Ok, kind of veering off a little
here, but I am a big 4th of July nut, so thought I would take an
opportunity here to share some fun with you.
If you find yourself hosting a
4th of July party, there are hours and hours to fill before the highlight events
of the day begin - the fireworks. You'll want to have plenty of activities and
games planned to keep everyone busy and entertained.
There are a variety of games you
can plan that have a patriotic theme. Depending on the age groups that will be
involved, these may change, but I have always seen the 4th as a
family holiday, so here are a few that work at every level.
Balloon pass - This game
involves relaying a balloon down a line of people. Use balloons that are red,
white and blue and tell the participants they will be using their hands and
their legs to pass the balloon down the line. Create two teams of people, and
line them up in straight lines. Give the first person a balloon and tell them to
put it between their legs, passing the balloon to the next person in line with
their legs only. That person will take the balloon and pass it to the next
person by putting it over their head. That third person will put the balloon
between their legs and pass to the next person like that. The game continues
until the balloon has passed all the way down the line. If you have a small
group, require that the balloon get passed down the line and back again before
declaring a winner.
Chalk it up - Pick a
panel of judges (the oldest members of the family are the obvious picks) and
have them become the official judges for a chalk contest. Break your guests into
two teams (or more, depending on how many people are at the party) and give them
each one or two containers of sidewalk chalk. Tell them to create a sidewalk
picture that shows something patriotic, and tell them the flag must be included
in the picture. Give them a time limit (depending on your group, this time limit
might range from 10 minutes to 45 minutes) and then have the judges declare a
winner after they have carefully examined all the artwork. You could have
art-themed prizes for the winners.
Parade - One fun 4th of
July activity that just screams "4th of July!" is a parade with
decorated bikes, scooters and the like. Ask everyone who comes to the party to
decorate their bike or scooter or other item in patriotic garb. You can have
people bring them to the party already decorated and have a contest for
"best bike", etc., but also fun is to have a decorating party within
the party. Have all the items on hand to decorate the bikes and scooters and
skateboards. You might have streamers, banners, flags, and ribbons. The children
and adults can decorate their bikes and scooters as a party activity.
Guessing Game - These
games are always popular for just about any occasion. Fill a large jar with
peppermint candy (the red and white striped kind) and decorate it with blue and
red ribbon. Have people guess how many candies are in the jar (which of course
means you count as you place the candies in the jar). The winner, or the person
who comes closest to the number without going over, gets the jar of candy.
Fireworks - If you're
having fireworks at your home, you might have a big box of assorted fireworks.
Everyone has their personal favorites and people might have clear ideas of what
they want to see and hear. You can play a game to determine who gets to pick the
next firework to go off next. You might ask trivia questions (why are there 13
stars on the flag?). Or you can have a dance off. While music plays in the
background, each person who really wants to pick the next firework to go off has
to dance the craziest, silliest dance they can come up with. Someone who's been
designated a judge will decide who won the dance off and that person gets to
pick the next fireworks item. Unless there are more fireworks than people, each
person only gets to pick once.
Seriously, this is the day that
we celebrate our independence and freedom. The freedom to create the life that
we want to live and not that which was passed on us by some bureaucrat that only
has his best interest in mind.
If you haven’t seriously
started working on creating the life that you want, the success that you desire
and the legacy that you want to leave to your children and children’s
children, then what are you waiting for?
Start now…wait, have fun now,
but after the fireworks, get started creating your life, not the life someone
else wants for you.
And now, back to our regularly
scheduled programming…aka building your successful legacy.
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