Anonymous wrote:We have a friend who has 2 out of 3 kids who won’t eat anything that isn’t a burger, pasta or chicken tenders. Both kids are overweight and everyone at the table thinks those 2 kids will be fine missing a meal. Their third kid is the slimmest and he eats everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH complains? What a ...
I get why he complains. It sounds like OP made the boy the boss of eating out and every restaurant choice is struggle! Sounds like dh says we are going to a steak house and op shuts it down to please the son.
Anonymous wrote:Your DH complains? What a ...
Anonymous wrote:My boy, 6 years old, has limited diet, and my girl, 3 years old, eats everything. My boy can only find food off from american restaurant menu (chicken tender, grilled cheese sandwich, burger etc), and my girl can eat everything, from sushi, salad, curry, steak, seafood etc. It is always a pain to cater to my boy's needs (restaurant choice & meal at home). Family member nags about it, and we, as parents, nag about it all the time. DH complains as well because he loves to go to steakhouse & sushi, and I want to try other restaurants. We used to bring outside food for him to eat at restaurant when he was younger, but I feel like that he is "too old" & too weird for us to do so at his age. Any families are like us? What would you do? Is there a certain age that restaurant would not allow us to bring outside food for picky eater with limited diet? And I hope my girl would not pick up her older brother's picky diet one day.
Anonymous wrote:We have a similar situation, but we just don't let the picky eater dictate what everyone else does. Everyone gets a choice of restaurants sometimes, but not every time. It isn't fair that his diet controls what everyone else eats all the time.
Just go to the restaurants you want, and let him eat or not. Make sure he knows he doesn't have to eat anything he doesn't want to but that there will not be another option for that lunch or dinner. Even really picky kids can usually find something on most menus -- many places have some version of chicken, even if it isn't the most favorite version of chicken tenders. Or we can ask for plain rice or noodles. Our son might eat only a little bit, but that's fine once in a while.
The key is not to make a big deal of it and make sure he knows it's not a punishment but that this is simply what you are eating that day for that meal. He can eat it or not -- up to him. Keep it very low-key. And make sure you let him choose the restaurant sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:We have a similar situation, but we just don't let the picky eater dictate what everyone else does. Everyone gets a choice of restaurants sometimes, but not every time. It isn't fair that his diet controls what everyone else eats all the time.
Just go to the restaurants you want, and let him eat or not. Make sure he knows he doesn't have to eat anything he doesn't want to but that there will not be another option for that lunch or dinner. Even really picky kids can usually find something on most menus -- many places have some version of chicken, even if it isn't the most favorite version of chicken tenders. Or we can ask for plain rice or noodles. Our son might eat only a little bit, but that's fine once in a while.
The key is not to make a big deal of it and make sure he knows it's not a punishment but that this is simply what you are eating that day for that meal. He can eat it or not -- up to him. Keep it very low-key. And make sure you let him choose the restaurant sometimes.