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Five End-of-Summer Family Bonding Activities

Today’s kids are extremely busy. In addition to school and homework, many are involved in extracurricular activities that keep them busy from sunrise to sunset.

Some families have an activity every day of the week, with different practices and games or weekend events. If your child is overly busy, they may complain about headaches and tummy aches, feel tired or agitated, and you may notice a drop in grades.

As parents navigate all this, they also understand the importance of family bonding time on their children’s overall mental and emotional health. Studies show quality time with parents, and a healthy relationship can impact a child’s success.

Family time and a slower pace are reasons parents look forward to summer break from school. However, summer can go by so quickly that you feel like you didn’t have enough quality time with your child before back-to-school shopping takes over and classes resume.

Fortunately, there are some end-of-summer family bonding activities that you can participate in to make sure they make the most of summer, even if it is the end of the season or school has already resumed.

 Create Theme Nights

Your family might already have a pizza night, but what are some end-of-summer nights you can create as a family to remember the warm, slow days of summer? For example, you might want to host a family movie night where you use a projector and sheet to create an outdoor movie theater experience in your backyard.

Other theme night ideas include:

  • A trip to the drive-in.
  • Trying food from another location, such as Korean or Mexican.
  • Even family game night.

Turn off the television for a while and spend quality one-on-one face-to-face time.

Volunteer Together

Find a cause you can support as a family and spend one day a month or a week volunteering. This could be anything from helping out at the local homeless shelter to visiting seniors at your local nursing home. What do you care about as a group? How can you make a difference in that area?

Some other things you can do as a family to support causes is to sponsor a child from another country who needs support to finish an education. You can all work together to raise the monthly fees to cover the sponsorship cost. 

One summer, you might go on a trip to meet the sponsored child. There are many organizations out there offering the opportunity to do this. 

Research where the money goes and which one would be the best fit for your family.

Take an End-of-Summer Camping Trip

Start an annual end-of-summer camping trip for the entire family. This is an excellent time to include extended families, such as grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. 

This will allow you to create a tradition and build memories you otherwise wouldn’t have. Everything about the trip can create bonding opportunities, even giving each family member a role, such as:

  • Setting up the tent
  • Gathering firewood
  • Fetching water

Start some camping trip traditions, such as telling funny stories around a campfire, roasting s’mores every night after dinner, and taking a nature walk. The key is to have a regular set of activities the family participates in and can look forward to every August.

Produce a Movie Together

One way to create a bonding moment and memory is to write, film, and edit a movie together. With today’s smartphones, you can easily capture and edit these moments. An inexpensive digital video camera will also allow you to create a film.

To make this even more exciting for the children, plan a red carpet event to debut your annual summer movie. Have family and friends dress up and arrive for the movie’s showing. 

Not only will your children remember the event, but you’ll have the movie to view for years to come.

Over time, you will begin to have a nice collection of movies. Eventually, you may move away from filming them to mainly watching past movies.

Make a Time Capsule

What are some of your favorite memories of this summer? Have everyone in the family gather items that serve as a reminder. For example, if you vacationed on the beach and collected seashells, put a few of your favorites in the time capsule.

Everyone can write a few notes about their favorite summer memories to include as well. Use prompts such as:

  • The funniest thing that happened
  • A skill that was learned
  • Saddest moments

Even the youngest children can draw a picture that answers these prompts and add it to the time capsule.

Although time capsules are traditionally buried and excavated years later, there is no hard and fast rule here. You can certainly keep the time capsule in a closet and pull it out at the beginning of the following summer to read through the memories and see if there is anything new you want to accomplish that wasn’t done the previous year. 

Or you can bury the time capsule and dig it up in thirty years. Either way works as a good bonding experience.

Treasure These Final Days

Even though summer might be winding down, you still have time to make precious memories that will allow your family to strengthen the ties that bind. These five ideas will get you started and hopefully spark a few new ideas for you. 

Don’t overlook local outings to build memories, such as a trip to the state park or a local children’s museum. Quality time is hard to find in today’s hectic world, but with some planning and determination, you can make the most of every last minute of summer. 

Remember that even small moments can have a significant impact that stays in everyone’s hearts for years to come.

Do you have a favorite end-of-summer activity? Please share it in the Comments. Thank you.

About the author

About the author

Author Jennifer Landis is a healthy living blogger posting on parenting, fitness, and food on her excellent blog, Mindfulness Mama. Originally from New Joisey 😛 she now calls Pennslyvania home, where she is a proud wife and mama. Jennifer describes herself as a tea-drinking, yoga-loving, distance running, nutrition nut, writer, and journalist. She loves making new friends.

 

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