Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you put a bunch of restrictions on food? I think that leads to this behavior.
Bingo. A kid sneaking food is is sign that they are being overly restricted. As the parent you need to work on your own food issues. Ellen satter is a good place to start.
The best things you can do right now:
1. Make MORE treats available to your kid so the perceived scarcity doesn’t lead to binging
2. Make a policy to never ever comment on your kids eating choices or weight.
Do the above to avoid inflicting damage as you work through your own stuff.
We really don’t restrict anything and she definitely not deprived, unless you consider not letting her eat a cheeseburger, fries and unlimited desserts daily being too restrictive. We eat dinner at home 4-5 night per week and then order in/go out 2-3 nights. One night per week is always burger and fries and one is pizza. She has dessert 3-4 times per week. Sometimes it is just an Oreo or two, sometimes it’s more substantial. After school snacks are pirates booty, goldfish, etc. Don’t get me wrong, she has healthy stuff in there too but she is not deprived of anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you put a bunch of restrictions on food? I think that leads to this behavior.
Bingo. A kid sneaking food is is sign that they are being overly restricted. As the parent you need to work on your own food issues. Ellen satter is a good place to start.
The best things you can do right now:
1. Make MORE treats available to your kid so the perceived scarcity doesn’t lead to binging
2. Make a policy to never ever comment on your kids eating choices or weight.
Do the above to avoid inflicting damage as you work through your own stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s her current height and weight? Where has her growth been on the percentile charts?
She is 55 inches tall (83rd percentile) and 90 lbs (93rd percentile). This is the same growth curve she has been on for a few years. So this has always been her build.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like any parent who harps on portion control and checking in on "are you sure you don't feel full" ends up with a kid who sneaks candy
Anonymous wrote:Do you put a bunch of restrictions on food? I think that leads to this behavior.
Anonymous wrote:My mother was big on "eat a piece of fruit if you're hungry" and acted like it was some kind of "gotcha" moment if I said no.
Fruit is not filling. Offer her something with protein.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At home, is she "overeating" the kinds of foods that she is served and that the family is eating? Or is she raiding the cabinets at all hours?
I think kids this age understand healthy and not healthy, but it can still be a little confusing to understand why they can't have more of the meal that is offered if they feel hungry.
For example, my DD will eat all the french fries in sight, when given the chance. So we limit the occasions when we have them - but when we do, we don't police what she's eating, since everyone else is eating fries and there's enough for everyone. If I'm eating fries while also telling her to slow down, etc etc, that's confusing for her.
She overeats the foods we are eating - she is definitely not raiding the cabinets as far as I can tell. Tonight for dinner we had chicken quesadillas, black beans, raspberries and raw carrots. She had her whole quesadilla and a small bowl of beans, probably 10 raspberries and 5 mini carrots. She said she was hungry and asked for more beans. She probably had half a can of beans all in.
But that said, on Sunday we had some friends and their kids over and ordered in pizza. She had 3 normal size slices, and all the other kids just had one.
Anonymous wrote:More exercise is needed