"Wondering what "a day in the life" of other families is like..." ....Our schedule changes very much by the season. We're currently on break (we take all of december off to make room for holiday schtuff) and school year round. (homeschool).
FALL & SPRING here's day in the life with our 8yo...
Kiddo tends to get up around 730ish and makes himself breakfast, takes a shower, does his chores, and hops on the xBox or computer until school starts at around 10am.
I get up about an hour after kiddo at 830ish and struggle to find a reason for living (I am NOT a morning person, I CAN get up early, but I prefer not to). Once I decide to live another day I tend to be quite happy... but that first half an hour or so is an exercise in stubbornly clinging to life against overwhelming odds. I take my laptop or a book with me and go sit on the porch drinking coke or espresso and half pay attention to what I'm reading/writing and half just enjoy the colors of the morning (if it's not doing the seattle drizzle... seriously... who enjoys drizzle? Fish maybe). Then it's showering, dressing, makeup, my chores. Then I make brunch and kiddo and I start school. We take a break about an hour later to get out of the house. We'll go swimming, or take the dog to the beach (cold, windy, seattle beach) or go for a hike, hit up the bookstore by way of a climbing wall... etc. Something at least halfway active. We come home to a hot lunch and a school movie (pick a documentary, any documentary... and BOY oh BOY are the "new" ones better than blockbusters from when I was a kid), or do storytime around bites of food. After lunch we finish up school by around 2pm and then kiddo and I studiously avoid each other for about half an hour. Afternoons are for playing, studying, meeting up with friends for playdates (HS friends... awayschool friends don't get out of school until 4pm so we usually don't see them except during activities or on weekends). Afternoons give way to evening classes (sports, art, music, etc.). After evening class/activities we come home and have dinner and curl up with a movie or book or game. Dad is sometimes home for dinner, sometimes not. About 50/50. Bathtime, bedtime.
Winter and spring are dictated by snowboarding and swimming. We get up super early (gag, 5am is just indecent, especially as it doesn't even become "dawn" in our area until 730/8am) in the winter and head up the mountain 4 or 5 days a week. We just bring our books and do school during hot chocolate breaks. I use winter quarter as my 1 quarter I can miss from university and not have it effect my standing (most take summer quarter).
Summer is swimming and sailing. Lessons in the morning half day of school with lunch and swimming and playing all afternoon and evening until around 10pm (sunset). Lots of BBQs.
All year
My son spends 1 afternoon a week with his Nana. We average about 1 playdate a week tops (we'd do more, but I just don't keep my house clean enough). We meet up with friends for dinner about once a week. Once every 2 weeks we have "parents night out" through kiddo's gymnastics place, and once a month he spends the night at nana's house...so 3 times a month we have date night. During public school breaks we enroll kiddo up for camps (right now he's in drama camp putting on "Lightening Thieves" adapted from Rick Riodan's book, last break it was "The Wizard of Oz", break before that was a Gymnastics Camp... and I use that as my personal time or time for lesson planning.
In as far as activites we do a LOT more than most families, because we have a LOT more time... and we get HS discounts... typically we pay about half or less of what "after school" lessons cost. Here's my rule of thumb: If I don't want to go on a consistant basis... we drop the activity. I've found that my OWN balance means needing 3 nights a week where I'm "home". Where we don't have to go anywhere in the afternoon/evening. ALSO that I have certain days I'm willing to drive a lot, and certain days I'm not. Ditto there are certain TIMES of day I'm willing to drive, and certain times I'm not. (rush hour and I do not meet up regularly).
The hardest thing for me is that there are SO MANY amazing, wonderful things to DO. We just can't do them all. Not at once. I need "sanity time" and "sanity checks". I need lazy afternoons and do nothing mornings on a regular basis. At least 3 afternoons a week and at least 1 morning. I REALLY look forward to school break camps (so does kiddo), but I also love having him home. For me... it's all about finding the right balance so that being at home isn't boring and leaving home is exciting (instead of "oh gawd... do we HAVE to leave?).