family-home-fun

Ideas to do with younger kids:

  1. Have a marathon story time. Pile together on the couch or on the bed and snuggle into an adventure — or a lot of little adventures.
  2. Grab the roll of art paper and let your kids draw a table-length network of roads for their Matchbox cars, complete with buildings, trees, or whatever — or let them draw a house that their dolls can sit in. Take a few minutes to get down and draw with them.
  3. Put a “do nothing” day on the calendar. Purchase fun snacks and veg doing stuff together all day: playing games, watching movies, going to the park — whatever a fun day looks like for your family.
  4. Let ‘em camp in the backyard. (Or in the living room.) Make s’mores over the grill (or in the microwave) for an authentic-feeling (and -tasting!) snack.
  5. Make a heap of creative greeting cards to send to people you love. As a bonus, take pictures of each other (maybe as you make the cards!), print them, and stick them in the envelope with your works of art.
  6. Pick a Scripture verse or passage you think they can handle, and memorize it together. Decide on a reward if you can both do it!
  7. Let them write, direct, costume, sell tickets for, and otherwise plan a play in the backyard. If they need starters, let them act out a favorite storybook or Bible story. Your role: the audience.
  8. Have a playdate with a friend your kid has been missing. Or, challenge your son or daughter to invite someone new over who might be feeling lonely.
  9. Get your heads together to plan one act of service this week — maybe as a surprise.
  10. Have an ice cream sundae night.
  11. Help them choose one thing they’d love to do this week (like sleep in, or have a friend over) and one project to tackle that they’ve been putting off (like cleaning the closet). Then develop a plan for both.
  12. Take them out to lunch or breakfast, just the two of you.
  13. Fly kites together.
  14. Make sock puppets, and then put on a show. Or do the old-fashioned draw-on-your-hand and turn your hand into a puppet. Duck behind the couch and use the top of the couch as the stage. Have them act out a story they already know from a movie or something you’ve seen or read recently.
  15. Sing old camp songs and teach the kids how to sing them.

Ideas to do with older kids:

  1. Pick out a book you both want to read this week so that you can talk about it together.
  2. Learn something new together. Maybe they’d like to learn how to sew, put together a model, bake bread, carve something, make candles, build something (bird feeder?), scrapbook — or even take a one-time class with you somewhere around town.
  3. Put a “do nothing” day on the calendar. Purchase fun snacks and veg doing stuff together all day: playing games, watching movies, going to the park — whatever a fun day looks like for your family.
  4. Pick a room to repaint and/or, within a budget, redecorate together.
  5. Go local. Find something you haven’t done before!
  6. Pick a night to plan and make a meal together.
  7. Have a game night, but make it a tournament with a prize everyone wants: a day with no chores, a gift certificate to the movies, or a “date” with a family member of his or her choice.
  8. Go on a spontaneous road trip, just the two of you!
  9. Get your heads together to plan one act of service this week — maybe as a surprise.
  10. Let them have friends over to make their own personal pizzas in cake pans and watch a good movie.
  11. Take them out for lunch or coffee, just the two of you.
  12. Go to a park with a picnic and maybe a good book. Relax and chat – no agenda!
  13. Drive down a country road with Vivaldi’s Four Seasons blaring out your rolled-down windows.
  14. In honor of St. Patrick’s Day being in March, challenge each other to speak with an Irish accent!
  15. Backyard surprise dinner picnic.

Okay, your turn: What are you doing this spring? And do you have any ideas for the rest of us?