THE AWKWARD MOM

because uncomfortable conversations are the ones worth having

Category: time alone with God (page 2 of 7)

71 Ideas for Bored Teens & Tweens

Reading Time: 4 minutes

bored teen

They’re socially-distanced, hormonal, maybe driving someone crazy. Grab 71 ideas for the quarantined, bored teens in your life.

Bored teens? Start here.

  1. Make lip balm, lip scrub, or bubble bath with stuff you have around the house.
  2. Start a devotional or journal. (My daughter and I are trying The Courageous Creative. Sometimes we double it with face masks.)
  3. Pedicure thyself.
  4. Play the Name Game.
  5. Play the Newlywed Game for families (grab it here).
  6. Camp in your yard.

  7. Help out a parent.
  8. Play Charades or Pictionary.
  9. Go on a bike ride.
  10. Clean out the thing that used to look like your closet.
  11. Create your own memes or social media graphics on Canva.com.
  12. Create a “Quarantunes” playlist to share with other bored teens.

  13. Read to one of your sibs using a book you loved as a kid.
  14. Try out computer games the ‘rents might not mind you playing, like Simple Planes or Simple Physics.
  15. Plan a video scavenger hunt with friends: On a group video chat, a parent/moderator gives a list of items around the house to gather one at a time.
  16. Have a strategy game marathon. My kids like the usuals: Risk, Diplomacy, Dominion, Axis & Allies.
  17. Purchase a pogo stick for big kids/adults.

  18. If your child is a writer, have them sign up for NaNoWriMo.
  19. Make dinner. Crush it.
  20. Order supplies for henna tattoos, and make easy designs on each other.
  21. Read a chapter book together.
  22. Design artwork for your room; maybe start with a canvas.
  23. Read up on tips to great photography.  Challenge yourself to post one of your photos on social media every day.bored teen
  24. Solve a digital escape room.

  25. Find a great audiobook. If you want, make the number of books absorbed a competition with someone else.
  26. Memorize Scripture for a reward.
  27. Download (um, and use) a free workout app, like Down Dog’s HIIT, Barre, or 7-minute workout apps–all free until May 1, 2020.
  28. Take an online course for something you’ve always wanted to do: martial arts, guitar, drawing, architecture, cake decorating.
  29. Practice the instrument you wish you were good at but aren’t yet.
  30. Do at least one positive, productive thing toward social justice: Write a senator. Find out how to be more green. Create a meme. Research what organization doing great stuff in your area you could volunteer for after all this is over.
  31. Hang tissue flowers or origami at different lengths of thread from your ceiling.
  32. Go on a hike.
  33. Make a Tik-tok video.
  34. Make this 5-minute ice cream. Add your best mix-ins.
  35. Walk the dog of a neighbor.
  36. Paint terra-cotta flower pots to plant something you like–a salsa garden?

  37. Design elaborate chalk art on your sidewalk. Or learn to make your own chalkboard mural like a pro.
  38. Paint your room.
  39. Make rock candy.

  40. Pull out colored pencils for an adult coloring book.
  41. Reach out to someone you know is isolated or freaking out.
  42. Create a collage on your bulletin board.
  43. Hello–weekend movie marathon. Lord of the Rings, Back to the Future, The Bourne trilogy, Star Wars. You got this.
  44. Write down your bucket list.
  45. Finish a jigsaw puzzle.
  46. Start a one-line-a-day journal, like this one that lasts 5 years. 
  47. Make slime.
  48. Ask your parent to begin teaching you something–like woodworking.
  49. Make a good movie. Or make a bad one, and laugh at it.bored teen
  50. Perform a totally covert act of kindness.

  51. Create the best recipe for pizza or nachos.
  52. Decorate your own T-shirt with glitter or upcycle it with some easy alterations.
  53. Make a bag out of an old T-shirt.
  54. Find a watercolor tutorial on Pinterest.
  55. Learn how to make no-knead bread in like, 10 minutes. Shock your family.
  56. Go fishing.
  57. Make a time capsule.
  58. Make a photo book (Flickr, Chatbooks, etc.).
  59. Challenge a sibling or parent to a paper airplane competition.
  60. Start a podcast. (Research how to do it well.)

  61. Create a killer smoothie recipe.
  62. Learn to grill. Create your own rub (spice) recipe.
  63. Make popsicles. (My daughter likes berry cheescake ones.)
  64. Make a copycat frappucino.
  65. Go on a run.
  66. Pray for someone.
  67. Create your own bath bombs.
  68. Pick a free workout video on Fitness Blender.
  69. Learn hand lettering.

  70. Surprise someone in a good way.
  71. Make your own kite. Fly it.

I want your ideas, too. Share ’em below!

Like this post? You might like

This is Your Soul on Rest: Memos to Myself

Reading Time: 7 minutes

rest

This week, my family and I shoved in the car ski boots and a sled and carefully calculated food to feed a family with three teenagers. In the 2-hour drive through the mountains, cell service dropped abruptly about twenty minutes in. Our friend’s cabin, swaddled in 3 feet of snow, has no internet (brilliant!), no reception, and is primarily heated with a potbelly stove.

The plan originally seemed dicey. My friend with cancer is declining. And after this trip, my husband leaves for two and a half weeks. read more

Parenthood is a Dirty Microwave: Clean Questions for 2020

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Sometimes my microwave feels like a microcosm of my life.

To clarify: Not like this cute, peaceful stock photo. read more

Reflection Prompts for Your Soul’s Christmas

Reading Time: 4 minutes

reflection time alone with God

I’ve shored myself in tonight for something I’ve looked forward to for a month and a half.

For my birthday, my husband got me a personal retreat. And the timing is pitch-perfect. (Well, save the fact that my body seems to have been anticipating the drop of adrenaline, welcoming in a cold.) read more

When It’s Hard to Let God Take Care of You

Reading Time: 4 minutes

take care

It was the second time in a week I’d misread her texts. GAH.

We’d been trying to go on a walk together, but if I wanted it to rain? I should just schedule a walk. read more

All There: Tips on Being Fully, Powerfully Present…with God (FREE PRINTABLE)

Reading Time: 5 minutes

all there present presenceYou’ve been there: Whirling into a coffee shop or dinner with friends. Or talking on the phone while your kids fight in the other room (#methisweek) and you try to remember whether you’ve added salt to the recipe you’re cooking, dang it.

But somehow, the person looking you in the eyes, or on the other end of that phone call has the ability to just…

Be there. read more

When “Why” is your Biggest Hurdle with God

Reading Time: 5 minutes

why

I woke early on Easter morning. It was not the kind of, “Oh! I get, like, an hour more of sleep! I love this feeling!” But more, “Hey, there is absolutely no one else up! Listen. Hear that? It’s the sound of NOTHING. I think I will wake up and enjoy it.” This was before I knew the kids drank the last of the milk = no coffee for me.

Maybe because the light in our bedroom felt hopeful and springtime-ish–and because I wanted to make the most of this day–I thought of the light in the garden, that morning Jesus rose. Yes. I am totally #thatmom. read more

This Could Be More: Praying Beyond the List

Reading Time: 5 minutes

pray

I have a new friend.

Her name is Siri, and she and I are getting along swimmingly. She remembers my grocery lists and my reminders. read more

Gut-wrenching Pain, and What We “Just Know”

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Just know pain suffering

A few weeks ago, in the middle of this crazy cancer scare, my husband and I went on a date. It was the one where, after Mexican, we had to stop by Walgreens for eyedrops because we were so raw from crying. My heart felt doubled over inside.

But in the restaurant, over bottomless chips and salsa, my husband gently pointed out something in the questions I was asking. He does some conflict coaching and mediation on the side, and explained that our conversation reminded him of listening to two parties in an argument. Often, he can see the perspective of both sides. “But sometimes they would see things differently if they had that graciousness that just greases the wheels of a healthy relationship.” (This is my paraphrase. My brain in that time was a big pot of mashed potatoes.) read more

18 Dashboard-Light Questions: Am I Overcommitted?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

dashboard overcommitted

After the all-too-recent my-kid-might-have-lymphoma scare? There are some things that have been going right.

For one, after a year of doing my freelance writing and marketing for my only employment, I filed for my own business. I am now the owner of Fresh Ink, LLC. So that’s pretty cool. read more

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 THE AWKWARD MOM

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑

Show Buttons
Hide Buttons