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FITNESS FITNESS
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HEALTHY LIVINGHEALTHY LIVING
Mountain View News Saturday, August 2, 2025
BEACH FUN FOR EVERYONE
Michele Silence, M.A. is a 37-year certified fitness
professional who offers semi-private/virtual fitness
classes. Contact Michele at michele@kid-fit.
com. Visit her Facebook page at: michelesfitness
Visit her Facebook page at: michelesfitness.
The beach: sunny skies, waves crashing, the smell of sunscreen
in the air. It’s the perfect place to relax—unless you’re
a parent. Let’s be real. While you might dream of stretching
out with a good book or taking a peaceful nap in your
beach chair, your kids probably have a different plan. One
that involves endless energy, sand everywhere, and shouts of
“Watch me!” every 2.7 seconds.
So, how do you get a little peace and quiet at the beach
while keeping your kids busy? Better yet, getting them to be
physically active? Easy. Give them a few fitness-based beach
games and challenges. You get your relaxation. They burn
off their energy. Everyone wins.
Here are some fun, simple, and safe fitness activities your
kids can do at the beach that won’t require much from you,
except maybe a cheer or a high five now and then. If you
REALLY want to motivate them come with a few gift cards
in your hands (food, movies, music, etc) as a surprise for
those who try the hardest, do the best and have the best attitude
(of course you’ll make sure each of them gets something).
1. Beach Olympics Kids love a good competition. Set up a mini beach Olympics with events
like:
• Sand Sprint: Pick a start and finish line using towels, sticks, or seaweed. Have them race
back and forth. How many times depends on how tired you want to get them.
• Crab Walk Crawl: They walk on hands and feet, belly up like a crab. It looks funny and
works the whole body!
• Long Jump into the Sand: See who can jump the farthest. Just like a true Olympian.
• Water Bucket Relay: Use small beach buckets to carry water from the ocean and dump
it in a big hole. First one to fill their hole wins.
All you have to do is announce the events and sit back while they burn off some energy.
2. Treasure Hunt Workout Bury small items like shells, plastic coins, or little toys
in a certain area. Then give them clues or a list of things to find. For each item they find, they
have to do an exercise before moving on—like five jumping jacks, three push-ups, or a silly
dance.
They’ll stay busy digging, running, and moving. You can stay busy doing absolutely nothing.
Glorious.
3. Build a Muscle-Making Sandcastle You might not think of building sandcastles as
exercise but tell that to their sore arms tomorrow. All that digging, lifting wet sand, patting,
shaping, and hauling buckets works their upper body and core muscles.
Want to make it even more active? Challenge them to:
• Build the tallest tower using only buckets of water and sand.
• Make a sand animal zoo and act out each animal when it’s done.
• Create a sand obstacle course and have them race through it.
You’ll be amazed at how long this keeps them busy—and how tired they get.
4. Beach Ball Blast Bring a couple of large, lightweight beach balls and let the
games begin:
• Don’t Let It Touch the Ground: Keep the ball in the air as long as possible.
• Beach Ball Soccer: Set up goal posts using flip-flops and let them kick the ball back and
forth.
• Wind Chase: On a breezy day, let the wind take the ball and have them run after it.
Just make sure you write your name on the ball. If it blows into someone else’s area, you’ll want
it back. Especially if it becomes a neighborhood favorite.
Why does fitness at the beach matter? Besides giving you a moment to breathe (which is reason
enough), beach fitness activities do a lot for your kids. They build coordination, strength, and
endurance. They help improve focus and behavior. They sleep better at night (hallelujah!).
And they learn that exercise can be fun, not just something grown-ups complain about.
Let’s face it, our kids don’t need more screen time. They need movement, fresh air, and a little
sand between their toes. And you? You deserve at least 20 minutes with your eyes closed and
your feet in the surf.
So go ahead. Pack the sunscreen, the towels, lots of refreshments and a snack bag. Just don’t forget
the best beach tools of all are creativity and a few fitness games that keep the younger ones
active while you kick back. Give it a try. Your beach day will be a whole lot better.
A VISIONARY LEADER:
Remembering Wallis Annenberg
Philanthropist Wallis Annenberg died this week, and with her
passing, Los Angeles lost a guiding light. But more than that, the
city lost a fierce, generous, and unapologetically bold woman
who understood the real power of giving, not as charity, but as
transformation.
Wallis Annenberg's name is etched into our cultural and civic life:
the Annenberg Space for Photography, the pet-friendly Annenberg PetSpace, countless
arts institutions, environmental efforts, and vital re-entry programs for formerly incarcerated
individuals. Her vision was holistic, intersectional, and deeply rooted in love. I know
this not only from headlines, but from experience. Years ago, I had the privilege of participating
in two major Annenberg Foundation programs designed to strengthen nonprofit
leadership and build entrepreneurial capacity. That opportunity expanded my thinking
and sharpened my purpose.
She believed in backing my favorite people: innovators, rule-breakers, and people reimagining
what's possible. "We invest in innovators," she once said. "That way, their example can
be copied, and leveraged, creating change on a scale no philanthropist could ever afford."
This wasn't just a theory for Wallis Annenberg; it was her life's practice. She lived by Winston
Churchill's wisdom: "We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what
we give." Over her lifetime, she distributed nearly $2 billion in grants and philanthropy to
nonprofits, innovative projects, and community organizations.
She understood what I call the law of circulation: that resources, money, influence, and opportunity
are meant to move. To heal. To lift. "I've always been aware of the privilege that
I have financially," she once reflected. "And at the same time, I knew it wasn't going to fill
me up. I can't keep it unless I can give it away. It's got to be a two-way street."
Wallis exemplified what happens when women have access to wealth and power: we share.
We support. We uplift. This isn't just anecdotal; statistics back it. Research shows women
are 40% more likely to engage in philanthropy than men and volunteer nearly twice as
often. With an estimated $1 trillion in personal wealth about to shift hands through intergenerational
transfer, mostly to women, our influence is only growing.
Sometimes philanthropy sounds too big and out of reach, but in reality, it can simply be a
way of being, a natural extension of caretaking and community stewardship. Of creating a
world where we all get to thrive.
Her legacy is both blueprint and invitation: to give generously, to lead boldly, and to recognize
that power isn't something we hoard. It's something we share.
Rest well, Wallis Annenberg. Your life made a difference and showed us a way forward.
Have you thought about your legacy, your impact? If you'd like to fine-tune your vision
and extend your ripple, join us at the Visionary Leader Salon on August 9th—a one-day
workshop where we have expansive conversations about building lives that give us more
LIFE. For more information, visit loriaharris.com/workshop.
Lori A. Harris
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