With coronavirus numbers on the rise across the country, your family may be preparing for a different Thanksgiving this year โ no trip to grandmaโs house, no overflowing dinners with extended family and friends.
If youโll be celebrating virtually with loved ones who arenโt in your quarantine group, hereโs how can you make it special.
- Plan a shared experience. No matter the distance, youโll feel close on the big day if you share the same rituals. Have your child come up with ideas for all five senses, and spread the word to everyone on the virtual guest list: For example, plan to light the same scent of candle or prepare the same fragrant dish, and create a shared playlist to use as background music.
- Create connection with meal prep. Thanksgiving meal may be the hardest time for your child to be apart from family members who arenโt in your quarantine group, like grandparents. So focus on the steps that come before eating, which are easier to bond over from a distance: Schedule calls for family members to help your child brainstorm the holiday menu and make a shopping list. Ask for a loved oneโs favorite recipe, and video chat while you and your child test it out. (Bonus: These are great ways to get your child involved in the kitchen!)
- Send Thanksgiving care packages. Mail or drop off treats and supplies to help guests feel part of the fun. Since you canโt crowd around one table to split a pumpkin pie, maybe you and your child bake pumpkin muffins and drop them off on doorsteps, or make matching centerpieces for everyone to display on their holiday tables.
- Connect. During your Thanksgiving video chat, have your child host โopeningโ and โclosing ceremonies.โ Your child might want to kick things off with a song or prayer, and wrap up with a round of jokes or the latest Tik Tok dance. With old traditions on hold, the possibilities are endless.
- Try a new twist on a pot luck. Since youโll all be dining as separate households, a traditional pot luck is out the window. But you can still ask every person to โbringโ something to contribute โ like a brief toast or favorite family photo to share virtually.
- Try a gratitude bowl. Have all the households in your extended family start this process a few weeks before Thanksgiving. Each day, each person writes something theyโre grateful for on a slip of paper and adds it to their household bowl. During your Thanksgiving virtual event, take turns reading aloud.
- Make Thanksgiving resolutions. This can be part of your virtual get-together, or just a quiet conversation with your child to close out the day. What would your child like to learn, try, or do more of by Thanksgiving next year? This is a nice way to remind kids (and all of us) that we all have a lot to look forward to on the other side of this pandemic.
Itโs hard on everyone to skip favorite holiday traditions. But as with so much else during the time of coronavirus, we can try new, quarantine-friendly ideas to fill in for what weโll miss. It may even add new meaning to your holiday.
Originally published at ConnecticutChildrens.com