Save a Seat for Dad
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Save a Seat for Dad

Why a working father put aside work to make time to eat dinner with his kids.

The benefits kids reap from family meals include higher grades and lower rates of obesity and drug use, studies show. So Cameron Stracher, then a corporate attorney and now author of Dinner with Dad: How I Found My Way Back to the Family Table, vowed that for one year he would cook -- and eat -- dinner with his wife and children five nights a week, come hail, high water, or rush-hour traffic.

Q. What motivated this culinary experiment?
A.
I had a high-pressure job and a killer commute and was missing out at home. I'd leave before anyone else was awake and return after they were asleep. Plus, my wife and I fell in love making food together and I wanted to recapture the magic.

Q. Sounds simple enough -- but was it?
A.
I took a financial hit because I had to drop projects requiring travel. Ultimately, though, it was matter of modifying my work habits. You don't have to take that last-minute phone call -- you can turn off the BlackBerry.

Q. How did this undertaking affect you as a father?
A.
It made me an equal contributor to my family life. I never wanted that Leave It to Beaver situation where the husband works and the wife cooks. When my 7-year-old asked, "Daddy, what's for dinner?" I knew I'd done the right thing.

 

Originally published in Ladies' Home Journal, July 2007.

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