My little boy asked me the other day “Mummy, what is Valentine’s Day?” I answered “It’s a day of love,” short and sweet but I didn’t think it needed more explanation.
It got me thinking though, if it’s a day of love then why not share it with our nearest and dearest rather than just our partners, as per the commercial instructions!
So, this Valentine’s Day, I’m going to tell them. I’m going to make it positive. I’m going to take this opportunity to empower them and perhaps start a little tradition.
Emma Conway, award winning Blogger at Brummy Mummy of 2 (go follow her, she’s brilliant!) has her own Valentines tradition which was inspired by her Nan
“Every year I get my children a few little treats. Nothing over the top. Generally from the pound shop. It’s all because my Nan who is no long around used to send me a card every year up until she passed away and it made me feel special. Boyfriends would come and go and I always knew that someone loved me and I would get a card. It’s something I will keep up with my two for the rest of my life. Whilst they might not get a bag of tat they will always receive a card from the woman that loves them most in the world”
Here’s 5 ideas for things you could do on Valentine’s Day with your children
1. Write them a letter
Tell them how proud of them you are. What you love most about them. Even if they can’t read, you can read it to them and save it so that one day they can read it themselves. Do this every year, make a collection, see how they’ve evolved. It would be lovely to read them all together one day. How would you feel if someone did this for you?
2. Do a treasure hunt
My lovely friend Lucy (aka tate and fable) does a valentines treasure hunt with a treat at the end which I think is a lovely idea, a great way of giving them something to look forward to and an annual tradition.
3. Valentines breakfast or dinner together
Why not plan a simple breakfast or evening dinner that you can all eat together and maybe you could give them their letters or a small token then. What could be a greater gift than the gift of your time?
4. Encourage the children to think of acts of kindness
What kind things could they do or say to people on Valentine’s Day, what do they love about their friends. Could they tell them today what they think makes them special. They might come up with some of their own ideas, kindness is a snowball effect after all. Once you start thinking of kind things to do, they often keep popping into your mind, but it also encourages others to be kind.
5. Get creative
Maybe you could do some crafts together, show small ones how to cut around heart shapes, teach them how to draw a heart. Decorate a biscuit with some icing sugar. Encourage them to paint, stick, have fun with junk modelling. Maybe they could make daddy a valentines card? If you’re stuck for ideas, I have loads on my pinterest board here.
I hope you’re feeling inspired to turn the commercial side of valentines around and focus on the true meaning of Valentines. Which is actually somewhat disputed, but either way – it focuses on loving and there’s got to be something positive about that 😍
Nikki x