Kathy Slattengren

Family Gatherings: Fun for Everyone?



Posted: Friday, December 18, 2009

by Kathy Slattengren
Priceless Parenting

When families gather together for a celebration, each participant brings their own history, behavior and expectations.  When these different expectations and behaviors clash, the celebrations are often far from the peaceful, loving gatherings depicted in TV holiday commercials!  However, when common problems can be anticipated and planned for ahead of time, there is a greater likelihood of a joyful celebration rather than a stressful experience.  To make these events positive and fun for everyone, it's helpful to consider the areas that cause stress for many families:  preparing and hosting the gathering and monitoring the interactions between children from different families. 

Planning, Preparing and Hosting the Family Gathering

One mom wrote seeking ideas for changing her family gatherings.  "I come from a largish family (5 children) who still live in the general area. We're all in our fifties now, married with our own children aged 13 to 25. We still get together at one of our houses for every holiday, four times a year (usually numbering 18-23 people). I have to admit, I absolutely dread these get-togethers. For one thing, my sister, aged mother and I do most of the work. The three brothers do less, and the sisters-in-law and nieces and nephews do nothing. As we get older, it gets more and more exhausting, and it seems like I hardly see my siblings other than these get-togethers, where I'm usually irritated and too busy to really talk much to anyone. Is it unusual to get together this often at our ages? Shouldn't the nieces and nephews be contributing by the time they're out of college?"

Sharing the workload is a key ingredient to making family gatherings fun for everyone.  If you're encountering this type of problem, think about some new ideas you'd like to try out and discuss them with your spouse or partner.  These new ideas which might include:

Keeping the Peace between the Cousins

Another area that can be rich with parenting challenges is the interaction between the children. For example, younger children may want to play with their older cousins, while the older cousins want to be left alone.  Successfully handling these types of disagreements while not offending any of the other parents is no small feat!

Being able to enjoy a glass of wine while your children play nicely together and work out their differences by themselves is ideal.  However, if unsupervised play doesn't work well, parents need to take a more active role.  You can try suggesting an activity everyone can participate in playing like charades or creating a play that can be performed for the rest of the family.  We've had some very entertaining family theater this way! 

Planning ahead is essential.  If your children are younger than the rest, take along toys, books or other things that they enjoy.  When they're not having fun playing with their cousins, they can play with these toys.  Be prepared to leave early if your children are "maxed out" and need to get to their own beds for everyone's sanity!


Enjoying the Payoff

When preparing for your next family gathering, work on making changes that will make the event more pleasurable.  Establishing family gatherings that are enjoyable for everyone will pay off over many years! 

Kathy Slattengren is an internationally recognized parenting educator and founder of Priceless Parenting, http://www.PricelessParenting.com. Priceless Parenting provides an online parenting class, parenting presentations and parent coaching.

While raising her own two children, she learned many wonderful parenting techniques from classes, seminars and books. Through studying research, she discovered a universal body of knowledge about how effective parents do their job. Her Masters of Education degree from the University of Washington combined with her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Computer Science from the University of Minnesota has enabled her to pull together parenting research into a course that is easy to understand and apply.

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