Isn't it possible that the reason they are strict is,because their kids are not as good about self regulating. If your kids,started regularly overdoing you might find yourself regulating? |
Mine are grown now. We didn’t have a “policy”. As long as they ate heathy meals, I didn’t limit the Halloween candy. After a few days all the good stuff was gone and they typically started to lose interest. I just tossed the rest. |
The op asked for what people do. I responded with what we do and that it works for us which is what was asked. You’re only accusing me of patting myself on the back because it’s not your situation but it’s a neutral response to a question. |
No you explained that your parenting resulted in children with healthy eating habits |
I have 2 kids who will walk away from an uneaten cookie and rarely finish cake at a BD party. I didn’t teach them this on purpose, but my husband’s family is like this and all naturally slim. We don’t have any weird food rules. We’re not precious about sweets and treats. Sometimes we have then and sometimes we don’t. We don’t make or cajole kids to eat foods they don’t want to. We serve healthy foods and model good behavior and don’t stress about what are kids don’t eat. My kids are both under 6. They never eat veggies. I give them veggies in smoothies and sauces. I also know they will come around. My mom said I didn’t eat anything green before age 8. Our Ped said just keep modeling eating moderate portions of healthy food. I have trouble resisting sweets but I grew up in a house where sweets were rationed and forbidden. My husband thinks of it as having a culture of abundance- there is no reason to overeat cookies or sneak cookies if you know there will be more cookies. My kids had as much as they wanted after preschool and K - which after class parties was 2-3 small pieces each. Friday they didn’t ask and I didn’t offer since my older one was going to a party that night and I knew he would have trays there. I will leave the bowls out in plain view (but out of reach) for a few weeks. I’ll give them one piece a day either after school or after dinner when they remember and ask. Eventually we’ll throw it in the cupboard and I will toss the remaining dregs around Easter. |
No, I didn’t. I never mentioned healthy food or habits in any way. I said I don’t limit treats and as a result they eat what want and forget about it. YOU inferred that as me claiming “we eat healthy.” I didn’t mention any other thing about my kids’ eating habits or diet beyond the Halloween candy. |
How do I police myself? We have a huge bowl of candy in my dining room. One DS literally ignores, other DS took some to school yesterday to share with his friends.
But I've been eating some every chance I get...... |
"I have never ever limited or restricted any food in our house so my kids aren’t convinced this is a free for all where they might never get candy again.' This seems a whole lot like cause and effect to me..I never mentioned anything about your eating habits..but probably not worth debating. |
This is what has been hardest for us. Sure, when she was little we could feed her in the way we wanted her to eat, but as soon as she started going to birthday parties, play dates, overnights at grandparents, and even DC school where they give daily snack (most parents bring goldfish, nilla wafers, pirate booty, etc.), she's gotten LOTS of non-parent-approved snacks and sweets and LOVES them. She loves baking and now that she's old enough to do it independently, loved making lots of yummy treats. She is active, does sports, and eats a varied and nutritionally balanced diet, but I do worry about how much she *craves* dessert every day because I don't want to make it a food "thing" but I also don't want her to have no limits with it either. I have a huge sweet tooth and my dh likes sweets sometimes but can usually take or leave them. So yes. My dd had and loved the most impressive baby diet you could imagine, and is still an adventurous eater who gets plenty of veggies. And she still places sugar goodies on a pedestal. |
Yes, go after the other people among these 5 pages who said they have a similar tactic with their kids. For some reason those didn’t strike a nerve with you despite the content being the same. |
I was the last poster but only posted once. I am not going after you just agreeing that I took your comment the same way as the others. |
My kids ages 6 and 4 get a few pieces that night, then put it in zip locks bags, and just distribute it randomly(treat after dinner, in lunch box, after school etc) until it’s gone. There’s always good amount of stuff in there they don’t like, plus we eat some and they only fill up their pumpkin buckets, not pillow cases, so it not a a ton anyway. |
You’re responding to me here, but it was other posters below who thought the same thing I did about your self-congratulatory post. I was annoyed by the cause and effect you are drawing with the word “so.” You clearly think it was your superior strategy that led to this great result. I actually did not mention my situation when I responded to you. I’ve got two kids and one is pretty indifferent to sweets and the other one really loves sugar. We raised them the same. |
That’s the trick part! Seriously people like me stress over having enough candy to give out. If you’re just collecting candy and not going to eat it, please just say hi, or do you like my costume? and be on your way. |
For my 3 year old, she can pick 1 piece of candy to have as dessert after she eats dinner. |