Traditions Work
Meg Cox's Ritual Newsletter for May 2006
Family Dinner Conversation Baskets
Last month, the New York Times ran an article on the front page titled Families With Full Plates Sitting Down to Dinner. It was about how over-scheduled families are reacting to research on the positive effects of family dinners. The research shows that kids whose families have dinner together regularly get better grades, show less stress, and are more likely to avoid drugs and alcohol as teens.
"After decades of decline in the simple ritual of family dinners, there is evidence that many families are making the effort to gather at the dinner table," says the article.
Bravo!!
But I would caution that having dinner together is just the first step. You have to make sure that the time isn't entirely dominated by "Pass the butter," "He kicked me!" and "Don't talk with your mouth full."
I once interviewed a sociologist who spent his entire career studying family dinners. He told me that they last an average of 20 minutes and are comprised mostly of mumbled comments on the food coupled with parental criticisms of table manners and other behaviorial issues.
There are many ways to make family dinners more fun and worthwhile without making them last much longer. I've got lots of dinner rituals in "The Book of New Family Traditions," but today I just want to focus on the Family Dinner Conversation Basket, which is something I've taught workshops about and tried with my own family.
During a television appearance on family dinners several years ago, I talked about the value of such baskets and drew some sample questions from a model basket I made for the show. At the time, we didn't have such a basket at home, but my son saw a videotape of the show and felt deprived. "Why don't we have one of those?" he asked. So now we do.
Ours is a small, pretty basket decorated with beads that hang down from the handle, spelling out the words "Talk, Talk, Talk." Inside the basket, I placed 50 colorful strips of paper, with a question or instruction on each one. I also put in lots of blank papers and a pen, so any family member can add a question whenever they want. This keeps the questions fresh.
I wanted the questions to get family members talking about their beliefs, passions and preferences, to truly express their personalities. I wanted us to excercise our minds as well as our jaws. Some are serious, some are silly. One paper says to make up a new nickname for every person at the table including yourself (nothing mean is allowed). Others ask: If you could have dinner with any person in history who would it be? Name something you can do better than your parents. Or, "If there was a holiday named after you, how would people celebrate it?"
At first, we would do the questions every night, but we later settled into a pattern of weekly Basket Nights. Usually each person gets to pick one slip, and after he or she answers the question, the others chime in with their response. The answers are often revealing, surprising and funny.
Feel free to adapt the basket to your own situation, adding questions that pertain to your religious faith, ethnic backgroound or favorite pastimes. Our basket has loads of questions about movies and books because we love stories of all kinds. Such as "If you could be any character in the Harry Potter books, who would it be?" My son's questions are often about Japanese anime or video game characters.
When I ran a workshop for Unitarian ministers and religious educators in February, participants were invited to create UU-themed questions for a Family Dinner Basket. They came up with dozens, including "Describe something you did last week to live one of the seven UU principles" and "What is your favorite story or hymn from church?"
Truly, this exercise is endlessly elastic, simple to tailor to your family's circumstances and easy to change over time. Conversation baskets are a perfect example of the type of simple but powerful rituals that I love and champion: they accomplish multiple goals in short bursts of time. What a great tool for faith-development, but at the same time your kids have fun and the family gets closer.
It isn't practical for me to list all 50 questions from my original basket, which I often share at workshops. But I would like to make them available, as a way of encouraging this practice with families.
So here's a special offer: anybody who would like a list of the 50 questions can simply send me an e-mail at meg@megcox.com
with the words Dinner Questions in the subject line, and I will send them along.
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Reminder: This free e-newsletter is written by author and traditions expert Meg Cox. Her latest book, The Book of New Family Traditions, is available from Amazon.com and the wondrous Chinaberry Catalog (www.Chinaberry.com). Feel free to forward this newsletter to anybody who might enjoy it, but be warned: no part of the newsletter can be reprinted online or in print without permission. To unsubscribe, write to FamilyRituals@aol.com. To ask about Meg's services as a corporate spokesperson, contact her agent Chris Tomasino at BooknView@aol.com.
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