Ditching the end-of-the-week baggage

While I was driving home from work on a recent Friday, my husband called and suggested I meet him and the kids at a little local restaurant we used to love. Money is tight, so we rarely go out to eat now, but we've been in a bit of a rut lately and it seemed like just the kind of treat we all needed.

The weariness of the long week seemed to fall away as I drove. Usually on Fridays, my husband picks up the kids from school and I try (and usually fail) to get out of work at a halfway decent hour and end up racing home to make bedtime instead of dinner. The kids are happy to see me and the welcome is always warm, but I hate ending the week that way.

That week, though, my work was done early; a last-minute family date felt like icing on the cake.

Unfortunately, the restaurant we used to love had changed in the years since we'd been there last; the menu was smaller, the prices higher, the waitstaff less professional, and that great old bartender who knew our names and poured our pints the moment he saw us at the door was gone. But the kids were excited at the novelty of eating "someplace fancy" (it's not fancy at all, but it's a little local pub and not a national "family style" chain), and their excitement set the tone. They tried something new (fish and chips, which garnered one "May I eat up your cheeseburger, Mama?" and one "I LOVE fish, can we have this at home ALL THE TIME?") and yes, our 3-year-old boy was very 3-year-old boyish by the end of the meal, but the break in our usual routine made a huge difference. So much so that when Sunday morning rolled around, we felt like we'd somehow gained an extra day.

Really, what we'd done was lost some end-of-the-week baggage. And the lighter load carried through the weekend.

Now, by Tuesday or so I'm already planning how we'll break that I'm-too-exhausted-to-think cycle. A fancy meal on a weekend night so the kids can keep challenging their palates? A mandatory grownup movie night at home on Fridays? Another family date out somewhere inexpensive, maybe just for dessert? To be honest, the money we spent at the restaurant could have been better spent in other ways too numerous to list here, but what we got out of it -- a bit of bonding, a bit of a break -- was priceless.

How do you break through the end-of-the-week exhaustion?

Lylah M. Alphonse is the managing editor of Work It, Mom!, where she writes about juggling career and family at The 36-Hour Day. She writes about parenting for Boston.com, and blogs at Write. Edit. Repeat.