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It has been said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over
again and expecting different results. So why do I still think my
open refrigerator door is going to suddenly inspire me with gourmet
thoughts and tasty dreams for this Tuesday night dinner? Isn't it
evident that it's almost time to panic? The chicken is as frozen as
an igloo in Antarctica and there is no way that the ground round will
thaw anytime before Spring. What's a woman to do?
The natives are restless and are beginning to circle the cat. I
better do something quick. Hungry?! What do you mean you're hungry?
It's only 5:45 -- get a grip! No one decent eats before 6:00. Maybe
if I go and open the refrigerator door again, inspiration will
strike.
But what is this? What doth my eye spy lurking there in the dark
recesses of the freezer? To my complete and utter joy, there are
approximately three tater tots and five fish sticks at the very back,
trying to strike out on their own. Make that four tater tots-what
looked like a brown ice cube is actually a tater tot completely
encased in its own ice tomb. If I promise them ice cream for dessert,
do you think this will be enough?
The tater tot is stuck to the freezer rack and comes apart as I try
to pull it out. Back down to three tater tots. Nope, definitely not
enough for two growing kids. Now what? Yikes, it's 6:00-now it's time
to panic. You-know-who should be bursting in on the scene in about 15
minutes. What am I going to make? Two peanut butter and jelly
sandwiches along with a banana each for the kids with a promise for
ice cream cones tomorrow if they promise not to tell a soul their
mother, the cookbook writer, is feeding them so pathetically and is
fresh out of ideas (and ingredients) for dinner.
I eyeball those fish sticks and 3-1/2 tater tots. Evil thoughts fill
my mind as I whip out the can opener and make a unique casserole,
just for you-know-who. A fish stick here, a tater tot there, some Y2K
cream of chicken soup in the middle, sprinkle with tarragon, top with
cheese and garnish with the half a tater tot rescued from ice.
¦I'm a genius! And as Martha would say, it's a good thing.
Sitting down to dinner as a family has almost become the exception
and not the rule anymore. The family table has been sacrificed for
various activities and the results are disheartening. Many families
feel disconnected from each other, children are incommunicative and
the opportunity to really know and care about each other is gone in
the quest to get to soccer practice on time.
A little thing like trying to sit down together as a family for
dinner every night, will have an impact on the family like almost
nothing else. For a lot of families, this could be the only time in
the day possible to interact and connect. Giving that time up to
activities will undermine a family's cohesiveness. Think about it. If
you don't have time to be together, you can't expect your family to
be close and loving. It won't happen unless there is that investment
of time.
So how do you revamp life to fit into this goal of sitting down to
dinner together as a family? Let's take a hypothetical family, the
Busbees (dad, mom and 2.5 kids-typical American family) and see if
you can relate to their schedule. They have been complaining about
the lack of family togetherness and when the family dinner table was
suggested, they thought it sounded great. But the question is, for
whom?
Betty Busbee, the mom, has a minivan with a bumper sticker that says
"If I am a stay-at-home mom, why am I always in the car?" Naturally,
she volunteers in both kids' classrooms. In addition, she teaches
Sunday school, manages the family's finances, and does all the
cooking and cleaning. She's also a homework helper to both kids and
the captain of the phone chain for school. She does all of that
in-between her time in the car where she takes the kids to music
lessons, band practice, ballet, tap, clogging, gymnastics, 4-H, cub
scouts, girl scouts, choir, swimming lessons, swim team, soccer,
baseball, volleyball and croquet.
And now, with her hair standing on end and a mad dog glint in her
eyes, she asks, "YOU WANT ME TO DO WHAT?" Clearly, this is a woman
who needs a break. This is a family that needs to realign their
priorities. How is this done, anyway? How can a busy Busbee family
get a grip on what's important to them as a family? It starts with
just that question: what is important to our family? And is what we
are doing accomplishing our goals?
Let's take a look at the Busbees. For starters, Mr. and Mrs. Busbee
can set down some hard and fast rules: one activity each for the
kids. That can even be cinched up a little tighter to make sure that
the kid's different activities are on the same day. I use that tactic
a lot to keep my schedule from flying out of control, and I only have
two kids! How much more important this rule is when there are more
children in the home. I have one day a week that the kids have music
lessons, we go to a convalescent home, and do all the errands-sort of
stacking the day with all the run around stuff, rather than
scattering it all out all over the week. It works well for us and
helps us keep our priorities straight. You want your home to be more
of a home and less of drop off point or launch pad. There's no place
like home is in real danger of becoming, there is no place that's
home.
The other thing the Busbees can do is not sweat the small stuff.
Let's say dinner together is impossible a couple of nights a week.
Have breakfast together if you can't do dinner, even if it means
getting up a little earlier than normal. The important thing is
sitting down together. On the other hand, it may be impossible to sit
down before 7:00 pm for dinner. I am unaware of any rules that say
dinner must always be eaten at 6:00. Flexibility is what will make
this work.
I have reworked my schedule so that my children are a part of the
dinnertime preparation and routine. This is one more way to develop
good relationships with your children. Both of my children look
forward to their turn when they get to be mom's kitchen helper. My
daughter, though just 10, can already make burritos, scrambled eggs,
pancakes and bake cookies, and makes lunch for her brother and me
regularly. She can easily clean up a kitchen single-handedly. She has
learned to do these things by my side as my kitchen helper. My
eight-year-old son is an expert carrot and potato peeler, pancake
turner over-er, and terrific salad maker. And he has learned to dry
and put away dishes, sweep and wipe down the counters and table. If
something needs vacuuming, I call in the expert, my son.
The point is when children have a vested interest in helping the
family reach its goal of drawing closer, they pitch in and do what
they can to help. If the burden is all on mom's shoulders to do all
the cleaning, cooking and cleaning up, she's overworked, overburdened
and what should be a relaxing, enjoyable time is just another thing
on her list of things to do. Not only will these trained and
efficient kitchen and household helpers make a difference at home,
they're having an opportunity to exercise their work ethic at an
early age-something that will serve them and their employer well when
they get older. This all works in tandem with the idea that as the
workload is spread out, the family has more time together. Everyone
is happier, especially mom!
Once you finally do get to the sitting down together part, enjoy each
other!
Don't rush through dinner and start barking orders to get the table
cleared. Sit and savor the moment. Laugh at your preschoolers silly
joke told for the fiftieth time, listen intently as your son talks
about catching that fly ball. By giving your children eye contact and
truly listening, they know they are loved and cared about. Good
healthy food on their plates can never take the place of a parent who
is truly there with their child, in the moment, listening to their
stories, complaints and goofball jokes.
But where was dad in all this dinner preparation? Why scrubbing the
toilet bowl, of course. Actually, the real reason I didn't include
him in this dinner time scheme is because for us, he's usually
arriving after all the action has taken place. And I've found that's
the case with a lot of families. But that doesn't mean Mr. Wonderful
gets the best spot on the couch and full remote privileges. Helping
to clean up or taking the kids off your hands a bit after dinner,
offers great time for dad and kids to reconnect. Nothing will cause a
woman to get more resentful quicker than having a hubby come home and
get comatose on the couch after dinner. There are still dishes to do,
children to be bathed, stories to be read. So even if your husband
misses all the preparation for dinner, he can still be a big part of
this new and improved plan of family togetherness. His participation
is as important as everyone else's.
All of this will help create a family identity and bring everyone
close. I tell my kids that they are "the excellent Ely's and we do
things excellently". I don't tell them this so they can proclaim
themselves superior to the world, but so they'll eventually hold up
high and excellent standards for themselves and their own families
when they are grown. From their vantage point and ages, I'm sure my
children probably don't see how any of this interrelates but it does.
Like a gigantic tapestry, all these things act like different colored
threads to make one beautiful masterpiece. If all you could see was
the backside of a tapestry, you would see all the work that went into
making this fine piece-the knots, the patterns and continuity of
color-all of the hidden work. Not too impressive, if that was all you
saw. But when you turn it over, the beauty of this work will take
your breath away. This is what the family dinner table represents. A
constant thread in the tapestry of our family's life. While only a
single thread to a bigger canvas, its interwoven pattern strengthens
and clarifies the big picture on the other side. Without it, the
whole thing would fall apart.
Excerpted from, Healthy Foods: An irreverent guide to understanding
nutrition and feeding your family well (Champion Press) February
2001
Copyright (c) Leanne Ely
All Rights Reserved, Used with permission
About the Author:
Leanne Ely is a nutritionist
and former caterer, with a passion for cooking and writing. Her
first book, Healthy Foods: An irreverent guide to understanding
nutrition and feeding your family well (Champion Press) is out on
bookstore shelves now. Leanne writes a newspaper column called The
Manic Housewife and is a guest cook on "Carolina Cooks."
Let's Get Cooking!
While there are many reasons for teaching kids to cook -- less expensive than eating out, preserves family heritage, etc, the most important
reason is that by teaching your child to cook, you're giving him a better chance to be a healthy grown-up. Enabling your child with the ability
to appreciate freshness and to transform ingredients into tasty foods opens their eyes to making wiser choices about what to eat...