“I can’t get them to eat anything else…and it doesn’t help that their mother just lets them have whatever they want when they’re at her house!”
That was one of the frustrated outbursts from a family member of mine, many years ago, talking about his two young kids and their very limited diet. He faithfully tried to hold to a family dinner routine on the nights he had custody of the kids, but found himself stuck in a rut of only four accepted menus, lots of fussing, and deep disagreements with the children’s mother about issues like table manners and chores. I don’t know what his ex-wife would have said about the mealtime situation on her end, but I’m sure she had similarly emotional conversations with the people in her life. Dinner had always been a sticking point when they were all living in the same house; it only took on new complications when they were dealing with dinner in two households.
All families change over time. Sometimes that change means separation or divorce. Sometimes those changes lead to new blended families, with stepparents and stepchildren in the mix as well. And no matter how gracefully or amicably all of the adults work to manage the transitions involved, there are bound to be bumps in the road. Family dinner, a seemingly simple daily routine, can actually become a prime battleground that exposes all of the tensions under the surface.
“Dinner time…reminds children of how dramatically their family has changed,” writes Dr. Patricia Papernow in her article on Steps to Ease Dinner Stress for Stepfamilies. “Study after study tells us that when parents recouple, children lose a significant amount of parental attention. They also have to deal with yet another in a series of unwelcome changes. The dinner table is a prime place where all of these dynamics get played out.”
Even if there is no remarriage to contend with, there are plenty of dinnertime challenges at work when one household becomes two. Dr. Anne Fishel, co-founder and Executive Director of The Family Dinner Project and Director of the Family and Couples Therapy Program at Massachusetts General Hospital, offers these tips for coping with dinner after divorce:
Speaking of fun new dinner rituals, summer is a prime time to take dinner outside. Try mixing things up with some Family Picnics!
After divorce, kids need to be reminded that they are still part of a big and beautiful family tree. This dinner game helps connect them to family history in a fun and challenging way!
Getting through a big life change like divorce takes courage and resilience. Explore both topics with these conversation starters.
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