is great for proprioceptive needs.

Sensory Outlet – Swing Indoors

Find a place to hang a swing indoors.

A swing, which is now in the garage, is a permanent fixture and has resulted in all cars being parked outside… we live in Oregon where it rains more often than not, so in order to provide daily access to swinging we sacrificed parking our cars in the garage in exchange for less meltdowns.

This way, our kiddo gets vestibular input any time he wants.

And trust me, he uses it most every day.

Hand Over the Office Chair

Did you ever notice how the office chair doubles as a spinning machine?

Kids love spinning in office chairs because it provides such wonderful vestibular input.

Use the Couch as Gymnastics Equipment

The couch makes a great apparatus for being upside down, which gives kids vestibular input, regulates and organizes, and helps decrease meltdowns.

Get Dirty

Dirt and puddles are for playing in at any given moment.

Who cares if the clothes get ruined?

Purchase clothes used or on clearance and consider them disposable.

After all, a happy kid is much more fun than a well-dressed cranky kid!

Get on the Floor

Don’t be afraid to get down on the floor and wrestle.

Dads are awesome at this! And in our house, wrestling with Daddy is a daily occurrence.

Plus, wrestling hits all the proprioceptive, vestibular and tactile needs.

Meeting Sensory Diet

It’s not uncommon for my son to come up to me and say “my body needs to swing” or “I need to hang upside down.”

We have talked about sensory differences and listening to our bodies to know what we each need.

Sometimes I am the one who needs a sensory retreat, and I help make that clear.

We all have sensory differences, some more than others. 

The more we each take charge of those differences, the less we will be consumed by them.

SENSORY SUMMER SERIES

This post is part of the Sensory Summer series, hosted by Mommy Evolution in partnership with The Sensory Spectrum.

I encourage you to follow us all summer and visit our Sensory Summer landing page to get the latest sensory fun for your kiddos!

About Wendy

Wendy is a former Early Intervention supervisor and teacher who recently chose to stay at home with my three children. She recently started this blogging journey to share the ideas and techniques she learned from years of working with children of all different skill and ability levels.

For more great sensory resources and a secret resource she has not yet announced publicly visit her at Not a Cookie-Cutter Mom.

5 Comments

  1. Jumping on the couch cushions is a favorite here! I think having a swing indoors would be awesome, if only we had the room!

  2. I love to let my kids do all these things. When they ask to jump on the bed or build forts/obstacle courses with the pillows, I say yes, and they get crazy excited about it!

  3. I LOVE LOVE LOVE this list!!

    I hang a baby hammock to a jolly jumper door hang thing, in place of the baby seat, so my daughter can swing, sit, wobble, lay, curl up etc in it. It works well.

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