RAG MusicRecreation
Lovely senior life

[For Seniors] Easy to try. Fun, crowd-pleasing recreation

For those who use senior care facilities or day services, lively recreational activities are important, aren’t they?

In this article, we introduce activities that everyone can try together as well as ones individuals can enjoy on their own.

All of them are exciting and easy to try once you learn the simple rules.

Even games that might look difficult at first—like rock-paper-scissors relays or ball bowling—can be done while seated, so no worries.

We hope you’ll all give them a try so that recreation can help invigorate the minds and bodies of older adults.

[For Seniors] Easy to Try: Fun, Crowd-Pleasing Recreational Activities (181–190)

Finger-Tip Rec: Ball Exercises to Build Grip Strength

[Finger Exercise] A Recreation Using Rubber Balls to Strengthen Grip [Senior Brain Training]
Finger-Tip Rec: Ball Exercises to Build Grip Strength

This is a recreational activity focused on gripping a ball to build grip strength.

In pairs, you will perform two movements: trying to pull out a fixed ball and passing the ball to each other.

While consciously gripping the ball firmly with one hand, add the pulling and passing movements to train other areas as well.

By carefully observing your partner’s movements, this exercise also helps you become more aware of dynamic vision, concentration, and force control.

Balloon volleyball with newspaper-stick bats

Recreation for seniors / Activities during the COVID-19 pandemic / Guaranteed crowd-pleaser: Balloon volleyball using newspaper-stick paddles
Balloon volleyball with newspaper-stick bats

Balloon volleyball played using rolled-up newspaper sticks lets you reach farther with the tool, while also challenging more delicate control of force.

It’s also important to treat the table like a volleyball court: set up a proper net in the middle so you can enjoy the volleyball atmosphere.

The higher the net, the more it encourages players to hit the balloon upward, which naturally directs their gaze up and can help improve posture.

Rather than focusing on winning, encouraging players to keep the rally going will likely help them enjoy it for longer.

Newspaper Ball Rolling Game

If you want a super exciting group game, this is it! Newspaper Ball Rolling Relay
Newspaper Ball Rolling Game

The “Newspaper Ball Rolling Game” uses newspaper sheets to pass balls along! Within each team, members split into pairs; each pair holds the ends of a sheet of newspaper and transfers the ball onto the neighboring pair’s newspaper.

The final pair places the ball into a box, and the team that gets all their balls into the box first wins! Handling thin newspaper is trickier than you might expect.

Even older adults will likely enjoy the challenge, saying things like, “It just won’t do what I want!” The difficulty also changes with the type of ball, so it’s a great idea to prepare various balls of different sizes and weights.

Brain training to create kanji related to spring

Summer brain-training game ideas for seniors that avoid crowding. Using a whiteboard, turn “insect” into “firefly.”
Brain training to create kanji related to spring

This is a game where players try to add components to kanji written on a board to transform them into different characters.

For example, you can add parts to 日 to make 春, or turn 女 into 桜.

Choosing kanji with seasonal themes is recommended.

A key tip is to leave plenty of blank space around each character so players have to think carefully about where to add the parts.

If they get stuck, you can give hints about what kind of kanji it could become or where to add the strokes to help spark ideas.

Let’s change one character with a spring-themed prompt.

[Fun Brain Activation] Let’s Change One Letter! [Whiteboard Brain Training]
Let's change one character with a spring-themed prompt.

It’s a game where you change just one character in a word written in hiragana to make a different word, and see how far you can keep the chain going.

If you limit the category of words you can use, the difficulty becomes too high, so starting with words that evoke spring is recommended.

Since the flow involves searching your memory for words that fit, it really tests how many words you know and how well you can retrieve them.

The difficulty also changes depending on the starting word’s length, so try various patterns to train your brain.

An evolved word-association game with a spring theme

[Whiteboard Rec] Activate your brain with an evolved association game!
An evolved word-association game with a spring theme

This is a variation on a word-association game where you throw out a theme word and have participants think of words that fit the condition.

Write two blocks on the board—adjectives like “cute” or “round,” and nouns like “animals” or “vegetables”—and have them quickly come up with combinations of the two.

Setting a rule like “things related to spring” makes it easier to form images from scenery, so that kind of tweak is recommended.

Since participants must think of combinations instantly after they’re specified, it should effectively stimulate the brain.

Sing and pass it around! Ball relay

All you need is a ball! This is fun♪ Sing and pass-the-ball activity!!
Sing and pass it around! Ball relay

Here’s an idea for a rhythm-based ball-passing game.

First, participants sit in a circle.

One person starts with the ball and passes it to the next person in time with the music; that person then passes it to the next, and so on.

When the music stops, the person holding the ball gets to drop out of the game.

You can also adjust the game by adding more balls depending on the number of participants.

Singing along while playing provides brain training benefits, and listening to favorite songs can boost motivation, which adds to the appeal.