Legacy Stone Family Blog

The Family Tradition Examples You Need for Strong Family Culture

Written by Legacy Stone | Oct 21, 2024 12:00:00 PM

To begin building a healthy family culture, family traditions can be a simple starting place. They are more than just daily routines; traditions are defined moments or practices that help reinforce what matters most to your family. Let’s walk through family traditions examples to help get you started with ideas of what to apply.

Previously, we have talked about three key categories of family traditions, so let’s dive deeper into the examples of these family traditions.

Family Traditions Examples for Connection

One of the purposes of family traditions is to help deepen the connections your family has as traditions can be a place to bond together. Use these ideas to spark your own potential practices:

  • Family Dinner Tradition: Bigger than just a normal mealtime, make a tradition for a special dinner. It could be about the food you eat, something special you do during the meal time, or the types of conversation you will have.
  • Family Storytelling Tradition: Have a set time where everyone brings their best family stories to share. It could be from past history or recent fun memories. Make it a special time to share stories, laugh together, and talk about the lessons learned.
  • Family Big Idea Night: Have a family tradition to dream big as a family at the start of the year. Talk about personal goals as well as dreams as a family. Make a vision board or fill out a goals worksheet. 

Family Traditions Examples for Celebration

It is often overlooked in our society that is so focused on achievement and staying busy, but we need to stop and celebrate together as a family. Use these family traditions examples to help you slow down and celebrate.

  • Family Shout Out Tradition: Hold a special time as family, in the timing that works for your current season, to share shout-outs of good things you have seen in each other. Celebrate accomplishments, and consider even having a special way to honor big victories. (Funny certificate, card, add to family hall of fame, etc.)
  • Family Trophy Tradition: Create a family "trophy" or symbol of success that is passed around whenever someone accomplishes something noteworthy. The winner keeps it until they identify the next family member to earn it, or make it a joint family decision to award it regularly.
  • Family Year in Review Tradition: Take dedicated time at year-end to do a highlights and wrap-up tradition where you review the year together. Talk about the ups and downs, and pray together to thank God.

Family Traditions Examples for Depth

Going deeper as a family, truly sharing life together, can be challenging, so these family tradition examples can help you engage beyond just the surface level.

  • Family Gratitude Tradition: Create a tradition with a physical way to remember what you are grateful for like having a jar where you can add slips of paper with things you are grateful for and then read them aloud at the end of the year together. Or use a shared document and add the memories there.
  • Family Prayer Tradition: Set a tradition around meaningful moments of prayer. It could be identifying key dates and transition moments during the year where you will have an intentional prayer night. (Want more ideas of prayer prompts for your family? Read our guide here. 
  • Family Generations Tradition: Consider having a tradition related to when your children hit a certain age where they are entrusted with a family heirloom or reminder of the family legacy. It can be a symbolic moment of inviting them into further responsibility and ownership of the family culture and legacy.

What Family Traditions Will You Start?

Now that you have this model, you can start to build your own family traditions that will support a thriving family culture. Connect, celebrate, and deepen together. The purpose of traditions isn’t to add more things to your to-do list. It’s to help you get back to the meaningful practices that will set your family up for multi-generational success.

If you are ready to get started, talk about these three categories with your family and brainstorm your own ideas, or pick ideas you like from the lists here. (Read our previous post explaining these 3 categories if you need help with the conversation.) Here’s to building the next generation!