Someone is stealing DD's lunch

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is really okay if a kid eats Oreos.

You have an unhealthy attitude towards food PP.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why Oreos Are As Addictive As Cocaine To Your Brain
“Our research supports the theory that high-fat/high-sugar foods stimulate the brain in the same way that drugs do,” Schroeder said. “It may explain why some people can’t resist these foods despite the fact that they know they are bad for them.”
http://www.forbes.com/sites/alicegwalton/2013/10/16/why-your-brain-treats-oreos-like-a-drug/


"It MAY explain why SOME people..."

I don't know how my brain treats cocaine, because I never tried, it, but my brain does not treat Oreos like a drug.
Anonymous
Agree with previous poster. Why is obesity such a big problem and concern in the America? Just look at our food portions. Everything is super sized. Everything is without any hardwork. (Messages of lose weight easy while you sit and gobble snacks)

you won't even get fat from an Oreo daily if it isn't coupled with candies, chips, fatty meat, large serving of burritos and pasta and then not having any output and being driven to school for a half mile because it's too dangerous to walk the street.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is really okay if a kid eats Oreos.

You have an unhealthy attitude towards food PP.


No, it is not OK. Oreos don't just lack nutrition, the amount of sugar they hold is harmful to the body.
Anonymous
So is someone stealing the girl's snacks or what?
Anonymous
the fact that it is missing means it is either thrown away but some other classmates' pesky mom, stolen by another kid who is deprived of Oreos. Teachers rarely want any kids foods especially if its touched, messed around with in a kids bag.
Anonymous
It's like some of you have never been in an elementary classroom. I can assure everyone that at no time is there an adult rooting through student lunches and tossing out certain food items based on a secret rulebook of what is nutritious and what is not.

There is a 100% chance that another child is coveting the goodies in OP's child's lunch and helping themselves when nobody is looking.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:the fact that it is missing means it is either thrown away but some other classmates' pesky mom, stolen by another kid who is deprived of Oreos. Teachers rarely want any kids foods especially if its touched, messed around with in a kids bag.


Do you really believe that a random parent is allowed to go through the lunches of other students? Do you think they just walk into the classroom and start pulling lunch sacks out of the closet?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So is someone stealing the girl's snacks or what?


Ikr, poor op and her train wreck of a thread...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So is someone stealing the girl's snacks or what?


Ikr, poor op and her train wreck of a thread...


well maybe if OP was sending things other than candy it wouldn't get stolen...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I find amazing that after years (YEARS!) of public conversations about obesity epidemic, overuse of sugar, harmfulness of refined carbs and artificial coloring..

After years of discussing it on every possible media, people are still ignorant enough to feed their kids oreos and gummies on regular basis.


Suck it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So is someone stealing the girl's snacks or what?


Ikr, poor op and her train wreck of a thread...


well maybe if OP was sending things other than candy it wouldn't get stolen...


You are a disaster of a person.
Anonymous
So - did OP ever figure out what is actually happening? I would be pissed if someone was stealing my kids lunch. If it is the teacher, the teacher should be letting the kid and parents know what food is not allowed. Plus, I thought they normally took it, but returned it at the end of the school day.

Anonymous
Hey OP, I thought of you yesterday when I was volunteering at my kids' school - I had to accompany kids to their classroom who'd forgotten their lunch boxes. One kid pulled out a couple of baggies and a juice from her backpack - either she didn't have a sack/lunchbox or she didn't understand that she was supposed to be buying that those were for aftercare. Is it possible that your child is confused about how to manage the food she's bringing?

Fwiw, the kid I saw yesterday had only fruit in the baggies; no Oreos. Hopefully that passes muster with the food Nazi moms on this thread. Of course when the lunchroom staff realized, they arranged to get her a hot meal, on the presumption that no parent would deliberately send just a few grapes for their kids' lunch. Perhaps they should read this thread.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So - did OP ever figure out what is actually happening? I would be pissed if someone was stealing my kids lunch. If it is the teacher, the teacher should be letting the kid and parents know what food is not allowed. Plus, I thought they normally took it, but returned it at the end of the school day.


Unless the kid is eating in class, the teacher does not confiscate food. Could you imagine the legal backlash if teachers went through kids' lunches and removed items?
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