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23Apr

8 ways to make dinner time, quality time

4 comments so far

Dinner is generally the only meal a family can spend together as school and work often mean everyone leaves the house at different times in the morning and lunch obviously isn’t an option. But dinner, ah yes, dinner… everyone is home and has an opportunity to spend some time together before departing separate ways for soccer practices, rehearsals, honey-do’s and other evening activities.

I imagine most people wish they could spend more time with their families and having dinner together each night is an ideal way to do that - to block out the rest of the world and interact with each other. Here are eight ways to make eating dinner together as a family more meaningful.

1. Turn off the TV. Focus on your family, not the TV. Watching TV during dinner 1. is a crutch because you don’t know what to talk about or 2. tells your kids what’s on TV is more important than them. Harsh, perhaps, but it can be perceived that way. It’s family dinner, not TV dinner. If you’re that worried about missing something, TiVo it.

2. No cell phones/texting. Sorry kids. The next hour is dedicated to family. Everyone (including parents) turn off your cell phones. And, no, putting them on vibrate isn’t an option.

3. Sit at the table. As opposed to the couch, when at the table everyone is facing each other instead of (let’s be honest here) the TV. It makes the gathering about each other instead of outside distractions.

4. Prepare healthy meals. It’s important that meals not just fill, but nourish your family. It’s not to say that having pizza for dinner is never a good thing, but it should be the exception more than the rule. By providing healthy, nutritious food you’re showing your family you care about them enough to put the effort into feeding them quality food. We grab enough junk during the day in snacking and eating out that dinner can be, and in my opinion, should be, healthy.

5. Work through the awkwardness. I know this sounds a bit odd, but you might not be used to sitting around as a family for extended periods of time without the TV on. At first, that could mean conversations might seem forced and a little awkward, especially if you have teenagers. Just be genuine and persistent. As it becomes routine people will open up more. Keep at it - it will get better.

6. Don’t rush. Enjoy the meal. We tend to get in the habit of scarfing down our food and moving on to the next thing on our agenda. While that may be necessary if you’re squeezing in lunch at work, it shouldn’t happen at home. Eating slower has a number of benefits: you’ll enjoy the food more, you’ll generally eat less and eating will change from a stressful event to a relaxing, happy thing you can look forward to each day.

7. Stay put. Just because you’re plate’s empty doesn’t mean you’re done with the meal. My in-laws are particularly good at sitting at the table for a while after everyone’s done and just…hanging out. My father in-law will ask someone to bring him some cookies and we’ll sit around, pick at the food that’s left on the table and continue our conversation. It’s a wonderful, often hilarious experience.

8. Everyone help clean up. Make sure everybody helps with dishes/cleanup. Not only does this extend the time you’re spending together as a family, but everyone understands they have a responsibility to help with the meal, not just the preparer of the food. Even little kids can wipe down the table afterward with a wet cloth so they have a sense of ownership. Of course, saying, “I’ve got it, you go sit down and relax” and giving everyone else a night off is a welcome gesture too. Just make sure it’s not the same person always saying it. :)

Dinner has a lot of potential as far as quality family time goes. These things have been beneficial to me and my family in making the most of it.

Do you have any other suggestions? What do you do to make dinner a special time for your family? Please leave some ideas in the comments.

LivSimpl

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Categories: Family, Food, Home, Simple Pleasures

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008 at 10:35 am and is filed under Family, Food, Home, Simple Pleasures. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “8 ways to make dinner time, quality time”

  1. Posted by albert 30th April, 2008 at 7:29 am

    Very nice post.

    We find that the biggest challenge is to get everybody to sit down at the table in the first place. Once that is done, the rest seems to follow of its own accord.

    Sit-down family dinners is one of those simple, free, everyday pleasures that we don’t let ourselves enjoy often enough.

    Albert @ Headspace
    http://thoughtsintime.co.za

  2. Posted by Tastes Kinda Minty 30th April, 2008 at 2:15 pm

    My kids are almost grown and gone, but the sit down meals we had were wonderful, and when we get together now I enjoy it so much. It is worth the effort to have that time each day with your family. My kids would often have friends for dinner. They enjoyed the time too. They often said how they didn’t have dinner at their homes with their families. Thanks for the good reminder!

  3. Posted by RaeLynn 1st May, 2008 at 12:39 am

    All good ideas. Awesome post. I just noticed on my google reader that you have over 150 subscribers to livsimpl…are you for real?! I have 11. Cool.

  4. Posted by LivSimpl 2nd May, 2008 at 9:13 am

    Thanks all for your comments - they’re always appreciated.

    Raelynn - As far as RSS subscribers go, that must be just people who are subscribed through Google Reader because there are a lot more than 150 signed up.

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