Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to leave aside vacations and special outings (e.g., pro sports games and theater), b/c it sounds like OP is looking more for day-to-day suggestions:
church -- kids don't go every Sunday, but often enough, and they do service projects -- if nothing else, it makes for interesting conversation
Sunday dinner -- nice meal with cloth napkins, candles, dessert and prayer
card games and board games -- Scrabble, Sequence, Ticket to Ride
sports -- tennis, bike rides ("Who wants to go get ice cream?")
TV -- major sports events (baseball playoffs, dog show, March Madness); series -- The Office, Blackish, Friday Night Lights
NYT crossword puzzle -- I'm an early riser, so I start it in the morning and then leave it on the counter; kids and DH fill in what they can later
cooking and farmers market
walking the dogs
Do you &/or DH do the service projects with them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dinner most nights, shooting baskets in the driveway, occasional outings to the batting cages or a climbing wall, Friday Pizza and a movie, games of Uno, Not Parent Approved, etc (quick hands of a card game, basically).
Are your teens really young? By 15 most wouldn’t do this stuff as a family unit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to leave aside vacations and special outings (e.g., pro sports games and theater), b/c it sounds like OP is looking more for day-to-day suggestions:
church -- kids don't go every Sunday, but often enough, and they do service projects -- if nothing else, it makes for interesting conversation
Sunday dinner -- nice meal with cloth napkins, candles, dessert and prayer
card games and board games -- Scrabble, Sequence, Ticket to Ride
sports -- tennis, bike rides ("Who wants to go get ice cream?")
TV -- major sports events (baseball playoffs, dog show, March Madness); series -- The Office, Blackish, Friday Night Lights
NYT crossword puzzle -- I'm an early riser, so I start it in the morning and then leave it on the counter; kids and DH fill in what they can later
cooking and farmers market
walking the dogs
Do you &/or DH do the service projects with them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dinner most nights, shooting baskets in the driveway, occasional outings to the batting cages or a climbing wall, Friday Pizza and a movie, games of Uno, Not Parent Approved, etc (quick hands of a card game, basically).
Are your teens really young? By 15 most wouldn’t do this stuff as a family unit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to leave aside vacations and special outings (e.g., pro sports games and theater), b/c it sounds like OP is looking more for day-to-day suggestions:
church -- kids don't go every Sunday, but often enough, and they do service projects -- if nothing else, it makes for interesting conversation
Sunday dinner -- nice meal with cloth napkins, candles, dessert and prayer
card games and board games -- Scrabble, Sequence, Ticket to Ride
sports -- tennis, bike rides ("Who wants to go get ice cream?")
TV -- major sports events (baseball playoffs, dog show, March Madness); series -- The Office, Blackish, Friday Night Lights
NYT crossword puzzle -- I'm an early riser, so I start it in the morning and then leave it on the counter; kids and DH fill in what they can later
cooking and farmers market
walking the dogs
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to leave aside vacations and special outings (e.g., pro sports games and theater), b/c it sounds like OP is looking more for day-to-day suggestions:
church -- kids don't go every Sunday, but often enough, and they do service projects -- if nothing else, it makes for interesting conversation
Sunday dinner -- nice meal with cloth napkins, candles, dessert and prayer
card games and board games -- Scrabble, Sequence, Ticket to Ride
sports -- tennis, bike rides ("Who wants to go get ice cream?")
TV -- major sports events (baseball playoffs, dog show, March Madness); series -- The Office, Blackish, Friday Night Lights
NYT crossword puzzle -- I'm an early riser, so I start it in the morning and then leave it on the counter; kids and DH fill in what they can later
Do you &/or DH do the service projects with them?
cooking and farmers market
walking the dogs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dinner most nights, shooting baskets in the driveway, occasional outings to the batting cages or a climbing wall, Friday Pizza and a movie, games of Uno, Not Parent Approved, etc (quick hands of a card game, basically).
Are your teens really young? By 15 most wouldn’t do this stuff as a family unit.
I'm the PP, ours does, happily. And yes he attends social events, sleepovers, hangs out with friends, etc. Again, not perfect parents by FAR, but these aren't hard.
Ok but I’m trying to picture. The whole family goes to the batting cages? Opposite gender siblings? And the whole family goes to the climbing wall? I guess I’m trying to understand as we do a lot with our kids but just not the whole family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dinner most nights, shooting baskets in the driveway, occasional outings to the batting cages or a climbing wall, Friday Pizza and a movie, games of Uno, Not Parent Approved, etc (quick hands of a card game, basically).
Are your teens really young? By 15 most wouldn’t do this stuff as a family unit.
I'm the PP, ours does, happily. And yes he attends social events, sleepovers, hangs out with friends, etc. Again, not perfect parents by FAR, but these aren't hard.
Ok but I’m trying to picture. The whole family goes to the batting cages? Opposite gender siblings? And the whole family goes to the climbing wall? I guess I’m trying to understand as we do a lot with our kids but just not the whole family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dinner most nights, shooting baskets in the driveway, occasional outings to the batting cages or a climbing wall, Friday Pizza and a movie, games of Uno, Not Parent Approved, etc (quick hands of a card game, basically).
Are your teens really young? By 15 most wouldn’t do this stuff as a family unit.
I'm the PP, ours does, happily. And yes he attends social events, sleepovers, hangs out with friends, etc. Again, not perfect parents by FAR, but these aren't hard.
Anonymous wrote:We eat dinner together most nights, or we sit with him while he eats after extracurriculars.
Spring Break trip ( usually short because he has to get back for sports) and Summer beach.
He plays hockey, so one of us gets one on one with him.
Running: he's much faster than me, but we'll drive out and warm up together then he takes off
The gym: Again, we do different stuff, but at the end, he drinks a smoothie and we sit together for a while
Sporting events
We're not perfect and neither is he. We're trying to steal as much time as we can.