I'm with your husband (and to an extent, you - just not you being the one angsting over all this). Sounds like your husband is quite reasonable and your parents are not being respectful of you/his quite reasonable way of parenting. This isn't a problem about your husband. It's a problem about all the grandparents. It really shouldn't be that complicated. Your parents in particular need to see how frequently the kids are getting bad food/treats/too much sugar in the big scheme. They also get these treats when they see your husband's parents. Your parents are acting like your kids never get to have anything unhealthy. I know it's probably easier said than done, but this sounds like you just need one conversation: this is how we do food in our house and for our kids; we're find with occasional treats such as x, y, and z; we're not fine with you sneaking these foods and trying to rationalize them to us; we'd appreciate you asking us what we prefer (sugar-free v. regular orange juice); if you can't respect the priority we place on health and a healthy lifestyle or the way we choose to raise our children, then you aren't going to be able to see your grandchildren 5x/week - just once a week, then you can load 'em up with all the junk you want (but they stay with you until the sugar rush wears off!) And please consider us as parents who would like to treat our children ourselves once in a while - but we can't if you're constantly treating them all week long. |
DP. Yes, it's the whole problem. DH and OP need to be talking with the parents and nobody should be yelling at the kids. |
I don't think it's fair to generalize causation. There are lots of factors developed over the past several years that lead to being overweight. Increase in processed foods; more sedentary lifestyles; busier lives wherein people claim they don't have time to eat better; evermore options and access to fast food; cheaper prices of fast food v "healthier" restaurants; drive everywhere and walk less; video gaming rather than going out and doing things for social activity; healthier foods in grocery stores and farmers markets being more expensive than the crap foods; etc. It is highly unlikely that their current weight is due to their parents. |
I suspect DH isn't flipping out and going berserk so much over the food - rather the grandparents' insistence on regularly and flagrantly defying his (and wife's?) preferences. It's not so much about the food and more about the grandparents' behavior. |
UH, actually they seem the perfect person to weigh-in, given all the accusations that OP's poor abused children are all going to develop eating disorders and/or be obese because they're subjected to rigid healthy eating rules in earlier childhood. PP's been there and is telling you how it turned out in adulthood for her kids. |
I sure hope dessert every night is not a "rule" unless a bowl of unadulterated fruit or yogurt with fruit or simple pudding and such are considered "desserts." Dessert being offered? Fine. Kids should be able to say no to eating it. Perhaps not likely; but I personally would have always easily refused anything with coconut in it (German chocolate cake, for example). |
No, she basically said she let her kids have fruit loops once in a while and her kids are fine. But kids now are given much more junk food than ever before, by people other than their parents. Including OPs kid who sounds like goes to public school where kids all are given a “free” junk food breakfast (didn’t have that when PPs kids were young) and the sports snacks/treats have exploded. Plus OPs grandparents are giving them treats 5+ times per week. |
Unless you were raising kids 20 years ago, you don't know how pervasive junk food was then (very, in case you actually want to know). Everything you mention was around then, possibly even junkier and more frequent. |
Yeah, I was around then. And no- it’s worse now. If you aren’t raising kids now you have no idea |
Around then, OK. Were you raising kids then? And also now? Like, for 20 years? |
NP but hi! Oldest kid is 26, youngest is 11 (yeah, whatever - this is how it worked out) and what I see is junk food was way more prolific and unavoidable THEN as compared to now. |
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You wrote the following so it sounds like you support him in this. I'm not clear why you are asking about it if you act as though you agree in daily life.
In general, I think your DH is normal and that the corporate world wants to fill us with corn and then blame us for being sick. Look at the aisle of chips in any store. Most at Trader Joe's contain corn. It's all cheap cruddy "food." "Both sets of our parents drive us crazy, especially with the juice and dessert, but so does the school meals. Even if we feed our kids breakfast, school is always giving them a free honey bun on their way in the door." |
Is your youngest at a public school that gives out free breakfast and lunch to all? Are they in organized sports? These alone are vastly different than even 10 yrs ago, i.e., lots of junk. It isn’t that school food used to be healthy- but now they actively give out junk food, for free, to all kids multiple times per day. And youth sports used to be you got orange slices and water after game days. That was it. Now the snack sign up is insane. It’s like a competition of who can send in the “best” snacks and it isn’t limited game days. Parents are constantly sending in junk snacks, decorated cookies, you name it. Look at statistics. Kids are more overweight/obese than ever before. They are definitely getting fed more junk and processed foods now and moving less, than ever before |
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I’m surprised no one has asked this but what’s the context for your kids seeing your parents 5x a week at their house it sounds like? Are they providing childcare for you for free? If so, while I still think they are being weird in terms of trying to almost force the kids to have junk, it becomes a lot harder to take a stand when they are your free afterschool childcare.
I think your DH sounds a little uptight and extreme about these issues but at the same time I wouldn’t want my parents playing my kids with soda when the kids don’t even seem to be asking for it. |
+1 |