Last Tuesday morning, I watched a father drop off his daughter at our gates. She climbed out of the car slowly, backpack dragging, eyes still half-closed. “We left home at 5:45,” he told me. “She fell asleep twice on the highway.” The child was six years old.
That conversation stayed with me. Not because it was unusual – it wasn’t. For years, families in Al Kharj have made this calculation: wake children before dawn, drive over 100 kilometers round-trip to Riyadh, and return home after dark. The question we rarely ask is what this daily journey costs beyond fuel and time.
The Arithmetic of Distance
The numbers tell part of the story. An 80-kilometer drive to Riyadh and back means 160 kilometers daily. Over 180 school days, that’s 28,800 kilometers per year – roughly the distance from Al Kharj to New York and back three times. But parents already know this. What they feel but rarely quantify is the cumulative weight of those mornings.
A typical routine looks like this: alarm at 5:15, child dressed by 5:30, car by 5:45, school arrival at 7:00. The day hasn’t started yet, but the child has already spent 90 minutes preparing for it. Every weekday. For nine months. Some families do this for years.
What Commutes Take From Childhood
Time.
A two-hour daily commute means ten hours weekly spent in transit. That’s time not spent reading together at the kitchen table, not spent playing in the courtyard as afternoon light softens, not spent helping younger siblings with puzzles or simply sitting together after school without rushing to the next thing. Childhood is finite. These hours don’t return.
Energy follows time. A child who wakes at 5:15 a.m. needs to sleep by 7:30 p.m. to get adequate rest. That leaves roughly 90 minutes between homework, dinner, and bedtime for everything else – play, conversation, rest, family connection. Many evenings, there’s no time left for drawing, no space for questions about why the moon changes shape, no room for the unstructured moments where children simply exist without agenda.
Parents feel the toll differently. They describe it as a low hum of exhaustion that never quite lifts. Irritability by Thursday. A sense of running a race that has no finish line. Some mention feeling disconnected from their children, as if the car ride has become their primary shared experience rather than meals, stories, or simply being present together without highways between them.
When Distance Makes Sense, and When It Doesn’t
I want to be clear: sometimes distance is necessary. If a child needs specialized programs unavailable locally, if a particular school offers something genuinely irreplaceable, the commute might be worth it. Educational decisions are complex; there’s no single right answer for every family.
But if two schools offer similar academic quality, similar values, similar care – then proximity becomes the deciding factor. Not because local is automatically better, but because proximity returns hours to families. Hours for homework without panic. Hours for play without scheduling it like a business meeting. Hours for the ordinary rhythms that make childhood feel less like a logistics operation and more like a childhood.
The Quiet Transformation
Families who’ve made the shift describe small changes that accumulate. Mornings feel different – still busy, but not frantic. Children arrive at school awake rather than groggy. Afternoon pickups become chances to hear about the day while details are still fresh, not hours later after energy has drained. Bedtime routines have breathing room; stories get read instead of rushed.
One mother told me her daughter started drawing again in the evenings. “She used to love it,” she said. “Then for two years, the colored pencils just sat there. Now she’s drawing again. That’s how I knew we made the right decision.”
These aren’t dramatic transformations. No one suddenly becomes a different family. But the texture of daily life shifts. There’s margin. Space. The possibility of spontaneity instead of everything requiring advance planning and military-grade coordination.
What Proximity Actually Means
A school fifteen minutes from home doesn’t just save fuel costs or reduce kilometers on the odometer. It returns time to its rightful owners – children and their families. It allows mornings to begin at 6:30 instead of 5:15. It permits children to sleep the hours their bodies actually need rather than the hours the highway schedule permits.
It means homework can happen at a reasonable hour instead of being squeezed between arrival home and dinner. It means if a child is genuinely unwell, parents don’t face the calculation of whether the illness is “bad enough” to justify missing school after that much driving. It means weekend activities aren’t constantly weighed against recovery time from five exhausting weekday commutes.
Proximity also changes the relationship between school and home. When school is local, parent-teacher conversations happen more naturally. Campus events don’t require major logistics. Children can make friends with classmates who live nearby, rather than scattered across Riyadh neighborhoods they’ll never visit. The school becomes part of the community rather than a distant destination.
The Question We Should Ask
Every family must decide what matters most. For some, a particular school’s specific program justifies the journey. That’s legitimate; context matters. But perhaps we should ask more often: if the academic quality is comparable, if the care is genuine, if the values align – why are we spending ten hours weekly in transit?
Not every compromise is worth making. Not every convenience is trivial. Sometimes the most important educational decision isn’t about curriculum frameworks or assessment methods. Sometimes it’s about whether a six-year-old should be waking before dawn.
The children in our classrooms arrive awake. Their parents aren’t calculating whether they can fit grocery shopping into the narrow window between pickup and bedtime. Families eat dinner together without racing against the clock. These sound like small things. Maybe they are. But small things, accumulated over years, shape childhoods. They shape how children remember these years, how families remember what it felt like to live through them.
Distance isn’t always a problem. But when it is, when it takes more than it gives, recognizing that matters. Because childhood happens in the margins – the unscheduled moments, the unhurried conversations, the evenings with space to breathe. And those moments don’t happen on highways.






