RAG MusicRecreation
Lovely senior life

[For Seniors] Refresh Your Mood! Lively, Get-Moving Games

As we get older, we tend to have fewer opportunities to be physically active.

Even in senior facilities like day services, people may end up sitting for long periods during activities like crafts.

Why not try incorporating some lively, movement-based games?

Of course, it’s fine to stay seated!

Even without strenuous movements, simply rolling your arms or marching your feet a little can loosen the body and make for good exercise.

Please be sure not to overdo it—have fun while keeping an eye on how you feel!

There are plenty of games that get everyone moving and energized.

[For Seniors] Refresh Your Mood! Lively, Movement-Based Games (121–130)

Popcorn Game

Ready in no time! 😆 Popcorn you can bounce and pop with your feet 🍿 #SeniorActivities #DementiaPrevention #DayService #Easy #Recreation #shorts
Popcorn Game

Even if you know that moving your body is good for your health, you might still feel reluctant to get active.

So here’s a fun popcorn game that lets you exercise your feet while enjoying yourself.

Sit in a chair and place paper plates on both knees.

Fill the plates with lots of crumpled-up paper balls.

Think of the paper plates as frying pans and the crumpled paper as popcorn for the game.

When someone says, “Ready, start!”, flutter your legs and march your feet to shake the paper popcorn out of the plates.

Watching the crumpled paper fall from the plates looks just like popcorn popping in a heated frying pan.

Because it’s an exercise you can do like a game, it seems like older adults can enjoy participating too.

Mountain Cup

[★UF Rec] #32 “Mountain Cup” – Senior Recreation: Let’s Get Excited with a Golf Game!
Mountain Cup

Some of you may have played golf back when you were working at a company.

Let us introduce the Mountain Cup, an activity that can bring back those memories.

As the name suggests, the course is shaped like a mountain.

Place a basket in the center, and lay plastic or cardboard boards—on which a ball can roll—over the top.

Make a hole in the center of the board, and roll the ball as you would in golf to get it into the central hole.

It’s easier to enjoy indoors than ground golf or gateball.

It’s likely to be fun for many older adults.

Prevent falls with rehabilitation!

I’ve created a new item that lets you do ‘foot exercises + brain training’ at home!
Prevent falls with rehabilitation!

A simple item that’s just a large cardboard sheet with numbers on it; you move your feet based on those numbers.

While counting the numbers from 1 to 8 written on the cardboard, move your feet to each numbered position.

By doing this step, you’ll become more aware of how you open your stance and step forward and back, which can help promote smoother walking in daily life and prevent falls.

First, get used to the step positions while seated, and once you feel it’s safe, it’s recommended to do it standing.

Full-body balloon volleyball

Balloon volleyball for parents and children: it works your abs, back muscles, and lower-body strength.
Full-body balloon volleyball

This program gradually adds rules to simple balloon volleyball to thoroughly train the whole body.

We’ll start with a basic rule of returning the balloon with the hands, then add movements like kicking it back with the feet and thinking elements.

Keeping the leg raised puts strong load on the abs and lower back, so if that’s difficult, it’s better to raise the leg only at the moment of returning the balloon.

Adding cues like “apple” to mean “return with your hand,” and other thinking components step by step will also help activate the brain by improving dynamic visual acuity, concentration, and split-second decision-making.

[For Seniors] Mood Refresh! Energetic, Movement-Based Games (131–140)

Brain training that sharpens your reflexes

5 brain-training activities for recreation or exercise that require no equipment, make you laugh and have fun, and improve your reflexes
Brain training that sharpens your reflexes

It’s a game that trains your reflexes by imitating claps so that your timing matches the model person’s clapping as closely as possible.

While getting a firm grasp of the clapping rhythm is key to enjoying the game, focusing too much on the rhythm can make you fall for tricks.

The sequence of observing the model’s hands and reflecting that in your own movements tests both your concentration and reflexes.

Adding changes in rhythm or variations in clapping midway through is also recommended, as it further directs your attention to the model’s hands.

Treasure Hunt Game

Recreation for seniors: Newspaper activities and an easy one-handed treasure hunt
Treasure Hunt Game

Let me introduce a treasure-hunt game you can enjoy using just one hand.

You’ll need a cardboard box, a basket, some newspaper, and lots of colorful balls.

Put the balls in the box, then tear the newspaper and add it on top so the balls are hidden.

Place a basket next to the box, and you’re ready.

Decide which color ball will be the “treasure,” then on “Ready, go!” reach into the box with one hand and search for the balls.

The first person to pull out three balls of the designated color wins.

It’s fun with small numbers or in groups, making it a great recommendation for recreational activities in senior care facilities.

Giant Triangular Tower

Senior recreation: super simple, quick, and fun—Newspaper Tower #activities_for_seniors #newspaper #exciting
Giant Triangular Tower

It’s a very simple game, but actually tricky! Try the newspaper tower challenge! Lay a sheet of newspaper lengthwise and fold it so it becomes a quarter of its original width.

Next, fold it into a triangular prism shape and tuck in the end.

Because it stores flat once folded, you can make it once and play again and again, which is nice.

The rules for the newspaper tower are simple: stack the triangular pieces of newspaper on top of each other and compete to see how many you can pile up.

People watching should call out instructions like, “A little to the right, left, it’s leaning!” This also helps promote communication.