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Creating and making special
memories with your child is very important, especially for
your child’s development.
Special memories also help
build a relationship with your child that will last a
lifetime. Moms often do not have the money they would like
to spend to do things with their children.
With that in mind, I have
put together activities I used to do with my son (who is
now 17 and still remembers doing these activates with me).
Some activities are also from when I did babysitting at
home.
Inexpensive Activities You
Can Do With Your Child
Remember Air Hockey?
Some arcades still have Air
Hockey Games, which are cheaper to play than the new
video-interactive games, but they do not have a time out.
If you can find one, suggest that you can score the most
goals, and challenge your son or daughter to a game. If
you have a young child, make sure that you hit the puck so
that stops before the goal line---this will allow your
child to successfully defend his goal and hit it back
toward you.
The game can go on for a
very long time, and you can have a lot of fun with “near
misses” and “good saves” and “SCORE!” When my
son was an 8-year-old, I could make an air hockey game
that cost 50 cents last for an hour. You are probably
thinking, “My child will want to play the other games,
too!” I used to tell my son that after we play Air
Hockey that he could then play two games of his choice.
This worked well and I could get several hours of quality
time with my son for under $5.00.
Shaving Cream can be Fun!
Get a bottle of shaving
cream and spray shaving cream on the kitchen table or
other smooth surface (please test this first by putting a
little shaving cream on a corner of the table to make sure
it will not discolor the furniture!). You and your child
can draw in the foam or make a snowman, etc., out of the
foam for as long as the foam lasts.
Be sure to wear clothes
that can be tossed in the laundry for a quick rinse! After
the shaving cream starts to dissolve all you need to do a
wipe down the table for a quick clean up. I loved doing
this because there is no real mess; it leaves a pleasant
smell in your home (and believe it or not does a great job
cleaning your furniture). Your child will also think it is
so cool that you are allowing them to play with shaving
cream. It is almost as if you are letting them do
something mischievous.
Supplies List:
- Shaving Cream
- Wet cloth to wipe up
with
Paint Walk
Buy a roll of fax paper or
any cheap paper you can find in a roll, and a container of
washable finger paint. Dress your child in painting
clothes. Lay out unfolded sheets of newspaper just to be
safe and then roll out a very long strip of paper (about
10 feet or more if you like) on top of the newspaper.
Place a baking pan with paint in it at one end of the roll
of paper and a baking pan with water in it at the other.
Take off your child’s
shoes. Your child can then step in the paint and then the
walk or dance on the paper ending by stepping in the water
that the end of the roll of paper. Dry their feet. Tape
the paper on the wall and allow to dry.
These footprints are also
great Christmas gifts for Grandparents. I used to do this
at Christmas with the children for whom I babysat or in a
day care center where I worked so the children could give
them to their parents for a Christmas present. The
children were so amazed I let them step in paint that they
behaved very well. This fun activity works best on a hard
floor surface.
Supplies needed:
- A roll of fax paper or
any type of cheap paper on a roll.
- Washable finger-paint,
any color.
- Old clothes for your
child to wear.
- Tape to use to hang the
paper to dry
Painting Sheets
When the weather is nice go
to garage sales and buy a cheap white sheet that fits your
child’s bed. (New sheet or colored sheets will work,
just that garage sale sheets are cheaper.) Wash sheet and
then hang on the line. At a craft store buy paint that
will NOT wash out and is non-toxic. Dress your child in
painting clothes. Give your child a paintbrush and allow
him or her to paint on the sheet freely. After the sheet
has dried, rewash and dry it. The child will love having
sheets they painted themselves to sleep on at night. And
Mom, you can paint, too!
Years from now your child
will remember the day he or she painted sheets with Mommy
(and here’s a sentimental idea: save the painted sheets
for when your child has his or her first child, include
the painted sheet in a shower gift for the mother-to-be!)
A few tips:
- Do not allow the child
to paint heavily on the sheet or it will be scratchy
after it is washed.
- When rewashing the sheet
let them soak in fabric softener to help soften the
sheet.
Different uses for the
painted sheets:
- If you do not like the
idea of the child sleeping on a painted sheet, you can
hang the sheet over a table for a playhouse. Mark on
the sheet what each side of the sheet will be in terms
of front, back, side, side, and top. Then lay the
sheet out and let the child paint doors, windows,
flowerbeds, etc., to make a playhouse cover (or a
fort, or fire station, or barn, or a fairy princess
castle). Then when the child wants a playhouse simply
set up the table and cover with the sheet. Remember it
does not matter if the flowers look like flowers. All
that matters is what the child sees flowers where the
glob of paint is.
Supplies needed:
- Sheet to fit your
child’s bed or over table depending on how you
choose to use it.
- Paint that will NOT wash
out and is non-toxic.
- Paint brush.
Hopscotch
There is always the lost
art of hopscotch! With some simple sidewalk chalk you can
spend the day at a park or at home teaching your child the
fun of a hop, skip, and a jump. But watch out because one
day when I did this in front of the apartments I lived in
and half the Mothers on my street ended up playing—we
all giggled like little girls and WE ended up having fun,
too!
Supplies needed:
- Sidewalk chalk and a
sidewalk to hop and have fun on
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About
The Author
Kimberly
Hargis owns and operates Mom’s Break
PMS. Printables Madness Syndrome n. 1 : a
chronic condition characterized by an
uncontrollable urge to find Free
Printables on the Internet: sometimes
known as PMS. Please visit http://www.MomsBreak.com.
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Copyright 2004 All rights reserved. |
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