Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

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Sitting around the table telling stories is not just a way of passing time. It is the way wisdom gets passed along. The stuff that helps us live a life worth remembering. – Rachel Remen, M.D.

Dinner_table_rockwell
  Dr. Remen might have added, although she implies it, that sitting around the table at dinner time is a way families signal they care about each other. But which families are eating together these days? I wrote about this subject once before and I visit it again here because of a statistic I read about the state in which I live. In 2005, most of the country saw a significant drop in teen violence – upwards of 18% lower than the previous year. In Tennessee, teen violence rose 3%.
  Is there a relationship between sitting down with your family for dinner and violence among teens? What do you think? Why are teens, or any of the rest of us, violent?…

   Some psychologists think it’s because we’re struggling for attention – or never got enough love when we were teens. Families who eat together still have troubles. But they are more likely to work them out together in an environment where they can learn real love instead of the soap opera kind.
   In 1997, my Swiss cousin’s teenage son came to the United States for a visit. He was placed with an Oklahoma family for the nine month school year. At the end of his visit, he visited our home. When lunchtime came, we sat down at the dinner table.   
   "You sit down at the table together to eat?" He asked, obviously surprised.
   "Of course," I answered. "We always do that."
   "My Oklahoma family never once sat down together to eat," he told me. "Not once in nine months – not even at Thanksgiving."
   The parents and kids just grazed through the kitchen or ate at fast food places. Not surprisingly, my relatives teenage counterparts, boys thirteen and fifteen, were often in trouble.
Dinner_table
  Now that our children are grown, I am grateful not only for our times around the dinner table, but for wisdom taught "along the way" instead of in some kind of formal training. It’s difficult to pass along wisdom when you have to speak over the noise of the television. It’s hard to show your child you care if he or she is continually immersed in video games.
   How do children learn love? They learn it more by the quality of our presence to them than from the actual amount of time we spend. Gather with your family or loved one at a dinner table today. Invite conversation. Listen. If you haven’t done this in a long time, it can be awkward to start up again. Keep trying. Tell everyone there’s something you want to share with them. This will be an opportunity for love – especially if you face some resentment because you turned off the television set.
   Around the dinner table, or in the intimacy of the kitchen, we have the chance to share life experiences with those we love, and who love us. In this way, we learn "the stuff that helps us live a life worth remembering."

-Erie Chapman

*The images in todays meditation are both by the famed artist, Norman Rockwell

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3 responses to “Dinner Table Wisdom”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    The 21st century family looks a lot different than that of Rockwell’s picturesque perfection in that we are much more mobile and schedules don’t follow the routine of dad at work from 9-5 and mom stays home to baste turkey in pearls. Now it’s mom works from 7:30 – 6:00 and dad might work the same schedule or maybe a night job so that someone is available for the kids during the day. The importance point I read in your meditation is carving out face-time, quality time with the family to talk, to laugh, to understand each other and the larger world. Sometimes that might be around a TV show that can often spur a conversation about sex or politics that might be more difficult to bring up out of the blue. Sometimes it is just being together around a bucket of KFC because we’re all too tired to cook. Thank you for your attention to our presence with our families.

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  2. Nancy Innis, R.N., M.S.N Avatar
    Nancy Innis, R.N., M.S.N

    Thanks for this column.

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  3. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Violence is a complex issue, I do believe the breakdown of family, lack of support systems, and poverty, are contributing factors. Endless cycles of abuse with powerless victims’ desperate to feel powerful only to become the oppressors until Love finds a way to break the destructive chain.
    Today’s meditation offers a rich banquet for contemplation and I appreciate your encouragement to gather round table in the ritual of sharing a meal. Perhaps, sitting down to a family meal is becoming a lost art much like letter writing has been replaced by the conveniences of modern technology.
    For many years, the Wessel family gathered each week for Sunday dinner. Woody’s parents served vegetables harvested from their garden and there was always an extra chair or two at table as all were welcome. I have the fondest memories of these days while my children were growing up with the nurturing love of grandparents. It was not until my in-laws had died that I truly recognized these gatherings as the holiest of communions.
    It seems to me gathering at table is a mindfulness practice as we learn to let go of the day’s distractions that can separate us and return to what is most important, one to another, as we create the right conditions for our presence and Love to expand. It is also a time to pause and offer our gratitude not only for the food but also for the many blessings in our lives.
    This morning ends a wonderful week with the Sorensen family gathering round table to share meals. The last of my family has left for the long journey home after a marriage celebration. I am left with a warm glow of love and precious memories of these times shared.

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