20 Things to Do With Your Kids Before They’re 20
There’s a reassuring truth modern parenting research keeps confirming: it’s not the number of hours you spend with your kids that matters most—it’s how you show up in the moments you do have.
A 2025 study on parental time use found that children benefit most from engaged, intentional interaction—not more time spent in the same space, at the same time.
Before they turn 20, your kids will absorb lessons everywhere: classrooms, friendships, failures, screens, and the wider world. But the experiences that shape their confidence, resilience, and sense of belonging often happen quietly—during ordinary moments when they feel seen, heard, and valued.
You don’t have to plan bigger vacations or bucket experiences. You can simply choose attention over distraction, curiosity over routine, and connection over perfection.
Here are 20 meaningful activities worth doing with your kids before they’re 20—small, doable moments that build trust, perspective, and lasting connection.
Connection & Belonging
1. Create a one-on-one ritual.
Whether it’s a weekly walk around the neighborhood, a Saturday morning coffee date (hot chocolate works too), a short drive to grab ice cream, or a late-night check-in over a board game, predictable 1:1 time tells them, “This time is just for you.” Make it consistent enough that they can look forward to it and feel seen.
2. Tell them stories about your own childhood—especially the messy parts.
Share times you got in trouble at school, struggled with a hobby, or had an awkward moment with friends. Include the lessons learned or how you handled it. Seeing that mistakes are normal—and recoverable—helps them accept their own stumbles without shame.
3. Let them talk without fixing.
When they complain about a rough day, a tricky friendship, or a stressful assignment, resist the urge to jump in with solutions. Ask open-ended questions: “How did that feel?” or “What do you think you might try next?” Feeling heard builds confidence faster than advice ever could.
4. Laugh hard together.
Create inside jokes, play silly games, tell ridiculous stories, or even have a bad-movie night where you both critique over-the-top plots. Unfiltered laughter and shared silliness become emotional anchors they carry into adulthood.
5. Apologize when you get it wrong.
Whether you raised your voice, forgot a commitment, or misunderstood them, saying “I’m sorry” models accountability. Follow it with a short explanation and a plan to do better. This teaches that respect goes both ways and that everyone—parents included—can make amends.
Confidence & Independence
6. Let them order their own food.
Whether at a restaurant, café, or even a takeout window, letting them choose—and place—their own order gives them a small but powerful sense of voice and independence.
7. Give them real responsibility.
Instead of just chores, let your child plan a weekly meal, lead pet care, or help manage family tasks like homework scheduling, gift shopping, or choosing a weekly activity.
8. Let them try something they’re not great at.
Kids build resilience by tackling challenges like a new sport, an instrument, or a tricky art project—where effort matters more than instant success.
9. Support them through failure without rescuing.
Stay close. Ask questions like, “What did you try first?” or “What might you do differently next time?” Let them do the learning—whether it’s missing a goal in soccer, flubbing a science experiment, or struggling with a math problem. Avoid jumping in to fix it; guide them to problem-solve on their own.
10. Teach them how to advocate for themselves.
Practice speaking up with teachers about a confusing assignment, asking coaches for more feedback on drills, or requesting a group member to pull their weight. Later, model how to communicate professionally with employers or mentors about needs, responsibilities, and boundaries.
Curiosity & Growth
11. Read the same book and talk about it.
Choose a novel, biography, or even a graphic novel. Instead of quizzes, have conversations like, “What would you have done in that character’s shoes?” or “Which part surprised you most?” Let your discussions spark deeper thinking and opinions.
12. Let them teach you something they love.
Whether it’s playing a Roblox game, explaining a Pokémon card strategy, or demonstrating the latest TikTok dance craze, letting them guide you validates their interests and builds their confidence in expertise.
13. Explore places outside your routine.
Go beyond the usual park. Visit a science museum, a historical neighborhood, a local library event, or a botanical garden. Let them ask questions, notice details, and reflect on what’s different or inspiring in each new environment.
14. Learn a skill together.
Try cooking a new cuisine, fixing a leaky faucet, skateboarding, knitting, or even learning Spanish phrases. Shared growth creates bonding, allows you to model perseverance, and gives them hands-on confidence.
15. Encourage questions you don’t have answers to.
When they ask things like “Why do some animals hibernate?” or “How do astronauts go to the bathroom in space?” respond with curiosity: research together, hypothesize, or admit you don’t know. Modeling curiosity shows it’s okay not to have all the answers.
Perspective & Purpose
16. Volunteer together.
Sign up for a community clean-up, help at a food pantry, or visit an animal shelter. Discuss what you notice, how people benefit, and how small efforts create real impact. Experiencing empathy first-hand is far more memorable than lectures.
17. Talk openly about money and values.
Discuss budgeting while grocery shopping, what to tip at a restaurant, how much to donate to charity, or the difference between wants and needs. Share personal reasoning behind decisions to instill thoughtful financial habits.
18. Ask big questions.
Prompt reflections like, “What would you do if you had no fear?” or “Who do you admire and why?” Encourage journaling or discussions over a walk—emphasize exploration over pressure.
19. Help them reflect on who they’re becoming—not just what they’re achieving.
After a school project or sports game, ask, “What did you learn about yourself?” or “How did you handle setbacks?” Focus on resilience, curiosity, empathy, and integrity rather than just grades or trophies.
20. Let them know—often—that they don’t have to earn your love.
Say it out loud: “I love you because you’re you, not because of what you do.” Remind them in small ways through hugs, notes, or quiet check-ins. This foundation of unconditional love fosters security and confidence in everything else they do.
How Parents Create Space For What Matters
Connection doesn’t come from doing more. It comes from creating space—in your schedule, in your routines, and in your attention. A few small shifts can open the door:
- Block connection time like an appointment. Let your child know you’ve set aside short, protected windows for walks, drives, bedtime check-ins where you want their full attention, which prepares your child to engage and signals that this time matters.
- Choose places that invite presence. Some moments of connection happen during the day to day, but others may require stepping out of your usual environment—into nature, a yoga studio, a café, or an art center—to help everyone slow down and reset.
- Lower the bar for what “counts.” Connection isn’t a project. It’s often a conversation in the car, a shared laugh, or sitting side-by-side without distraction.
- Notice before you plan. Pay attention to when your child opens up, when they linger, when they seem most themselves—and start by making space there.
At Shine NYC, we help families create room for these moments—not through rigid rules or packed calendars, but through themed parties, classes, workshops, and open play time that helps you reserve more intentional time while your kids are still young.


