Does Your Family Eat Dinner Together?

by Scully 43 Replies latest social family

  • Scully
    Scully

    Interesting article from today's National Post:

    We don't eat together, and are paying for it Families in crisis: Researchers say suppers apart may cause social ills
    Misty Harris
    CanWest News Service
    Monday, October 17, 2005

    Family dinner hour, once an institution in Canadian homes, is becoming a quaint relic among time-starved parents and kids. This according to at least a half-dozen recent reports from top universities, research firms and think-tanks, all of which paint a picture of families in crisis at the dinner table.

    Or, more accurately, away from it.

    The latest studies -- one from from Harvard Medical School, the other from Columbia University -- cite the family-dinner deficit as a contributing factor in childhood obesity, teen substance abuse, poor academic performance and increased household stress.

    The problem has apparently grown to such proportions that a Canadian company -- with written support from Prime Minister Paul Martin, no less -- is organizing the country's first National Family Dinner Night. M & M Meat Shops is asking parents to make pledges on its Web site to dedicate the evening of Nov. 3 to breaking bread with loved ones.

    While the online formality might sound silly to some, experts say a modern family needs all the help it can get when it comes to organizing dinner.

    "Kids are participating in a ton of extracurricular activities these days," says pediatrician Elsie Taveras, lead researcher of the Harvard study of 14,355 youth. "You can imagine how that increased demand on our time is impacting the ability to get anyone together, let alone an entire family."

    A survey released this week by Decima Research for the Holmes Group (marketer of Rival and Crock Pot slow cookers) indicates more than half of Canadians believe they don't have time to plan or execute a dinner event for family and friends. A full 30% cited dinner preparation as the most stressful element behind such a gathering.

    A separate survey of Canadian women, released this week by Leger Marketing for Palm Canada, similarly found 21% of married mothers consider putting dinner on the table to be the most stressful activity in their day.

    But Ms. Taveras's report, published in this month's issue of the journal Pediatrics, nonetheless calls for doctors to recommend family dinners as an ongoing health initiative.

    "We understand the stresses and demands on people's time," Ms. Taveras says. "But our work has shown that if you eat family dinners more often, you have better diet quality and you're less likely to be overweight."

    In Canada, there are even "coaches" available to get you started.

    Lynn Fraser, founder of Families Are Worth It in Edmonton, says part of her job as a work-life balance coach is to teach families how to plan a meal. She covers everything from turning off the TV to changing "dinner logistics" (for example, eating dessert first) to offering conversation starters.

    "It's really easy to put on a pot of frozen vegetables and boil them in the water," says Ms. Fraser, who is helping to promote National Family Dinner Night. "But when you're feeling stressed, even a simple, straightforward task like that is overwhelming."

    Miriam Weinstein, author of the new book The Surprising Power of Family Meals: How Eating Together Makes Us Smarter, Stronger, Healthier and Happier, says people claiming to be "too busy" or "too stressed" to plan a family dinner need to re-evaluate their lifestyle.

    "Schedules are a reflection of our priorities," explains Ms. Weinstein, a mother of two. "We brag now about how busy we are, how little time we have for anything, and it becomes self-fulfilling."

    While she admits a "seamless, 90-minute dinner" is highly unrealistic, Ms. Weinstein believes it's within everyone's power -- and in every family's best interest -- to attempt regular sit-down suppers.

    Pointing to a study released last month by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, she notes that family meals are even proven to curb risky behaviours among youth. Compared with teens who have five or more family dinners a week, the report found young people who have two or less family meals are three times likelier to try marijuana, 2 1/2 times likelier to smoke, more than 1 1/2 times likelier to drink alcohol and almost 40% less likely to receive A's and B's in school.

    © National Post 2005
  • Billygoat
    Billygoat

    Scully,

    This is something that Mozz and our small group (at church) discussed at length yesterday. We find when we DO sit down to eat, it's on the sofa in front of the TV. So the 8 people (4 couples) in our group challenged each other to sit down together (with no TV!) and have an actual dinner at the dinner table at least THREE times this week. We're studying in our Sunday School class how much time TV robs from our lives...so this is our little "lab" to see what else we accomplish when we eliminate some of the TV watching our lives. We're finding our schedules increasingly busy, so the idea of having children is totally overwhelming to me right now. I can barely remember to feed my cats, how on earth am I going to keep track of a kid???

    I'll let you know how it goes this week!

    Andi

  • vitty
    vitty

    Most evening we do, but it usually ends up in a row. When you have a 18 year old who doesnt want to talk about what he done during the day and my husband who gets cross because he being unenthuiastic about his life, its not worth it.

    Highly over rated if you ask me, put the telly on and have something to talk about LOL

  • blondie
    blondie

    1. We don't have children

    2. We were both single and ate alone for about 15 years.

    3. We come from the TV generation and watch while we eat (bad, bad) but we watch different channels.

    Blondie

  • xjwms
    xjwms

    Good question......

    We watch TV while we eat. In the family room.

  • luna2
    luna2

    When my son lived at home we ate together....mostly in front of the television. I'm sorry, but the two of us sitting at the table was boring. My son never volunteered much information and I hated asking him a bunch of questions just to get him to talk to me. At least watching tv, we'd discuss what was on. LOL

  • JH
    JH

    I live alone, so I eat alone, and at very weird hours too

    Like Breakfast at 7am

    Lunch at 10h30 am

    Dinner at 3pm

    Beer is only after 6pm

  • caligirl
    caligirl

    We used to, but not so much now. Mostly it is in front of the TV, which I am not happy about, but that is the current habit. It depends on the time of year also- in the summer, we BBQ a lot, so we tend to spend more time outside away from TV. Right now, my husband's work hours make it nearly impossible more than 1 or 2 nights. That and all my scrapbook supplies have taken over the dining room table!

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee

    looks around to see who else is here

    Nope just me. Kitchen and living room all in one TV and table and computer all in one too

    Therefore all of me eats all of my meal in the room

  • Billygoat
    Billygoat
    looks around to see who else is here

    Nope just me. Kitchen and living room all in one TV and table and computer all in one too

    Therefore all of me eats all of my meal in the room

    That makes just one less person to fight over the leftovers!

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit