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Health & Wellness, Mental Health

Slow Down for Spring Break

Published March 18, 2026Admin Only:

With more togetherness and awareness, make this spring break mindful.

Spring break promises breathing room. Fewer alarms. Less rushing from one place to the next. But for many families, that extra time disappears into screens โ€” a parent replying to emails, a child on YouTube, everyone technically together but mentally elsewhere.

Thatโ€™s not a failure of willpower. Screens are designed to fill gaps. The moment things slow down, they step in.

Unplugging doesnโ€™t mean banning phones or declaring a full digital detox. It means choosing, in a few key moments, to protect shared attention. Because attention is where connection actually forms โ€” and without it, even long stretches of โ€œtime togetherโ€ can pass without anyone feeling closer at the end.

Benefits of Unplugging One Day a Week

Studies from the University of California have shown that even the presence of a phone on the table (not in use) reduces the depth of conversation and perceived empathy between people. In families, that plays out as shorter exchanges and fewer moments of real, active listening โ€” especially during holidays when expectations of โ€œquality timeโ€ are already high.

Mindfulness helps not by adding more to the schedule, but by slowing interactions down just enough for them to register. Itโ€™s the difference between doing something together and actually remembering it later. Shared laughter during a board game. A walk where everyone notices something different. A meal that doesnโ€™t feel rushed or fragmented.

Spring break is one of the easiest moments to experiment with this. Thereโ€™s less pressure, fewer deadlines and more flexibility to try small changes without turning them into rules. You donโ€™t need perfect conditions, just a willingness to swap a bit of screen time for shared experiences that spark conversation and joy.

Spring Break Activities for Kids

Play without purpose

Board games, card games and outdoor play give families a reason to gather without pressure. They encourage turn-taking, cooperation and healthy competition โ€” all skills that matter beyond the game itself. Choose activities everyone can get involved with.

Make space for stories

Storytelling builds empathy and understanding. Invite family members to share memories, talk about funny moments or create a story together one sentence at a time. It helps kids feel heard and reminds adults that connection doesnโ€™t always come from โ€œbigโ€ conversations.

Explore with awareness

Spring break is ideal for low-stakes adventures: parks, trails, neighborhood walks or local attractions. Before heading out, pause to set a simple intention โ€” to notice, slow down, be curious. While exploring, encourage everyone to tune into their senses. These moments of shared attention deepen the experience.

Walk and observe

Try a short, silent walk together. Afterward, talk about what stood out: sounds, colors, movements. It encourages mindfulness without needing explanation, and shows that everyone experiences the same space differently.

Bring mindfulness to the table

Meals are a natural anchor point. Cook together where possible. Eat without screens. Talk about the food โ€” textures, flavors, where it came from. End with gratitude or even just a simple check-in. Itโ€™s a small habit that creates rhythm and connection.


Anthony Cupo

Anthony Cupo is a trained mindfulness facilitator (TMF) from the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior. He is a co-owner of Stepping Forward Counseling Center, LLC, and has been meditating for over 30 years.

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