Football training prep
Forget the shin pads and the kid spends the whole hour on the sideline. That single rule puts real pressure on packing, and the visual schedule below lets the bag get sorted without anyone shouting the same item five times.
♀Girl preparing for football training
A girl in a blue football uniform is sitting and putting on a shin guard. A football and a football boot are next to her.
About this visual support
The kit list for soccer training is short, but every item is non-negotiable. No shin pads means no playing, no water means a headache at halftime, no boots means slipping for the first quarter. That turns preparation into a chain where every link must hold, while the window between school and departure is usually tight.
A visual schedule for the prep turns the kit list into a sequence the child can follow alone: change of clothes on, socks, shin pads, club shirt in the bag, boot bag, bottle filled, snack, keys. With the cards living near the hallway bench, no adult has to recite the list under pressure, and the child gets used to owning their own gear.
A concrete tip: keep one fixed bag spot by the front door and pack in reverse the night before — water bottle last, since it needs filling in the morning anyway. That cuts the chance of the whole bag being forgotten.
If you also want a timer that nudges when it is time to leave, you can try Routined free for 14 days.