How to Entertain and Enjoy it, Too
Here's how to entertain with a Great Dinner Party in Seven Easy Steps Remember that message about oxygen masks on airplanes? You must attach your mask first before helping anyone else. The same goes for giving a great dinner party. Give to yourself first. The rest comes easy. Here are seven essential steps for your fun when you entertain: 1. Recall some of the parties you loved, whether or not you or your family hosted them. Think back as far as you can remember. (Once I had so many guests for Thanksgiving I had to cook two turkeys and set up two tables in the living room. I carried in one turkey and set it on the end nearest the kitchen. My daughter carried the other to the table near the fireplace. As she leaned forward to set it down, the turkey slid off the platter onto the table. A male guest uncrossed his arm in that umpire gesture and hissed, "Safe!" The rest of the day was sheer fun.) 2. Spend ten minutes writing about one dinner party you particularly enjoyed. Be specific.
Brainsweep
will show you how. (I remember a dinner for eight where everyone listened to the one who was talking and everyone had a chance to speak. Without competition for attention, relaxed witticism and laughter prevailed.) 3. Recall dinner parties you loathed as far back as you can. 4. Spend ten minutes describing one. (Tension at the table. My sister-in-law barks at my brother because he forgot to hold her chair for her when she sat. My other brother makes fun of that idea. His wife kicks him under the table, audibly. I laugh and my mother cries.) 5. Make a list of what is most important to you when you entertain. Is it the food? Wine? Serving dishes? Choice of guests? Conversation? Music? Prioritize the list. (I start with the food that I like best and include choices for finicky guests) 6. List a few situation or conditions that may embarrass you during your party and deal with each beforehand. For example, * if one of your friends gets drunk, * if your sister talks too much and bores the other guests, * if conversations splinter in loud groups of two, * if your main dish burns, etc. Plan your party. Become a movie director building the "right" scene. 7. Social anxiety prevents pleasure. Here are some suggestions to counteract potential problems: A. Demand that guests arrive by a specific time. B. Invite people you enjoy. Don't invite anyone else. C. Give your most anxious guests pre-planned serving tasks. D. Try this or similar exercise: Even if the guests know each other well, ask each one to tell three "facts" about himself. Two will be true, the third a lie. Guests will then guess which is the lie. Give them three minutes to plan. You direct. Remember, this is your movie. E. All courses should be prepared in advance. You can have a lot of fun at your own dinner party if you consider yourself first. When you give to yourself first, you become wonderfully generous. Read more about this at
Thought-Power.
And don't forget to breathe. Cheers, Evy Evelyn Cole, MA, MFA The Whole-mind Writer P.S. To learn more ways to enjoy life, visit
Learning Strategies,
and
Sedona.
P.P.S. It can be wonderfully satisfying to have a good time when you
entertain.
Try it. Don't forget to apply your oxygen mask first!

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