| You need to relax OP. Don’t we all need a popsicle after this year?! |
Great idea to have it after lunch. Every day for a month seems a bit like overkill to me… why don’t they just have them sing a song or something. Also it is never done at pick up time so I stand around there waiting for them to eat it. |
So smug about Europe are we. How’s Europe doing actually vaccinating people. In America we have enough vaccine and popsicles for everyone. |
What is wrong with you? Do you speak to people like that in real life? Why are people so rude here!? There is nothing wrong with not wanting popsicles before lunch! And now you are accusing me of having an eating disorder. Good grief, sometimes this forum is BAD for mental health... and people like you being so rude. |
| Your kid won't eat because of a popsicle? |
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Many kids have issues with the food coloring in these things. My one child becomes hyper fixated on sweets and will barely eat lunch if she has something like this before a meal
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And we have no universal health care or maternity leave. We have no reasonable childcare options or mental health services. Our obesity rate is upwards of 40%. Education rankings are laughable given our economic punch. Sometimes other people can do things right. It's ok. You don't have to be all rah-rah-USA. And yes, in general, most people eat better than we do. That's just fact. |
Seems to me that the popsicle that so perturbs OP falls squarely into the bolded category. |
Except a popsicle is not a snack. It's water and sugar. It's candy. That's the issue. The kid has daily candy time at school - every day - and OP doesn't like the frequency. She's not against an occasional popsicle (or candy) but the continuous popsicle/candy feed. This is not a mini cucumber sandwich. |
Except it’s snacking at a mealtime, which is exactly what teatime is not. |
Wow. Hilarious attempt to say French kids don't snack. Lol. |
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Tea time= food in between meals.
Gaiter= food in between meals. Snack=food in between meals. There's no difference. |
They are not hopped up on sugar. That is a myth. https://www.science.org.au/curious/people-medicine/does-sugar-really-make-kids-hyper |
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OP here. This is totally becoming popsicle gate.
To clarify, no I am not opposed to sweets. Yes I like popsicles. During quarantine we had a teatime some days to break up the monotony and we all liked baking new treats. But eating empty calories at meal time when you’ve just had a snack 1.5 hours ago seems not to make much sense to me. I think these responses are a bit extreme. I’m going to cause an eating disorder by not wanting them to eat snacks at mealtime? Kids cannot transition to a line without a treat? Um, ok. I have nothing against using a treat for fun and helping the kids look forward to camp. Have a popsicle day, water balloons day, bubbles day, whatever. Every single day right when your parents are waiting outside anyway just seems unnecessary. As for America, it’s well-established that attitudes to food are somewhat unhealthy here. Every country has their own quirks and I accept that. In the bigger picture though I do not want my kids equating food with an emotional quick fix, convenience, have whatever you want when you want it. Food is about connection to the land and the people who work to make it. You respect yourself and your community by taking time to learn about it and prepare it well. Even this young kid knows how to water the garden, harvest vegetables, cut and eat it, compost to make the soil good. I don’t think it’s healthy to grow up thinking food comes from a plastic bag and you just buy and trash it as you please. But ok, I am giving my kids an eating disorder…. |
Big difference between eating three hours after one meal ends and another is to begin and eating five minutes before. |