Rex Features
1. When setting aside an evening for a date night, it is always best to check the Radio Times beforehand because neither of you will be able to devote your full concentration if one of you is keeping an eye on the football score or you want to know what's happening in EastEnders.
2. The best evening is mid-week when you're both not yet so exhausted you want to fall asleep on the sofa. Sundays are out because you'll be rushing around trying to get the kids to finish their homework and ironing their uniform. Mondays are all about recovering from the first day back at work and school. And Fridays and Saturdays are designated drinking nights so you'll be far too busy looking for the bottom of the wine bottle to focus on each other. That leaves Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, so take your pick depending on what's on the television.
3. If you're staying in, ban mobiles and laptops. Tweets or Facebook updates, such as 'oh God, it's date night' or 'this is the worst date night ever', are not conducive to a happy marriage.
4. If you're going out, put a personalised ring on your mobile for calls from home. That way you'll know not to pick up if the babysitter calls.
5. The point of date night is to spend uninterrupted quality time with your other half, so choose a location where your kids can't reach you. Such as a nuclear bunker.
6. Attire is all-important. Just because you've put eye-liner on will not cancel out the fact you are in your stained pyjamas.
7. Do not aim too high. Dreams of candle-lit dinners and cuddles in the cinema are all very well but the reality will probably be a takeaway in front of the telly or snoring in front of a film.
8. If staying in, do not tell the kids it is date night or they will try their best to interrupt. The same goes for the in laws.
9. Be careful when choosing topics of conversation. Do not discuss anything which is likely to upset your other half, such as the fact they never do anything round the house or the garden.
Don't bring up money, politics or work. The safest bet to ensure you have a wonderful evening is to sit in absolute silence.
10. Try to vary where you go and what you do. Take it in turns to choose. If you forget it's your turn to book a table somewhere, never admit it. Simply pretend you've planned a surprise. Then panic.
11. If your date nights are in a bit of a rut, try something new.
Like bowling, bingo or listening to one another.
12. If you're on a budget, why not cook together at home? That way, you can pretend your tears over the pathetic state of your marriage can be blamed on onion-chopping.
13. Beware starting off with a pre-dinner drink at an alternative venue because you will end up getting completely ratted and buying chips on the way home.
14. Men: do not assume date nights will lead to sex. Women: do not assume date nights will lead to the dishwasher being emptied.
15. If at all possible, avoid date nights altogether. The Camerons swear by them – but you and your other half are more likely to end up swearing at each other. The modern myth that a marriage should be kept alive and fresh is responsible for heaping pressure on two exhausted people, who really have enough on their plates already, thank you very much.
In short, if it ain't broke, don't do date nights.
Too cynical or true, especially when you have young children? Tell us your thoughts.
More on Parentdish: Your first night out after having a baby
Oh no, here we go again...
- Queuing with the whole family at the post office<p> You have to send a parcel to your sister, so you and the kids are stuck in a 20-minute queue behind people getting passport applications checked and buying holiday insurance and there is no way you can stop your youngest pinging the barrier tape so the plastic bollard falls over and why didn’t you go to the toilet before you left the house?</p>

- Taking the kids for a haircut<p> You think you’re taking them for a quick trim so that they look less like mops on sticks. They think you are subjecting them to an extreme form of torture that involves pinioning their arms in a black plastic cape, attacking them with pointy scissors and showering them with needle-sharp bits of hair that get stuck underneath their T-shirts. Tears all round.</p>

- Staying with grumpy relatives who disapprove of children<p> It’s not easy to spend 24 hours of every day on red alert in case one of your kids makes the sofa cushions look untidy/can’t finish up all the boiled cabbage/might knock over an ornament/drops a biscuit/chases the cat/wants to watch TV/won’t go to bed at 6pm/doesn’t like going for a walk…</p>

- A trip to the dentist<p> It’s the first week of the summer holidays, and the waiting room is packed with kids sliding off chairs and tapping the tropical fish tank. Another family has monopolised the ancient Duplo set, so you (unsuccessfully) try to distract your lot by counting eight-inch stilettos in battered copies of Heat. But all of you can hear the high-pitched whine of the drill…</p>

- Being stuck in a three-hour traffic jam on the motorway<p> Your five-year-old wants the loo, the litre bottle of water was finished hours ago, the story tape’s jammed, there’s a man with his window open in the next lane thumping out rap, it’s so hot your thighs are sticking to the seat, the baby’s crying – and your two-year-old is sick all over her favourite teddy…</p>

- Christmas<p> Not the wonderful day of family celebration, obviously, but the mad build-up of preparation the month before – present-buying, turkey-sourcing, house-cleaning (because Granny’s coming to stay), costume-making (for the nativity play), Christmas-card-sending, tree-buying and food-shopping. Is it possible to feel any more tired?</p>

- Shopping for school shoes<p> It’s not such a surprise, is it, that every single mother in the UK is trying to buy dull and boring regulation school shoes in August because she forgot to do it before they went on holiday, so why has the shop only got three sizes left in stock, in pink patent leather, with glittery buckles and purple feathers?</p>

- Taking the car to the garage for its annual MOT<p> Because you have to call in favours from anyone you’ve ever met so that your offspring can be picked up from football and netball and martial arts and recorder club – while, in the meantime, you stagger home from Sainsbury’s on the bus with six carrier bags and a jumbo pack of special offer toilet rolls</p>

- Your cousin's wedding<p> Yes, it’s magical, glorious and blissfully romantic – but you’re tensed for all the terrible mayhem your kids are about to unleash on the unsuspecting guests (knocking over flower arrangements, drowning out vows with sudden piercing wails, upending bottles of champagne). It’s the happiest day of her life – and the longest one of yours…</p>

- Packing to go on holiday<p> Because your toddler is right behind you taking out everything you’ve just put in, and because you’ve forgotten what’s at the bottom of the suitcase owing to the fact that you’ve spent the past five minutes trying to stop Voldemort killing Harry Potter with the cardboard tube from a packet of tin foil.</p>

- A family bout of gastro-enteritis<p> You’ve gone through every set of sheets in the house, no one has slept for three days, the baby’s still got a temperature, there’s not even a cream cracker left in the cupboard , and you’re tempted to give up any attempt at behaving normally and just put a communal sick bucket in the middle of the kitchen floor…</p>

- Having a birthday party at home<p> Because a) someone’s always sick on the carpet b) nobody likes what’s in their party bags c) there’s birthday cake ground into the stairs d) no one will pass the parcel e) there’s always someone small with a loud voice saying they don’t like what’s in the sandwiches and f) your other kids, feeling left out and overlooked, start behaving extremely badly…</p>

- Going for a walk<p> It’s a lovely day. Everyone’s been stuck in the house since breakfast. Let’s go for a walk, you say, and get a bit of fresh air. Half an hour later, you wish you hadn’t bothered. (I can’t walk any more, my legs don’t work, I’m tired, I’m hungry, I’m thirsty, I’m bored, when are we going home, carry me, carry me, why won’t you carry me…)</p>

- Staying with relatives who disapprove of children<p> It’s not easy to spend 24 hours of every day on red alert in case one of your kids makes the sofa cushions look untidy/can’t finish up all the boiled cabbage/might knock over an ornament/drops a biscuit/chases the cat/wants to watch TV/won’t go to bed at 6pm/doesn’t like going for a walk…</p>

- Going on a long train journey<p> Because there’s someone swearing into his mobile (<em>‘What’s that word mean, Mummy?</em>), because you wouldn’t buy them Coke and chocolate when the trolley came round, because they need the toilet, because the elderly woman in the corner is looking at you with disapproval, and because you can’t find the tickets when the inspector is standing there glaring at you</p>

- Visiting family friends whose kids are much older/younger<p> Because of the complaints from your ten-year-old all the way there (it’s so boring, there’s nothing to do, you just sit there eating lunch all afternoon, they don’t have Nintendo/X-box/Wii, their dog smells, I hate their house) and all the way back (I told you it would be boring, I never want to go there again, I’m hungry, I’m thirsty, how long till we get back home?)</p>





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