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General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "How to deal with snack culture if you follow Ellyn Satter"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Ugh. This is the OP. This thread really devolved and became unhelpful. Thanks to the couple of people who answered my actual question. Glad there's a different thread now to debate the merits of Satter's methods, because that was not my question! And FWIW, my kid only has one snack because that's all he needs, not because I'm starving a hungry kid. He happens to be hungrier later in the day, so he has a big snack (basically a fourth meal) and a huge dinner late in the day, but eats like a bird for breakfast and lunch, so clearly doesn't need a morning snack. He's literally never asked for one at home, nor ever asked for an early lunch. He just gets FOMO when the other kid he's playing with suddenly has a fistful of food on the playground. I know there are a lot of Satter followers here, so I was simply asking other people who follow a similar structure how they handle those situations. We'll probably do it case by case out of the house, but ask that other kids in our house eat at the table. I like the tip that if he is eating out and about (like at the playground) to still have him sit and eat rather than wander with food. That seems like a good balance. So thanks to folks who mentioned that. [/quote] You know what OP? You should take your terrible, judgmental self to the mirror. Instead of criticizing “snack culture”, teach your child he doesn’t get stuff just because other kids have it. You can’t control what other people do. The fact that you can’t control your child’s whining and crying in public is a testament to your poor parenting, inability to set proper expectations for your child, and lack of planning and preparation to bring something healthy to the playground when you know your child will feel hungry and want to snack. [/quote]
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