Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saturday/Sunday morning cuddles in bed with cartoons and soft toys. Yummy breakfast like waffles or pancakes or omelettes.
Sunday night family dinners with extended family.
You’re either being sarcastic or in the wrong forum. Which is it?
Anonymous wrote:Saturday/Sunday morning cuddles in bed with cartoons and soft toys. Yummy breakfast like waffles or pancakes or omelettes.
Sunday night family dinners with extended family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Please stop posting in the teen and tween forum if you do not have this age range at home!!! Get a life and move to the other forums. Thei traditions you have now with your seven-year-old will not be what still holds true when they are teens. Please answer only when you have helpful information for the people in this group.
People include 10 and 11-year olds in tweens. Why so angry? Flag the evil posts about 7-yr-olds and get it deleted so that it no longer offends you.
Anonymous wrote: Please stop posting in the teen and tween forum if you do not have this age range at home!!! Get a life and move to the other forums. Thei traditions you have now with your seven-year-old will not be what still holds true when they are teens. Please answer only when you have helpful information for the people in this group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On Sunday nights, we have a family meeting. We all take turns talking about the best and worst things from the week and talk about schedules and concerns for the upcoming week as well as areas to improve upon.
Good god why would you do this!? Like we don't get enough of this at work...
https://theweek.com/articles/444395/6-things-happiest-families-all-have-common
"You're not mom or dad anymore — you're now co-CEO's. To find the way to keep a family improving, Bruce turned to the world of business.
Your family needs a weekly board meeting with all the shareholders present. Sound cold and clinical? Wrong.
Bruce's wife says it's one of the best things they've done to make their own family life happier.
It's not complicated and it only takes 20 minutes, once a week.
Here's Bruce:
We basically ask three questions. What worked well this week, what didn't work well this week, and what will we agree to work on in the week ahead?
And if the kids meet the goal, they get to help pick a reward. And if they don't, they get to help pick a punishment. "
Anonymous wrote:Interesting question. We are not religious so we don’t have any. I always wonder if my kids are missing out, but I didn’t have any as a kid either!
Wonder if any non-religious people have any?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On Sunday nights, we have a family meeting. We all take turns talking about the best and worst things from the week and talk about schedules and concerns for the upcoming week as well as areas to improve upon.
Good god why would you do this!? Like we don't get enough of this at work...