Anonymous wrote:Whenever we get together with dh family, they insist on eating at 3pm - a multi course meal. Idk if it’s lunch or dinner - but it totally tears up our day and - as full time working parents - we value our days off. Is this normal? My family just does actual lunch or dinner so that ppl can do other things
Anonymous wrote:It's actually very healthy. We ate that way in the UK and Spain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For holidays, where it takes a lot of time to prep the meal? Eating at 2pm or 3pm makes sense.
You don't have to stay on a "busy" schedule every single day. Bring a lunch snack for you and the kids, and consider the 3pm as dinner.
Op this is any time we see them, includes restaurants. Maybe 1 x per month.
It’s a lot to get kids to engage at what is typically an active time for them, esp bc there are no other kids there. Dh won’t address it. It’s weird bc if we’re my family we’d just communicate about what does and does not work. But he seems reluctant
I’m with OP because I also see elderly relatives act as though we all have nothing but leisure time all day like they do, and like kids love sitting around talking to old adults for hours with no toys or outside activity. I hope I never forget the reality of having kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For holidays, where it takes a lot of time to prep the meal? Eating at 2pm or 3pm makes sense.
You don't have to stay on a "busy" schedule every single day. Bring a lunch snack for you and the kids, and consider the 3pm as dinner.
Op this is any time we see them, includes restaurants. Maybe 1 x per month.
It’s a lot to get kids to engage at what is typically an active time for them, esp bc there are no other kids there. Dh won’t address it. It’s weird bc if we’re my family we’d just communicate about what does and does not work. But he seems reluctant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does it mean that it “tears up your day”? It’s not sufficient to eat a really light or no lunch since you know this is coming?
Tell me you don’t have small children that nap without telling me you don’t have small children.
My IL's were like this. Perfect timing for my kids when they napped, since they'd wake up, change diapers, head straight there, as opposed to needing to kill and hour or two and then messing up bedtime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does it mean that it “tears up your day”? It’s not sufficient to eat a really light or no lunch since you know this is coming?
Tell me you don’t have small children that nap without telling me you don’t have small children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does it mean that it “tears up your day”? It’s not sufficient to eat a really light or no lunch since you know this is coming?
I think it means that people tend to break up their weekends into Morning, Afternoon, and Evening activities. A 3pm dinner means that the Afternoon and Evening slots are being taken up with one event. Example: Saturday is date night. You've got a babysitter want to do dinner at your favorite spot or try a new restaurant and then see a show. But you just ate dinner at 3. So what are you going to do in the meantime before the show. Or, dinner starts at three but doesn't end until 5:30 and you don't have enough time or energy to go and attend a later show. Or, your kids do sports or activities in the mornings and are ravenous afterwards. Then Grandma gets her feelings hurt when they pick at her meal because they just ate lunch. Personally, I think that withholding or limiting food from children, during natural mealtimes when they are hungry, to please someone else isn't a good thing to model outside of special occasions like Thanksgiving.
Op - this. I have a zillion things I need to achieve and dinner at this time eats up 2 slots - plus I have to feed the kids at their usual lunchtime so then it’s totally random time to eat. I don’t want to linger for hours trying to get my kids to behave and talk to a bunch of elderly ppl
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For holidays, where it takes a lot of time to prep the meal? Eating at 2pm or 3pm makes sense.
You don't have to stay on a "busy" schedule every single day. Bring a lunch snack for you and the kids, and consider the 3pm as dinner.
Op this is any time we see them, includes restaurants. Maybe 1 x per month.
It’s a lot to get kids to engage at what is typically an active time for them, esp bc there are no other kids there. Dh won’t address it. It’s weird bc if we’re my family we’d just communicate about what does and does not work. But he seems reluctant
Anonymous wrote:For holidays, where it takes a lot of time to prep the meal? Eating at 2pm or 3pm makes sense.
You don't have to stay on a "busy" schedule every single day. Bring a lunch snack for you and the kids, and consider the 3pm as dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does it mean that it “tears up your day”? It’s not sufficient to eat a really light or no lunch since you know this is coming?
I think it means that people tend to break up their weekends into Morning, Afternoon, and Evening activities. A 3pm dinner means that the Afternoon and Evening slots are being taken up with one event. Example: Saturday is date night. You've got a babysitter want to do dinner at your favorite spot or try a new restaurant and then see a show. But you just ate dinner at 3. So what are you going to do in the meantime before the show. Or, dinner starts at three but doesn't end until 5:30 and you don't have enough time or energy to go and attend a later show. Or, your kids do sports or activities in the mornings and are ravenous afterwards. Then Grandma gets her feelings hurt when they pick at her meal because they just ate lunch. Personally, I think that withholding or limiting food from children, during natural mealtimes when they are hungry, to please someone else isn't a good thing to model outside of special occasions like Thanksgiving.
Op - this. I have a zillion things I need to achieve and dinner at this time eats up 2 slots - plus I have to feed the kids at their usual lunchtime so then it’s totally random time to eat. I don’t want to linger for hours trying to get my kids to behave and talk to a bunch of elderly ppl
It's definitely a strange time for dinner unless you go to bed at like 7pm. Or if you eat again after dinner. Once in a while (like for a holiday) I would suck it up but if it's every week, I'd ask about doing lunch instead (or dinner at a time that works with the kids' schedules).
op- i would say it happens whenever we visit them for any kind of extended family thing. maybe 5x a year.
I think it triggers me because it sort of implies that the visitor doesn't have anything else going on with their day. our lives are SO hectic with insane work schedule and kids. ILs are retired and do absolutely zero. I think on some level it feels oblivious to the lives of others to me. bc when i make arrangements they typically revolve around and include the visitor in the calculations - eg 'you're coming from an hour or two hours away - what makes sense, a brunch or lunch or dinner?" none of that communication ever happens.