Episode 1. Eat Together
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Across the globe, families are falling apart. They don’t mean to, it just happens. Well, there’s one thing – one very simple, natural thing that you can do to substantially reduce the …
Across the globe, families are falling apart. They don’t mean to, it just happens. Well, there’s one thing – one very simple, natural thing that you can do to substantially reduce the probability of that occurring. And that is this: Make sure that most days, you share a meal together. Can it really be that simple?
We’ve all had that experience – having a meal with someone takes a relationship to a whole new level. Not quite sure what makes this whole eating together so important to us – but it is. It’s one of the primary ways that we form relationships.
Perhaps it’s the fact that as we sit with someone over a meal, we have the time to engage them in conversation. Perhaps it’s the simple act of sharing food. Perhaps it’s the fact that oftentimes, one of the parties at the table has put time and effort into preparing the meal.
Just the other night, some friends of ours invited Jacqui, my wife, and me out to their place for dinner. It was a simple meal – nothing fancy you understand. And for about 3 hours we enjoyed their company. We were already friends with this couple, but somehow, having that time together in their home, eating a meal that they’d prepared for us, deepened those bonds of friendship.
It’s a very special thing. And in many cultures – the whole idea of a man and a woman dating each other places a lot of emphasis on going out for meals together.
Eating meals together with other people – in almost every culture on the planet – is an incredibly important part of building and strengthening relationships. We kind of already know that – but just stopping to think about it and talk about it – really drives it home doesn’t it?
So why is it then, that we’re seeing declining rates of families having meals together? In the UK for instance, one in ten families never sits down to an evening meal together. But that same study – which surveyed 3,000 families – revealed that two–thirds of children yearn for a return to the traditional family dinner time. And four out of 10 children have even asked their mother or father to have more evening meals together as a family.
A similar study conducted in New Zealand found that the majority of 15 year olds – 64.7% – reported that they shared a main meal with their parents around a table several times a week. That sounds great until you realise that 35.3% – or just over a third – reported that they didn’t share a main meal with their parents around a table several times a week.
The newspaper USA Today had this to say on the whole subject of family dinners:
Family dinners help kids avoid risky behaviors and may even help them in school. But new research shows that the more frequent these dinners, the better the adolescents fare emotionally, says new research published this week in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
“The effect doesn’t plateau after three or four dinners a week,” says co-author Frank Elgar, an associate professor of psychiatry at McGill University in Montréal. “The more dinners a week the better.”
With each additional dinner, researchers found fewer emotional and behavioral problems, greater emotional well-being, more trusting and helpful behaviors toward others and higher life satisfaction, regardless of gender, age or family economics. The study was based on a nationally representative sample of 26,069 Canadian adolescents ages 11 to 15 in 2010.
Do we really need more studies and statistics to tell us what we already know? Eating meals together is good for children, and good for families. Eating meals together stops people from falling apart and families from falling apart. And yet it’s something that in many countries – we’re doing less and less. It’s as though we’re hell–bent on destroying our families.
And our family contains the most precious people on the earth to us, right? What’s one thing – just one thing that you can do to stop your family from falling apart? Eat meals together as often as you possibly can. They’re important for children, they’re especially important for teenagers and they’re important too for husbands and wives.
Over the dinner table in the evening – it’s as though we check in with each other. We find out what’s been happening in each other’s days. How are the rest of our family members going? What joys and triumphs did they have today? What sadnesses and disappointments? Time magazine puts it this way:
Studies show that the more often families eat together, the less likely kids are to smoke, drink, do drugs, get depressed, develop eating disorders and consider suicide, and the more likely they are to do well in school, delay having sex, eat their vegetables, learn big words and know which fork to use. “If it were just about food, we would squirt it into their mouths with a tube,” says Robin Fox, an anthropologist who teaches at Rutgers University in New Jersey, about the mysterious way that family dinner engraves our souls. “A meal is about civilizing children. It’s about teaching them to be a member of their culture.”
I want to encourage you to take this one thing in your family seriously. It’s all about being a family – providing a safe place for one another – not just the children, but also the adults. I’ve found that our kids need us just as much – differently – but just as much now that they’re young adults.
And husbands and wives – make sure that you guys have a time on a pretty regular basis, where you can have dinner just the two of you. Whether it’s at home, or going out on a date, it’s so important to connect. Seems that we’re so intent on connecting with the world through social media and email and all the other electronic relationship destroyers – that we’ve forgotten to connect with the people we love the most.
This one thing is so simple to do. It’s so practical. Okay, perhaps it will require some changes to entrenched routines. Perhaps your children will raise their eyebrows or wonder what’s going on. But remember that study – most of the children on this planet long for a return to regular family mealtime. And for you – it’s perhaps the simplest, most practical thing that you can do to stop your family from falling apart.
Just sit down, once every day, and have a meal with your family. Can it really be that simple? Sure it can. If the studies are right – it’s worth a try.
As I open my Bible – there seems to be precious little in it about sharing a meal together as a family. Or… is there. I guess back in the times when the various books of the Bible were written, there weren’t all the distractions that we have today, to tear families apart. No cable television, or mobile phones, or internet, or social media.
And yet it seems that God sees the family as the central piece in bringing children close to Him. This is what God says to His people way back in the book of Deuteronomy Chapter 6, starting at verse 4:
Hear, O Israel: The Lord is our God, the Lord alone. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might. Keep these words that I am commanding you today in your heart. Recite them to your children and talk about them when you are at home and when you are away, when you lie down and when you rise.
Talk to your children about God. And to the church, he says in the NT – Hebrews 10:25
And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near.
Bring those two together into the modern day malady of families falling apart and the message is clear. We need to spend time together as a family – it’s good for us. It’s God’s will for us. And the easiest way to start is to do what comes naturally. Eat meals together. It really is that simple.
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