“‘There’s Nothing to Do’ Game,” Ensign, Aug. 1987, 57
“There’s Nothing to Do” Game
On long summer days our children often complain that “there’s nothing to do.” We found a solution to that problem: with the children’s help, we choose various activities, then write each activity on an index card. (Watching television is not one of the choices.) When a child wants something to do, he draws a card, then must do what’s on that card. Here are some examples:
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Color
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Make a present
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Read a book for twenty minutes
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Tell someone a story
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Eat a popsicle
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Practice piano or singing
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Weed the garden
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Organize your sock drawer
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Take your brother to the park
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Memorize a Bible scripture
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Draw your own maze
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Cook something
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Play with play dough
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Clean the bathroom mirror
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Memorize one Article of Faith
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Count your money
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Pick up your room
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Draw a picture for someone
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Work on Scouting
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Have a water fight outside
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Write a letter
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Rest and think for ten minutes
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Eat some fruit
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Sweep the kitchen floor
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Play a game on the computer
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Build a fort with blankets
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Listen to cassette story tapes
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Build something with blocks
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Do crossword puzzle or word find
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Look at photo albums
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Ride your bike around the block
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Talk or sing into a cassette tape
The cards can be modified for winter activities, and a different set of cards can be prepared listing appropriate Sunday activities.
Since we started this we rarely hear “There’s nothing to do.”—Janine Miller Lund, El Paso, Texas