Add Silicon Canals to your Google News feed. ![]()
Growing up in a working-class neighborhood outside Manchester in the 1980s, my family had something that today’s wealthy families desperately try to buy: genuine connection. Every Sunday followed a rhythm that cost almost nothing but created bonds I now realize were priceless.
I’ve watched friends spend fortunes on family retreats, hire “connection coaches,” and schedule quality time like business meetings. Yet they never quite capture what we had naturally, without even trying. The irony isn’t lost on me. We had less money but more of everything that actually mattered.
Looking back, I can see exactly what made those Sundays special. These weren’t grand gestures or expensive outings. They were simple rituals that modern families have somehow forgotten in the rush to optimize everything.
1. Everyone helped make Sunday dinner from scratch
Sunday mornings started with my mother pulling out ingredients for a proper roast. Not from fancy shops, mind you. Just basic vegetables from the market and whatever meat was on special that week. But here’s what made it different from today: everyone had a job.
My sister peeled potatoes while I set the table. My father, home from the factory, would handle the heavy lifting, moving pots and checking the oven.
We’d bump into each other in our tiny kitchen, argue about who was in whose way, and somehow produce a meal that tasted better than anything I’ve eaten in expensive restaurants.
The whole process took hours. We’d talk while we worked, sharing stories from the week, planning what we’d watch on television later. No one was checking phones because we didn’t have any. No one was rushing because where would we go? This was the event.
These days, families order takeout or eat at different times. They’ve traded those messy, chaotic kitchen moments for convenience. But those moments were where we learned to work together, where family stories got passed down, where we figured out how to be a team.
2. They went for long walks after dinner
After stuffing ourselves with Yorkshire puddings and gravy, we’d head out for what my father called “a constitutional.” Just a walk around the neighborhood, maybe to the local park if the weather was decent. Cost? Absolutely nothing.
We’d see the same families every week, stop and chat with neighbors, maybe kick a football around if someone brought one. These weren’t power walks or fitness sessions. We just wandered, talked, and digested our massive lunch together.
I’ve noticed wealthy families now pay for guided nature experiences or book hiking tours to create these moments. But there’s something forced about scheduled family activities. Our walks happened naturally, flowing from dinner like one long conversation that moved from the dining table to the streets.
3. They played board games or cards
When we got back home, out came the worn Monopoly set or the deck of cards that had seen better days. We’d play for hours, getting genuinely competitive over fake money or matchsticks we used as poker chips.
My father taught me strategy through chess. My mother showed me how to bluff at cards. We learned to lose gracefully (mostly) and win without gloating (sometimes).
These games weren’t educational tools we’d bought to develop our children’s cognitive abilities. They were just what we did when the television only had three channels and none of them were interesting.
Today’s families struggle to get everyone in the same room without devices. They buy expensive board games that gather dust or sign up for family game nights at trendy cafes. But the magic wasn’t in the games themselves. It was in the hours we spent together with nowhere else to be.
4. They watched one television program together
Sunday evening television was an event. We’d all gather for the one program we’d agreed on, usually something everyone could enjoy. No one had their own screen. No one was streaming something different in another room.
We’d discuss what was happening during the commercial breaks, make predictions, argue about characters’ decisions. When it ended, that was it. No binge-watching the entire series. We had to wait a whole week to find out what happened next, and we’d spend that week talking about it.
This forced sharing created common ground. We all knew the same stories, laughed at the same jokes, got invested in the same characters. Modern families might have five different shows playing on five different devices in the same house, missing that shared experience entirely.
5. They visited relatives without planning weeks ahead
Sunday afternoons often meant someone would say, “Should we pop round to see your aunt?” And we would. No scheduling apps, no checking calendars three weeks out. We’d just show up, and they’d put the kettle on.
These visits weren’t productions. We’d sit in their living room, adults talking about work and local news while kids played or got bored. Sometimes we’d stay twenty minutes, sometimes two hours. It depended on the conversation and whether they’d made cake.
The casualness of it built stronger bonds than any carefully orchestrated family reunion. We saw relatives when they were relaxed, in their everyday lives, not performing for special occasions. We learned family history through repetitive stories told over tea, not through ancestry websites.
6. They fixed things together
Sunday was also fixing day. The car needed checking, the garden gate was squeaking, something always needed attention. My father would rope me in as his assistant, handing him tools and holding things steady.
I learned more about problem-solving during those sessions than in any classroom. We’d figure out what was wrong, improvise solutions with whatever we had, and celebrate small victories when things actually worked. Sometimes we made things worse, which became family jokes told for years.
Wealthy families now outsource everything or buy new rather than repair. But those fixing sessions taught patience, creativity, and the satisfaction of making something work again. They were lessons in resilience disguised as chores.
7. They had tea and talked before bed
The day ended as it began, together. We’d have tea and biscuits, recap the day, share what was coming up that week. Just fifteen minutes of connection before everyone headed to bed.
No one was scrolling through social media or catching up on emails. The day had a clear ending, a moment of closure where we checked in with each other. It was simple, cost nothing, and happened every single week without fail.
The bottom line
I’ve mentioned this before, but real wealth isn’t measured in money. Those Sunday rituals created something that expensive family consultants now try to manufacture: genuine connection built through repetition and presence.
The tragedy is that many families have traded these simple rhythms for packed schedules and separate lives lived under the same roof. They’ve gained efficiency but lost intimacy. They’ve prioritized achievement over connection.
You can’t buy what we had. You can only create it by showing up, week after week, for the small moments that seem insignificant at the time. The mess, the chaos, the boredom, even the arguments – they were all threads weaving us together into something stronger than any individual part.
Looking at my own life now, I try to recreate some of those Sunday rhythms. Not from nostalgia, but from understanding that those “nothing special” moments were actually everything special. They just came disguised as ordinary life.














