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When the new year begins, why not make a resolution to eat better as a family? You can keep good nutrition in mind as well as spend more quality time together at the table. And if you can make more of your meals a family event, experts say you may also be
By
Jeanie Lerche Davis
Reviewed by
Charlotte E. Grayson Mathis, MD
Oh, boy. Here it comes again. The usual time of the year when
you say you are going to trim down on both the junk food and where it ends up
on the waistline.
The idea is as important as ever. But with America
rediscovering the importance of family life, why not get everyone at home
involved in the New Year's resolutions together? As the new year begins, try a
new tactic to improve eating habits and the amount of time you spend with the
family.
Now you don't have to turn into the Cleaver's. That's pretty
unrealistic and just leads you down the dead-end street of abandoned
resolutions anyway. Be practical and see what you can accomplish.
Think you can pick up a cookbook of easy low-fat meals and find
a few you like?
Can you work more salad and veggies into the meals you already
serve?
It's those simple changes that you make, implementing them one
at a time, that have the best chance of catching on and becoming habit -- just
like the number of times you'll be able to sit down and have a meal with all
those other people living under your roof but on different schedules.
Pick a night -- at first, it may be weeks from now, if need be
-- where everyone can plan to be home for dinner. Then see how many more nights
each month it can realistically happen.
If getting everyone home for dinner during the week would
require an administrative assistant to schedule and a psychiatrist to help you
handle the stress, then maybe you can be a bit sneaky.
Remember the goal is to eat more healthy stuff and spend time
together. What about scheduling a few family dinners on the weekends? That may
be the best crack you get at everyone at home -- and you may even be cutting
down on the weekend trips to the burger joint. That certainly means healthier
eating and actually sticking with a New Year's resolution. And experts say you
may get a few bonuses, too -- especially when it comes to parenting.
When the new year begins, why not make a resolution to eat better as a family? You can keep good nutrition in mind as well as spend more quality time together at the table. And if you can make more of your meals a family event, experts say you may also be
Breaking Bread Together Means Eating Better
Researchers will tell you that it is a healthy thing to eat
together, especially if you can win more control over dinnertime. Children who
eat frequently with their families, for example, and actually sit down together
at the family dinner table -- have healthier diets than those who don't,
according to a report by Matthew Gillman, MD, an associate professor of
ambulatory care and prevention at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
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