Today's Family Man |
New Year's With the Kids
For a family man, the opportunities for taking your best lady out for a New Year's Eve on the town are few and far between. However, you can still have quite a lot of fun with the kids by getting a little creative. Here are some ideas to try.
For New Year's Eve
- Stay home (it's safer) and let the kids stay up a little -- even a lot -- later. This is the one night perfectly suited for staying up late.
- Celebrate a New York New Year's though you may not be on the East Coast. You can ring in 2005 by 9pm.
- Cook a special dinner together. Give it a theme. Make a "new" dish with foods your kids never tried before.
- Make your own noisemakers (fold a paper plate, staple it a few times, fill with beans, and close it up with more staples). Also, make party hats, a New Year's ball, and pretend fireworks and pop popcorn and shoot streamers.
- Make a time capsule together and bury it in the backyard (that night or the next day).
- Throw a pajama party. Eat on a blanket in the living room in front of a movie marathon or play board games. Or, dress up. Make it a special occasion with formal clothes. If you have a baby, dress him/her up as "Baby New Year." Make Dad "Old Man Last Year."
- Invite another family over and make it a slumber party. Or let the adults of your kids' friends go out while you watch the children. You get to go out next year.
- Toast with sparkling cider.
- Talk about what you loved about the year that was. Plan things you'd like to do in the New Year. Write it all down for a family scrapbook.
- Take pictures and/or videotape the evening. Make this a tradition for future trips down memory lane.
For New Year's Day
- Watch the Rose Parade. You can tape it or watch one of the frequent repeats.
- Make your own floats with shoeboxes and rose petals (buy flowers or pick them from your garden).
- Eat breakfast in bed.
- Go out and plant a tree for the New Year.
© Gregory Keer
About the Author
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Gregory Keer
Gregory Keer is a syndicated columnist, teacher, and on-air expert on fatherhood. His Family Man ™ column appears in publications across the country, including L.A. Parent, Boston Parents' Paper, Bay Area Parent... Learn more about Gregory Keer


