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Lovely senior life

For Seniors: Effective Recreation for Preventing Care Needs—Have Fun While Staying Healthy

For the physical and mental well-being of older adults, rehabilitation that involves moving the arms and legs is ideal.

However, simply following a set rehabilitation routine doesn’t always lead to motivation.

In this article, we introduce enjoyable recreational activities that contribute to arm and leg rehabilitation for older adults.

From group activities that everyone can get excited about to options you can focus on individually, you’ll surely find fun ways to work on functional improvement.

Choose according to each person’s physical and mental condition.

We hope you find this helpful.

[For Seniors] Effective for Preventing the Need for Care! Fun Recreational Activities (291–300)

ball toss (traditional Japanese beanbag/ball-throwing game)

Tamaire, the ball-toss game often seen at school sports festivals.

Some older adults may have taken part in sports days and played tamaire in the past.

Here’s a perfect tamaire activity for a warm April day to get the body moving.

Because it’s a familiar game, it can help older adults refresh their mood and relieve stress.

Have participants sit in chairs and place a basket in the center.

Prepare red, white, and other colored balls, and have the participants throw them into the basket.

The person who gets the most balls in the basket wins.

Throwing with the arms and shoulders also provides upper-body exercise.

Ball Grabbing Game

[Mini Game] Ball Grabbing Game ♟️ #dayservice #recreation #elderly #nursingcare #rehabilitation #sportsrecreation #shorts
Ball Grabbing Game

Let’s play a game where you grab balls using newspaper.

All the tools used in the game are made from newspaper.

Make the balls by crumpling newspaper into a sphere, and make the grabbing sticks out of newspaper as well.

You can create everything you need for the game using everyday materials.

Place several balls inside a circle, grab them with the stick, and put them into a basket.

If you set a time limit, the game gets more exciting.

Forming teams and competing for the best time will make it even more fun.

Funny Gesture Exercises

Recreation (brain training): Seniors smile and do gesture exercises — recommended for day service programs.
Funny Gesture Exercises

A gesture game where you don’t speak, but watch movements and guess the answer.

Because it’s often played on TV shows and at parties, many older adults may already be familiar with it.

In gesture games, you watch the movements, imagine what they mean, and answer.

Imagining is said to help activate the brain.

What’s more, having older adults perform the prompted actions themselves boosts the brain-training effect.

Since you’re getting older adults to move, it’s like gesture exercise.

Expanding prompts from “eating a mandarin” to “peeling and eating a mandarin” also stimulates the imagination.

Adjust the difficulty to suit the older adults.

The more movements you add, the more smiles you’re likely to see.

Quick brain training, “Ready, set!” game

No prep needed for senior recreation or props! Simple and exciting! Ready, set, go! Game
Quick brain training, “Ready, set!” game

Here’s a simple brain-training game you can do while seated, with no prior preparation.

Pair up in twos.

When one person calls out a number—like “Ready, five!”—both of you raise your hands or feet.

If the total number of raised hands and feet matches the number that was called, you’re correct.

You can make it more game-like by intentionally raising more hands or feet to throw off your partner’s guess, and enjoy training your brain as you play.

It also helps to create a cheerful atmosphere where mistakes lead to laughter.

Since raising hands and feet doubles as light exercise, try it together with older adults.

Whack-a-mole with paper cups

[100-yen shop] Super-exciting recreation with a paper-cup Whac-A-Mole
Whack-a-mole with paper cups

This is a game where you use a hammer made from a paper cup with chopsticks attached to catch moles made from paper cups.

If you stack them quickly, the mole sticks to the hammer, and you use this to pick up the moles on the field in order.

A key rule is to remove the captured moles one by one, and this transfer process also exercises hand movements.

By competing to see how many moles you can collect within the time limit, it’s a game that trains concentration and quick reactions.