Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids can have u limited snacks as long as they're healthy. If they want a snack they can have fruit, a peanut butter sandwich, Greek yogurt, nuts, carrots, an avocado etc etc. If they don't want any of the healthy options then they're not really hungry.
+1. If he's already eating healthy things and still hungry, he's probably in a growth spurt. Offer a peanut butter sandwich or Greek yogurt. Something with carbs, fat, and protein.
Anonymous wrote:I vote apples, apples, and more apples. OP do your kids get enough fiber. If not, you’re not doing your job.
Anonymous wrote:I vote apples, apples, and more apples. OP do your kids get enough fiber. If not, you’re not doing your job.
Anonymous wrote:THANK YOU! I appreciate all the advice.
He’s in school full time but asks for snacks before dinner (or first thing when he wakes up - ugh! And I have to explain why we eat “breakfast” and not snacks and what the difference is. He gets breakfast at school but wants a pre breakfast lol). Weekends and holidays - snacks all day long if we’re home and not doing something super engaging.
Anonymous wrote:My 4 year old is obsessed with “snacks”…he eats meals well but in between meals he is constantly asking for snacks. I try to give him healthy things like fruit and cheese and apple sauce but he asks for more and more! When we run out of healthy things I’ll move on to giving him some goldfish and chips to hold him off until dinner but I don’t like that they’re not healthy.I can’t tell if he’s going through a growth spurt or if he’s just obsessed with snacks lol. I don’t want to deprive him of food if he’s actually hungry. But I wish he would stop with the constant asking!
Any tips?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:THANK YOU! I appreciate all the advice.
He’s in school full time but asks for snacks before dinner (or first thing when he wakes up - ugh! And I have to explain why we eat “breakfast” and not snacks and what the difference is. He gets breakfast at school but wants a pre breakfast lol). Weekends and holidays - snacks all day long if we’re home and not doing something super engaging.
Ha. All meals are snacks to my 2.5 year old. "Do you want dinner?" "No" "do you want a snack?" "Yes"....spaghetti is the snack.
Exactly! It’s the real food/meals vs. snacks distinction that’s getting on my nerves. I just want him to eat healthy but it’s hard to explain why some things are ok and other things aren’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:THANK YOU! I appreciate all the advice.
He’s in school full time but asks for snacks before dinner (or first thing when he wakes up - ugh! And I have to explain why we eat “breakfast” and not snacks and what the difference is. He gets breakfast at school but wants a pre breakfast lol). Weekends and holidays - snacks all day long if we’re home and not doing something super engaging.
Ha. All meals are snacks to my 2.5 year old. "Do you want dinner?" "No" "do you want a snack?" "Yes"....spaghetti is the snack.
Anonymous wrote:THANK YOU! I appreciate all the advice.
He’s in school full time but asks for snacks before dinner (or first thing when he wakes up - ugh! And I have to explain why we eat “breakfast” and not snacks and what the difference is. He gets breakfast at school but wants a pre breakfast lol). Weekends and holidays - snacks all day long if we’re home and not doing something super engaging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an adult and am more a grazer versus big meal person. It works for me and my body. One of my kids couldn't care less about snacks and the other is obsessed with them. Since i'm the same way (and believe my body is naturally that way versus somehow my parents made me that way and not my siblings) I don't fight it for him. What I do is...
Make him BIG snacks in a snack box that others would consider more like a meal. They often include 2 hard boiled eggs or half a sandwich or a hearty breakfast cookie or pasta salad etc plus a fruit, a more typical snack food like chips or a little popcorn, and often a second fruit or a veg
This size snack is offered 2x a day. He can have it as early as he wants in the morning and in the afternoon. He will sometimes eat it all right away and sometimes spread it out
Accept his meals are going to be smaller (and sometimes he eats basically no dinner) because he's eating mini meals (versus snacks) in between the other meals.
Once I got on board with this it went so much better. Because the food was more like a meal (versus him filling up on "snack" food) it didn't bother me that it was so big or might make a meal later smaller. Because he had variety and plenty, he stopped asking for more or different snacks. The overall goal of getting "snacks" off his mind / out of our debates and getting nutritious food into him was met
I like this approach
Anonymous wrote:I'm an adult and am more a grazer versus big meal person. It works for me and my body. One of my kids couldn't care less about snacks and the other is obsessed with them. Since i'm the same way (and believe my body is naturally that way versus somehow my parents made me that way and not my siblings) I don't fight it for him. What I do is...
Make him BIG snacks in a snack box that others would consider more like a meal. They often include 2 hard boiled eggs or half a sandwich or a hearty breakfast cookie or pasta salad etc plus a fruit, a more typical snack food like chips or a little popcorn, and often a second fruit or a veg
This size snack is offered 2x a day. He can have it as early as he wants in the morning and in the afternoon. He will sometimes eat it all right away and sometimes spread it out
Accept his meals are going to be smaller (and sometimes he eats basically no dinner) because he's eating mini meals (versus snacks) in between the other meals.
Once I got on board with this it went so much better. Because the food was more like a meal (versus him filling up on "snack" food) it didn't bother me that it was so big or might make a meal later smaller. Because he had variety and plenty, he stopped asking for more or different snacks. The overall goal of getting "snacks" off his mind / out of our debates and getting nutritious food into him was met
Anonymous wrote:My 4 year old is obsessed with “snacks”…he eats meals well but in between meals he is constantly asking for snacks. I try to give him healthy things like fruit and cheese and apple sauce but he asks for more and more! When we run out of healthy things I’ll move on to giving him some goldfish and chips to hold him off until dinner but I don’t like that they’re not healthy.I can’t tell if he’s going through a growth spurt or if he’s just obsessed with snacks lol. I don’t want to deprive him of food if he’s actually hungry. But I wish he would stop with the constant asking!
Any tips?