Forum Index
»
Tweens and Teens
|
We started marking food in the fridge with tape when our teenage son needs to leave it alone. If it has tape on it, he can only take one small serving. A year in and so far, this is working.
|
Are you a troll? Either make it yourself for less, buy something else, or tell him to eat something else. Both the hunger and focus on self is developmentally appropriate. |
Ha, this. The petty posts by OP and a number of PPs are amusing though. |
Yes, but not normal for one person to eat an entire container of something others may want too - he can have some pasta salad, some fruit, some ice cream, a sandwich, etc. to make a complete snack and still share with others. |
This is so bizarre. Just buy more food. |
There was a second container of the pasta salad. He didn't leave them pasta salad-less fhs. |
Why? His family has money they can buy more pasta salad. |
He’s a teenage boy, it is completely appropriate to be a bit selfish. It is OP’s job to civilize him by telling him not to eat all of the treats and move on. Not hold a grudge because a teen is teening. |
| Why do people try to control what and how much other people eat? And why is it always people with average to very small appetites who cannot manage to understand that other people feel more hunger than they do, and need to eat differently/more to achieve satiety? |
+1000 A middle-aged woman failing to understand why a teen boy feels hunger differently than she does is just a massive eye roll. |
I guess to you it is bizarre! He can have anything else in the fridge, but if we have leftovers of a meal I cooked that everyone loves, he gets one share of that and everyone else gets a share too. There is plenty of other stuff and he knows how to cook meals as well. It is working for us- he learns he can’t just take all of everyone’s favorite foods and should be aware others want it too. He is also able to eat when he is hungry, just not other people’s food they are also looking forward to. We have plenty of food, but no I’m not doubling up on cooking meals and doing twice the dishes (some things only fit in certain pots/dishes) so he gets to eat whatever he wants. |
|
In HS when I was still growing I routinely ate 4 meals per day. I would come home at 3:30pm and eat a full dinner (e.g., big plate of pasta with meat sauce) and then at 6pm I would eat another big plate of food, plus salad and bread. In college, I could eat an entire 14" pizza soli at one sitting. I did not gain wait eating like this, in fact ROTC said I was underweight for my height and so I was disqualified from joining.
After I left college, I naturally ate less simply because I was less hungry. So I do not find it odd that a HS student would be as hungry as OP describes. |
Jesus Christ. Just make more food when you make these amazing meals you doofus. Your doubling up on dishes excuse as to why you refuse to cook bigger portions is extremely lame and doesn’t make sense. (Cook the food in a bigger pot maybe?) Why is this so difficult for you to grasp? |
Hahaha are you really writing here to tell me how to cook food? Sorry everyone- thought we had a solution that works for us and might work for others. Clearly that isn’t you PP! Congrats on telling me off!
|
I mean, you’re either incompetent or you resent your own son. I was giving you the benefit of the doubt, but I’m guessing you’ll be one of those confused women someday who doesn’t understand why your son spends most of his holidays with his in-laws. Enjoy! |