Kiss and Make Up Day is celebrated on August 25 each year, a gentle nudge to let go of grudges, apologize, and rebuild connections that matter most. It’s an unofficial observance that encourages forgiveness and practical reconciliation in everyday relationships.

History of Kiss and Make Up Day

As a modern feel-good observance, Kiss and Make Up Day took shape through popular calendars and lifestyle sites that fixed its date on August 25 and framed it around mending strained relationships. The phrase itself is an old English idiom about forgiving and becoming friends again, which fits the spirit of the day perfectly.

Some sources credit the creation of the day to Jacqueline Milton, who promoted it as a chance to re-examine old relationships and find ways to repair them. Whether there was a single formal “founding moment,” the idea spread because it’s simple, useful, and easy for anyone to try.

Why is Kiss and Make Up Day important?

Most of us don’t need a lecture on forgiveness—we need a small, timely push to pick up the phone, knock on the door, or send that first message. This day provides it. It reminds us that pride is loud, but repairing things is quieter and braver, and that peace at home or in a friendship is worth more than being “right.”

It also shifts reconciliation from abstract advice to practical action. You don’t have to solve a lifelong dispute in one afternoon; you can start with a short apology, a cup of coffee, or a promise to try again. Those tiny moves restore trust faster than grand speeches.

  • It gives a clear, no-drama moment to make the first move.
  • It helps turn hurt into a conversation, not a wall.
  • It models humility for kids who are watching how we handle conflict.
  • It replaces silent distance with small, steady hope.
  • It reminds us relationships outlast most arguments.

How to celebrate Kiss and Make Up Day

Keep it low-pressure. Start with one person who keeps popping into your thoughts, and choose the easiest first step—text, voice note, or a short call. Own your part without a long defense, suggest a casual meet-up, and keep the tone kind and simple. If emotions run high, agree to pause and try again tomorrow.

You can also “make up” with yourself: forgive a past misstep, tidy up a messy inbox or workspace that’s nagging you, or write a quick letter you never plan to send just to get feelings out of your head. If you’re celebrating with a partner, pair the talk with a small ritual—walk around the block, share dessert, or swap one sincere compliment each.

  • Send a brief message that says, “I miss you—can we talk?”
  • Write down one boundary and one hope for moving forward.
  • Offer a clear apology without the word “but.”
  • Suggest coffee or a walk in a neutral, relaxed place.
  • Celebrate progress with a small shared treat.

Therapist-Backed Tips to Reconnect

  • Set a clear intention for Kiss and Make Up Day: “I want to reconnect and understand you,” not “I want to win this argument.”
  • Choose good timing (avoid HALT—hungry, angry, lonely, tired). Ask, “Is now okay to talk, or should we set a time?”
  • Use a soft start-up: “I feel… about… I need…” rather than “You always/never…”.
  • Apologize well—three parts: acknowledge the impact, take responsibility (no “but”), and state what you’ll do differently next time.
  • Practice reflective listening: summarize what you heard and ask, “Did I get that right?” before sharing your view.
  • Get curious, not defensive: “What felt hardest for you?” and “What would help you feel safer with me in this conversation?”
  • Agree on a time-out rule: either person can pause when overwhelmed; set a specific return time (e.g., 30 minutes) and honor it.
  • Reframe the conflict as “us vs. the pattern,” not “me vs. you.” Name the pattern (e.g., sarcasm, stonewalling) you both want to change.
  • Negotiate one small, observable change each (e.g., “I’ll text if I’m running late,” “I’ll put my phone away during dinner”).
  • Turn down the physiological volume – slow your breathing, lower your voice, and sit at an angle or side-by-side to reduce reactivity.
  • Boost positives on purpose: share three specific appreciations about your partner today to rebuild goodwill (aim for a 5:1 positive ratio).
  • Set and honor boundaries: clearly state what you will do to protect the relationship and what you need to feel respected.
  • Repair with actions, not just words: make amends that match the harm (replace what was broken, plan the rescheduled date, follow through).
  • If you’re stuck in loops, consider a neutral third party (couples therapist, mediator). And if there’s abuse or coercion, prioritize safety and seek professional help—reconciliation isn’t an obligation.
  • Create a simple reconnection ritual (15–20 minutes weekly): a walk and talk, tea on the balcony, or a “How are we doing?” check-in.

Cherish your relationship! Cherish each other’s feelings! Appreciate the time you spend together.

Kiss and Make Up Day Dates Table

YearDateDay
2025August 25Monday
2026August 25Tuesday
2027August 25Wednesday
2028August 25Friday
2029August 25Saturday

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