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[For Seniors] Extremely Effective Brain Training! A Fun Collection of Hand Games

As a form of recreation for older adults, many facilities incorporate hand games that involve moving the fingers and arms.

It’s said that making fine movements with the fingertips or performing different motions with the right and left arms helps activate the brain.

In this article, we’ll introduce a variety of hand games that also serve as brain training.

These hand games range widely—from activities that only move the fingertips to ones that use the arms, and even the upper body and legs.

Please choose activities that match participants’ physical condition.

[For Seniors] Highly Effective Brain Training! A Fun Collection of Hand Games (91–100)

Handmade spinning top

A Must-See Day Service Recreation! Handmade Spinning Tops by Participants
Handmade spinning top

Let’s play with spinning tops made from origami.

Are you familiar with tops crafted from origami? There are types that look like flowers with a cross-shaped handle in the center for spinning, and ones where a toothpick is inserted into the center of a square top.

Some folding methods are complex, but older adults who enjoy origami will likely have fun making them.

Let’s spin the origami tops everyone has folded.

Both making the origami and spinning the tops use the fingertips, making it good training.

With the nostalgic game of spinning tops, older adults can relive their childhood and enjoy a pleasant time.

Take as many clothespins as you like

At-home Indoor Recreation for Seniors (Day Service/Nursing Home): Unlimited Clothespin Grab Using Clothespins and a Spoon
Take as many clothespins as you like

Let me introduce a recreation activity you can do using only items you already have at home: the Clothespin Scoop.

All you need are clothespins, spoons, and a container to put the clothespins in.

You can use a bowl as a substitute for the container.

Place the clothespins on a table and hold a spoon in each hand.

Using only the spoons, transfer the clothespins into the container.

It’s fine to use both hands.

It may look simple, but using both hands simultaneously increases stimulation to the brain, turning it into enjoyable brain training.

You can also do it on the floor instead of the table to change the working height; doing it in a squat adds balance training and lower-body exercise at the same time.

[For Seniors] Highly Effective for Brain Training! A Collection of Fun Hand Games (101–110)

Milk Carton Stacking Game

Here’s a super easy activity you can do with a milk carton! Guaranteed laughs—this one’s a hit! The Stacking Game! #DayService #ActivitiesForSeniors #Elderly #Seniors #Recreation #Rehabilitation #shorts
Milk Carton Stacking Game

Introducing a milk carton stacking game you can enjoy with just a little preparation.

All you need are milk cartons.

Cut the cartons into many ring-shaped slices a few centimeters wide.

Stack the square-ring pieces as high as you can without letting them fall.

You can start with a “Ready, go!” or simply stack at your own pace—both are fun.

Deciding where to hold each piece, how to place it, and adjusting while watching the balance engages upper-limb movement as well as thinking and judgment, making it great brain training.

It’s easy to prepare and enjoyable with any number of players, from a small group to a larger one, which is part of its appeal.

butterfly

Here’s an easy “butterfly” craft you can prepare quickly with just a few simple steps.

First, prepare three sheets of origami paper: two for the wings and one for the body.

On the two sheets for the wings, draw lines freely with colored pencils.

This will make the finished piece much more vibrant.

After drawing the lines, fold the origami paper into an accordion, then fold it into a V shape.

Next, cut the remaining sheet into the shape of a butterfly’s body.

Attach the wings to the body symmetrically, and you’re done.

If you make butterflies in various colors and display them, they can become a fantastical wall decoration.

Because this craft uses fine motor skills, it also provides good stimulation for the brain and is recommended as a recreational activity in senior facilities.

Brain-training finger play

[Test Your Frontal Lobe] Brain Training for the Frontal Lobe That Seems Easy but Is Difficult
Brain-training finger play

Here’s a no-prep recreation activity: a finger-play brain exercise.

It’s simple to do! First, hold your hands up with your palms facing you and make fists.

Open only the thumb on your right hand and only the pinky on your left hand.

Next, switch: open the pinky on your right hand and the thumb on your left hand.

Keep repeating this.

It sounds easy, but it’s surprisingly hard.

Try doing it to a rhythm—one, two, one, two—and you might find yourself laughing at how tricky it is.

But don’t worry.

The goal isn’t to do it perfectly; performing two different movements at the same time stimulates your brain, so just trying it provides a brain-training effect.

With practice, you’ll get the hang of it and feel a sense of achievement.

Give it a try!

High touch rec

Can't stop laughing lol! A high-five recreation that gets everyone excited [Senior brain-training exercise]
High touch rec

A high five is when two people clap each other’s hands, often when greeting brightly or feeling happy.

Let’s turn this high five into a recreation activity that seniors can enjoy.

Have everyone sit in a circle on chairs and high-five the person next to them.

Try high-fiving with just one hand, or flip the hands over to change the palm orientation as you go.

Make the seated circle smaller so people can reach to tap someone’s hand, or do double high fives with both hands.

Thinking about who has a free hand and counting to ten while high-fiving can also help train the brain.

It’s an activity that may spark conversations with people who don’t usually talk and broaden communication.

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.