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What's Included
- Beautiful metallic box with full color sticker.
- 365 Statement cards alphabetized into 26 clear packets.
- A Keepsake journal
- 2 Instruction sheets
- 1 Straw
- Mindamics Decal
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What It Does
- Learn more about your father/daughter using 2 years worth of entertaining and stimulating statement cards.
- No matter what your relationship is with your father/daughter this game will help provide a fun and relaxing atmosphere to learn more about each other.
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Mindamics COM-MU’-NI-CA’-TION game is a fun game that makes it easy for fathers & daughters to communicate with each other while going out to a meal together. The game includes fill-in-the-blank statements that the father & daughter read and answer during the meal. The game includes 365 statement cards divided between 26 different packets lettered “A” thru “Z”. Each of the 26 packets contains enough statement cards to promote stimulating conversation between a father and daughter during the meal. Example statements include:


The game is played with the father & daughter going to a restaurant that begins with, or contains, the letter corresponding to the packet of cards for that meal. For example, when first starting the game with the “A” packet, the father & daughter might choose to go to Aunt Alice’s restaurant for breakfast, since Aunt Alice’s begins with the letter “A”. Part of the fun of the game is trying to find restaurants that begin with, or contain, each of the different letters of the alphabet. If a father and daughter play the game once a month, they’ll have enough materials to cover over two years worth of activities.

The game is designed for fathers with daughters’ age 10 or higher. The game was invented ten years ago by a father who was looking for a way to stay in touch with his daughter after being separated by divorce. Research shows that unfortunate events are more likely to occur when children lose regular, meaningful contact with their father. For example, [girls] who grow up with only one of their biological parents (usually the mother), compared to children who grow up with both parents, are three times more likely to have a child out of wedlock, 2.5 times more likely to become teen mothers, and twice as likely to drop out of school.