Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EVERY week? Frankly, I cannot imagine doing this. Every once in awhile, even once a month would be nice, but no way would I commit to extended family dinners every weekend. Your kids are obviously young, OP.
I'm not the OP, but I am the 12:30 PP who has a muti-generational Sunday dinner at my mother-in-law's house every week. I'm surprised you find this so shocking. We leave at 5:30, we are home by 9:15, maybe later if conversation was particularly interesting. Why is it "obvious" that one's kids must be young in order to do this? What do older kids have going on on Sunday evenings that can't be done another time? Not sports, surely? They have all weekend to get their homework done. So yeah, my kids are young -- they are 6 and 3. The first grader plans his homework schedule so it is finished before we leave. I imagine Sunday dinners getting easier, not harder, as the years pass. The kids won't be as picky with their foods, table manners will improve, no need to keep them entertained with toys while the adults converse, won't feel as guilty about getting them in bed late. Really, it is just a nice, relaxing time with family. A way to recharge for the week ahead. If others have a chance to make this a tradition, I strongly encourage it. I dearly love my mother-in-law. It is through years of dinners that I have become so close to her. Same with the rest of my husband's family.
Yeah. Check back with me when yours are 14 and 11, or even 9 and 6, and see if this is still working for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EVERY week? Frankly, I cannot imagine doing this. Every once in awhile, even once a month would be nice, but no way would I commit to extended family dinners every weekend. Your kids are obviously young, OP.
I'm not the OP, but I am the 12:30 PP who has a muti-generational Sunday dinner at my mother-in-law's house every week. I'm surprised you find this so shocking. We leave at 5:30, we are home by 9:15, maybe later if conversation was particularly interesting. Why is it "obvious" that one's kids must be young in order to do this? What do older kids have going on on Sunday evenings that can't be done another time? Not sports, surely? They have all weekend to get their homework done. So yeah, my kids are young -- they are 6 and 3. The first grader plans his homework schedule so it is finished before we leave. I imagine Sunday dinners getting easier, not harder, as the years pass. The kids won't be as picky with their foods, table manners will improve, no need to keep them entertained with toys while the adults converse, won't feel as guilty about getting them in bed late. Really, it is just a nice, relaxing time with family. A way to recharge for the week ahead. If others have a chance to make this a tradition, I strongly encourage it. I dearly love my mother-in-law. It is through years of dinners that I have become so close to her. Same with the rest of my husband's family.
Yeah. Check back with me when yours are 14 and 11, or even 9 and 6, and see if this is still working for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EVERY week? Frankly, I cannot imagine doing this. Every once in awhile, even once a month would be nice, but no way would I commit to extended family dinners every weekend. Your kids are obviously young, OP.
I'm not the OP, but I am the 12:30 PP who has a muti-generational Sunday dinner at my mother-in-law's house every week. I'm surprised you find this so shocking. We leave at 5:30, we are home by 9:15, maybe later if conversation was particularly interesting. Why is it "obvious" that one's kids must be young in order to do this? What do older kids have going on on Sunday evenings that can't be done another time? Not sports, surely? They have all weekend to get their homework done. So yeah, my kids are young -- they are 6 and 3. The first grader plans his homework schedule so it is finished before we leave. I imagine Sunday dinners getting easier, not harder, as the years pass. The kids won't be as picky with their foods, table manners will improve, no need to keep them entertained with toys while the adults converse, won't feel as guilty about getting them in bed late. Really, it is just a nice, relaxing time with family. A way to recharge for the week ahead. If others have a chance to make this a tradition, I strongly encourage it. I dearly love my mother-in-law. It is through years of dinners that I have become so close to her. Same with the rest of my husband's family.
Anonymous wrote:Are you Italian, pp?

Anonymous wrote:Is this something that is just totally "old school"? To me it seems normal to still have Sunday dinner with my parents, siblings, their spouses and now the kids we are having. Its just something we do. Of course things come up and sometimes not everyone can make it, but at least 80% of the time its all of us. Especially during football season. We enjoy the time together, its something we were used to from the generation prior even.
But I've met some people lately who have made odd faces when I tell them about my weekend plans- met with lots of probing questions. I don't know what answers they are looking for, some kind of hidden meaning behind it all? - we have to eat, we like each other, 2 birds with one stone.
Also, when people get together with extended family, I assume there's something to celebrate so I too might ask you some probing questions. Anonymous wrote:EVERY week? Frankly, I cannot imagine doing this. Every once in awhile, even once a month would be nice, but no way would I commit to extended family dinners every weekend. Your kids are obviously young, OP.