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How are Your Family Rituals?
by Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC
Description: How to create family rituals to promote family togetherness.
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A few years ago, my four-year-old daughter was
starting to say our grace before dinner. "Daddy,
fold your hands like this!" she shrieked. Everyone
else at the table was stunned at the intensity of
her outburst.
But if we consider the world from the standpoint
of a four-year-old girl, it may make perfect
sense. Sarah wakes up in the morning and isn't
always sure if she's going to school or not. She's
not quite sure of which clothes she should wear,
and she's not always sure who she'll be spending
time with each day. She's not all that comfortable
with the language yet, so it's not always easy to
get her point across.
In other words, she lives with a lot of
uncertainty in her life. Having rituals in your
family creates an opportunity for your kids to
feel secure and to feel equal in the family. It's
a time in which nobody will tell them what to do
and everyone knows their role. It represents
certainty for kids who live in a sea of
uncertainty.
Contemporary American families are entropic,
meaning they drift toward falling apart," says
William Doherty, head of the Marriage and Family
Therapy program at the University of Minnesota.
"Rituals combat that entropy and help hold
families together. Whenever you do a ritual, you
are saying `No' to other activities or people, and
becoming what I call an intentional family. Most
of us just drift into habits, doing what is most
convenient. But ritualizing means to take a hold
of activities and ask: does this meet the needs of
our family? If it's something like sitting in
front of a TV night after night for dinner, then
the answer is `No.'"
So whether your kids are toddlers or teens, make
sure you're holding and creating rituals which
have meaning for your family. Family dinners,
weekend trips, or family laundry day on Sunday can
all have an important impact on your family.
And remember that it may mean a lot more to your
kids than it does to you! One of your jobs as a
parent is to create some rituals that hold meaning
for your family.
Here are some ideas:
- Create a time each week to do a family chore
together and then order pizza.
- Plan a "recreation time" for your family at the
same time every week, and rotate who chooses the
activity.
- Create your own special activities on
established holidays -- on Thanksgiving Day, bring
food or clothing packages to families who may need
them.
- Have a regularly scheduled family meeting in
which you talk about problems, negotiate
solutions, plan fun activities, and acknowledge
each other. Make it sacred. Turn off the phone and
make it happen.
- Make sure that you include your kids in planning
the rituals. The more invested they are in
creating it, the more meaningful it will be.
There's a tendency for parents today to throw up
their hands when "together time" with the family
is mentioned. With dance lessons, baseball
practice, piano lessons, and homework getting in
the way, there may seem to be little time left for
the family. Those in the middle of a chaotic
family schedule seem to have lost the choice along
the way.
And while it's inevitable that family life will be
busy these days, parents can never afford to lose
the choices available to them. Because the very
"soul" of your family is expressed in meaningful
rituals that parents choose to undertake.
It may be hard to decide against the extra piano
lessons that your son or daughter could be taking,
or to have your child participate in only one
sport instead of two. But by doing so, you'll
teach them a lesson that's far more important than
the ones they'll learn from these other
activities.
You'll teach them that their family comes first.
And as their parent, it's your responsibility to
see that it happens.
Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC, coaches men to be better
fathers and husbands. He is the author of "25 Secrets
of Emotionally Intelligent Fathers". Sign up for his FREE bi-weekly newsletter, "Dads, Don't
Fix Your Kids," at http://www.markbrandenburg.com.
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