• December 6
Children’s Choice — Invite the children to choose an activity and plan and prepare for it as much as possible according to their ages and abilities.
• December 7
Assist children in preparing cards or notes for their teachers and others who bless their lives. Missionaries and servicemen who represent your ward could also be remembered.
• December 8
Make or purchase gifts for other family members. You may want to exchange gifts with everyone or perhaps you prefer to draw names at your house.
• December 9 (Sunday)
Tell Christmas stories and relate favorite experiences such as “The Christmas You Remember Best.” Enhance the occasion by turning off all the lights in the room except those on the Christmas tree. Enjoy brownies and cold milk for a bedtime treat.
• December 10
Continue the gift-making or purchasing project from Dec. 8th and then wrap the gifts.
• December 11
Children’s Choice — Invite the children to choose an activity and plan and prepare for it as much as possible according to their ages and abilities.
OR, create hand puppets for re-enacting the Story of the Nativity on Christmas Eve. (See December 24th for details and a note at the end of the column about patterns for the puppets.)
• December 12
Make it a family game night. Play a favorite board game, put a jigsaw puzzle together, or enjoy some lively rounds of charades.
• December 13
Attend a church, school or community program or play. Non-professional productions of classics such as Dickens’ Christmas Carol or the Nutcracker can be free of charge.
• December 14
Drive as a family on a self-guided tour of Christmas lights around the city.
• December 15
Go sledding, skiing, ice skating; build a snowman or enjoy whatever outside activity the weather permits in your area.
• December 16 (Sunday)
Read Christmas stories such as Christmas Oranges (Linda Bethers), The Polar Express (Chris Van Allsburg), How the Grinch Stole Christmas (Dr. Seuss); Snowmen at Night (Caralyn and Mark Buehner), The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey (Susan Wojciechowski), ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas (Clement Moore), Christmas Day in the Morning (Pearl S. Buck), or “A Christmas Carol (Charles Dickens) as you sit around the tree. Enjoy a favorite treat such as hot wassail and donuts.
• December 17
Go caroling as a family to neighbors, a senior adult care center, or a hospital.
• December 18
Bake and decorate sugar cookies or gingerbread men (see recipe below for gingerbread that is easy to handle and delicious to eat.)
• December 19
Organize a neighborhood cookie exchange.
• December 20
Enjoy a Christmas movie on television or DVD such as Mr. Krueger’s Christmas, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, The Miracle of 34th Street, or It’s a Wonderful Life. Pop plenty of corn and enjoy it and other munchies as you watch.
• December 21
Prepare for a family service project.
• December 22
Carry out a family service project.
• December 23 (Sunday)
Consider a family devotional, in addition to your regular meetings, wherein you remember the Prophet Joseph Smith’s birthday and talk about his life and mission.
• December 24
Make this the grandest family night of the year. Enjoy a delicious dinner or light supper, according to the tradition of your family, followed by a beautiful evening of music and the Story of the First Christmas from the Book of Luke.
If you’re one of the many families who enjoy re-enacting the First Christmas, you might be interested in a short, three-page Nativity skit that was published in the Friend magazine a number of years ago. It includes speaking parts, scriptural passages, and musical references and appeals to all ages. If you would like a free copy, please visit my website. See below for information.
If you’d like a change from the children taking parts and dressing up in bathrobes, shawls, and white sheets, let the children manipulate hand puppets this year. (The skit, mentioned above, works well with either live actors or hand puppets.) Free patterns plus photos for creating the hand puppets can be obtained from my website. See below for information.
• December 25
Open gifts! Rejoice and be thankful over both the gifts you’ve given as well as received. And sometime during the day or evening, while you’re gathered around the table or the Christmas tree as a family, remind the children that Christmas is all month long, not just a day. Recall with them the celebrations you enjoyed as a family during December. “Christmas, children, is not a date. It is a state of mind.” (Mary Ellen Chase).