3. I didn't say kids were starving or didn't eat breakfast. Just said I sent thes boys off with full stomachs to golf. Studies have shown that eating breakfast helps in test scores, etc. I think it is wonderful schools are offering breakfasts to kids who might not get it at home.
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June Cleaver managed it because she was a housewife on a half-hour tv show.
June Cleaver managed it because she was a housewife on a half-hour tv show.
I don't think the OP was hung up on the timeframe so much as the idea of not having dinner together with the family. It's a time-honored tradition, a time for family to come together at the end of the day, and LOTS of research shows that it's one of the single best things you can do for your kids / your family. Dinner is more than nutrition. It's about family.
It doesn't take much looking around to see that many families are not connected as strongly as families were in the past. Certainly plenty of things are to blame for this: Busy schedules, technology that separates rather than uniting . . . but making dinner a priority is a way to overcome these problems. Eat early, eat late, eat take-out, cook it in a crock pot, bring a picnic and have dad meet you just after soccer practice -- you can manage dinner together in many different ways.
Very well said!(Bolding mine..)
I find it amazing in our lunchroom the number of people and families who don't eat dinner or eat together at all. I work both FT and PT so I'm not home two days a week, but I fix dinner for my DD and DH otherwise it defeats the purpose of me working if they go out.
All meeting seem to be starting at 6pm and go to 7:30 - soccer, church, associations...
I can't tell you the number of times I get phone calls between 6 and 7:30 with friends just wanting to chat and I say, "are you eating" and they say no.
Maybe it's just me, but I find it very odd.
Anyone else notice this too?![]()
It is 8:30pm here. My oldest is still at his baseball game and has been there since 5:30 for warmups. He should be home around 9. I have a sick one at home and a husband who is working out of town this week. We are lucky that 3 of us got to eat together tonight. My oldest will probably get a frozen pizza and salad for dinner. He doesn't like reheated burgers ( what the rest of us had ) and there is NO way I was making the rest of the kids wait until 9 for dinner. Once again, you don't know everyones situation!
I find it sad that families do not eat together and it fustrates me the number of activities that schools/sports/churches plan at 6:00-6:30. What is the point of being a family/having a family if you can't spend time together?
We eat dinner together every night. I love to plan, prepare, cook and my husband makes sure he's home by dinner time, which is around 6 pm. Call us old fashioned, but that's very important to us. Playdates and activities are planned and scheduled before or after dinner, or mostly on the weekends. The kids never complain, it's just something that we do. Our oldest is 8 and is already asking when she can learn to cook real meals.
Since parents choose to be overworked, and to overshedule their kids with activities, there's no real quality time. As a result family members are forgetting how to relate to each other and eventually the family falls apart.
We eat dinner together every night. I love to plan, prepare, cook and my husband makes sure he's home by dinner time, which is around 6 pm. Call us old fashioned, but that's very important to us. Playdates and activities are planned and scheduled before or after dinner, or mostly on the weekends. The kids never complain, it's just something that we do. Our oldest is 8 and is already asking when she can learn to cook real meals.
Since parents choose to be overworked, and to overshedule their kids with activities, there's no real quality time. As a result family members are forgetting how to relate to each other and eventually the family falls apart.