Video Message from Santa!

Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2009

Organizing A Christmas Family Gathering

Organizing A Christmas Family Gathering

Christmas is time to get together and celebrate the family bonding. No matter where all your relatives and friends live, this is one time of the year when they would come down to meet to and spend time together. So…how about organizing a Christmas family gathering that is full of warmth and have fun. You can prepare some really mouthwatering delicacies to treat the guests and several other things to make your party turn out great. Here are some helpful tips:

Most of the family gatherings are usually based on food. So, plan the menu in advance. If you know who likes what, try if you can get those specialties prepared to surprise them.

You need to send out invitations early so that everybody knows the where and when the party is to take place. You may as well include the starting and ending time in the invitation cards.

You can get some help from some of your family members to get the things organized. You may ask some family members to bring along some dessert, side dish or drinks to your place. If you have planned a family get-together then you can freely ask for help as organizing everything alone could be difficult. You have taken the initiative, let others help you too.

You may also organize a gift exchange at the gathering. You may as well mention this in the invitation card. This would make your party more interesting and lively. Remember the music. Get some good music CDs or DVDs and keep them playing to create the perfect ambience for the gathering.

For the kids, you may arrange for some game or a movie. All the kids can enjoy some game in a room, in the presence of an adult. You may give out prizes to the winner. You may even get some good movie DVDs for the kids to watch.

Remember to have all arrangements to accommodate the elderly and the disabled people if any. This time is to relax and cherish the moments, so enjoy the most out of it.

Santa Claus and his helpers

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Monday, December 22, 2008

Christmas Day Games


Just because the gifts are opened and the paper is strewn about the living room doesn't mean the fun of Christmas has to be over. You can add some fun party games to Christmas Day to extend the fun of Christmas.

If you have a large gathering on Christmas Day, have fun with the hat game. When they arrive, give everyone a Santa hat. These are inexpensive and can be purchased at the dollar store, or in bulk, if you plan ahead. As everyone goes about their business of getting food and chatting with others, the room will look very festive with everyone wearing their Santa hats.

However, the object of this game is to not have your hat on. As people forget about the hats, the object is to get rid of your hat and not be the last one wearing a Santa hat. Inevitably there will be one person so wrapped up in a conversation or the buffet table, they forget to take off their hat and will be left the game's loser. This is a game that can be played again and again as you head forward with the day's festivities.

One fun memory game that kids particularly like is to make everyone pay careful attention to all the gifts that are opened on Christmas day. After the gifts are removed from the room (or you remove yourselves from the gift room) have everyone try and remember every single gift everyone received. Include stockings and any food gifts. Tell people they only have to remember the items that were opened that day, not any gifts they received and opened prior to Christmas day. This can be a fun game that's particularly popular with kids because they love to relive the gift magic. If they were so immersed with their own gifts they didn't notice anyone else's, this is a good chance for them to educate themselves about what everyone got that day.

If you need a game to keep everyone busy before dinner, try the "guess me" game. Buy some large heavy socks that are thick and come at least to the calf. Put several items in the socks. Make sure the items in each sock are identical. The items should all be related to Christmas in some way. You might include a small ornament, scotch tape, a pinecone, a Hershey's kiss, and so on. Have each person feel the socks (having two socks just makes the game go faster, but you can play with just one sock), and write down their guesses about what's in the socks. Be sure to tell everyone how many items are in each sock. The winner gets, you guessed it, one of the socks!

If you have a bunch of performers in your group on Christmas day, how about playing a little game of "Christmas Idol?" Set up a small table for the "judges" and have teams of 2 people (or individuals, if they want) sing a Christmas carol. Tell them to have a lot of fun with the song, and even add a Santa hat or other dress-up items if they wish. The winners can take home a CD of Christmas music. This game is particularly fun if only the children want to perform and be judged by the adults, or if, conversely, the adults perform and are judged by the children.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Games for Christmas Eve


You don't often think to play games on Christmas Eve, but playing a game or two can be a lot of fun.

One fun game is perfect for anxious children, but could also be for adults if you want to add some fun for gift giving. For children, this is a way to make that "open one gift on Christmas Eve" rule a little more exciting and make it last a little longer.

First, create a hunt with clues, so the children have to follow the clues to find their gift. Instead of the gift being under the tree, for example, you might put it somewhere else, but the children will follow clues to find it. For this game, you can use anything to write your clues on. You could use Christmas cards in their envelopes that you had extras of, or you might cut out Christmas tree shapes, or you might want to use ornaments.

Whichever method you choose, write a clue on each of your items and leave those around the house. You start by handing each child the first clue. It might say, "you sleep here every night" and the children will run to their beds. On their pillow you have placed another clue that might say, "mom's eggs taste better with this" and the children head to the spice cabinet, where they find another clue on the salt. The final clue (and depending on the ages of your children and their tolerance, you might have just a few clues for this game or many more) will be the gift itself. To make it extra fun, have the gift be under the tree. Your children won't see that coming!

If you have a large gathering on Christmas Eve, try a circle game. Have everyone get in a circle and the first person will start with, "in my Christmas stocking there is an apple" and the next person will add, "in my Christmas stocking there is an apple and a boot." Each person will continue on, remembering the previous items and the adding one of their own in alphabetical order. If you miss an item, you're out of the game and the winner is the person who successfully remembers all the stocking items over and over again each time they have to recite the items and add to the list.

Looking for a little physical activity on Christmas Eve? How about a rousing game of musical chairs using Christmas music? This one can be particularly fun if you use upbeat Christmas music. Use songs everyone knows and ask that they sing along while they run around the chairs. This adds a fun element because you are likely to have at least one person who gets so caught up in the music they don't realize the music has stopped. This game is played like any traditional game of musical chairs with the loser being the one who doesn't get a chair when the music stops.

Since the big event on Christmas Eve is Santa's arrival, play a game of "where's Santa?" In this game, everyone sits in a circle and one person is chosen to be Rudolph. That person leaves the room for a minute. A Santa is chosen among those left in the room. Rudolph returns and begins hunting for Santa. Rudolph should stand in the center of the circle and try to figure out which person is Santa. Santa, meanwhile, winks at other people in the circle. If someone gets winked at, they yell, "ho ho ho.” Once Rudolph figures out where Santa is, another Rudolph and another Santa are chosen and the game continues.

By Christmas Eve, your Christmas cards have been on display for a few weeks, so maybe it's time to play a game with them. Have someone set up a laundry basket, or a gift box a few feet away (the distance depends on the age of your players and ability). Have them try to toss the cards into the box or basket. This sounds easy, but different cards of different weights and styles will react differently and can be harder than expected to get into the box or basket.


Friday, October 17, 2008

Christmas Games

It’s possible that no other single activity really embraces camaraderie, playfulness, and fierce (but friendly) competition as heartily participating in playing indoor games with friends and family. Christmas games do all those things but also serve the purpose of bringing friends and family together to interact directly with each other in a competitive and happy way.

Participating in Christmas games is another way of sharing, but it is also doing something tangible to get into the festive, jolly, and relaxed mood for the holidays. Otherwise, it’s easy to get caught up in all the preparation and shopping and become ridden with anxiety. Here are some holiday and Christmas games that will cause fierce but friendly competition and leave everyone in a jolly mood.

For the “Gift Wrap” game, items needed will be small gifts, wrapping paper, scotch tape, and music that can be turned on and off at will. Each gift item is wrapped in several layers of paper. The number of layers used will depend on how long you want the game to last. A gift is given to the group which should start passing around the gift when the music starts. Whenever the music stops, whoever has the gift should remove one layer of gift wrap. This continues until the last layer of paper is removed. Whoever has the gift unwrapped gets to keep it.

The items needed for the “Sock Guessing” Christmas game are two or three thick, new thermal socks, items used or seen during Christmas, pens, pencils, and paper. Each sock is stuffed with 20-25 items that are used or seen during the Christmas season. These can be useful items such as scotch tape, ornaments, decorations, etc. Each sock should have the same items and the opening should be tied with a ribbon so the contents inside aren't visible. The socks are then passed around for each person to try to feel and guess the items then write down what they think is in the sock. The person with the most correct guesses of objects is the winner and can be awarded a special gift or token.

The “'Gift Grab Card Game” requires two decks of cards and a few small Christmas gifts that are wrapped to look very interesting and enticing. One deck of cards is passed out one card at a time to guests. Each should have an equal number of cards from the deck. The gifts are then placed in the center of the group. Someone then calls out cards from the second deck. Whoever has the matching card gets to choose a gift. When all the gifts are taken, everyone can steal gifts from each other until the deck is finished and those with gifts get to open and keep them as prizes. The fun increases when the stealing begins, because everyone will have different ideas about which gift looks interesting and will try to hang onto it by stealing it over and over if it is stolen.

A children's Christmas game is “Pin the Nose on the Reindeer,” which is the Christmas version of “Pin the Tail on the Donkey.” The items needed are a drawing of a reindeer's head, with an incomplete drawing of the nose, and several noses with the names of the children on one side and tape on the other. The picture should be placed against a wall so that children can reach the nose. Each child then gets a nose. They take turns being blindfolded, spun around a couple times to disorient them a little, then told to walk to the reindeer to place the nose on the picture. The child who places the nose closes to the reindeer's nose wins.

A delightful Christmas game for work is the “Match the Desk to the Item” game. A day or so before the Christmas party at work, someone needs to secretly take one item from each person's desk and assign a number to each item. At the party, all the items are displayed for everyone to guess whose desk the item belongs to.