Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It could be social anxiety. I used to gag at holiday dinners with extended family when I was a kid. He could be already feeling anxious and nauseous and anything gross could be sending him over the edge. See if the teacher will let him eat alone in the classroom with her not paying much attention to him and see if he feels okay doing that.
Thanks for your suggestion, but he is very social and would actually hate to kiss lunch because he loves being with his friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It could be social anxiety. I used to gag at holiday dinners with extended family when I was a kid. He could be already feeling anxious and nauseous and anything gross could be sending him over the edge. See if the teacher will let him eat alone in the classroom with her not paying much attention to him and see if he feels okay doing that.
Thanks for your suggestion, but he is very social and would actually hate to kiss lunch because he loves being with his friends.
Anonymous wrote:It could be social anxiety. I used to gag at holiday dinners with extended family when I was a kid. He could be already feeling anxious and nauseous and anything gross could be sending him over the edge. See if the teacher will let him eat alone in the classroom with her not paying much attention to him and see if he feels okay doing that.
Anonymous wrote:I would try to go into lunch one day if you can, just to observe (maybe not sit with him). The lunchrooms are noisy, smell horrible, crowded and dirty. My son was disgusted by other kids who would mix their chocolate milk with their food, put ketchup on it and then eat it. That is disgusting!
I would tell him that I know there are some gross thingsthat happen at lunch. If you feel like you might get nauseous, get up from the table to get a drink of water or ask to use the restroom. Sitting at the end of a table might work too. Kids sometimes get overheated at recess and then the lunchroom is very hot too, which doesn't help.
Anonymous wrote:Sigh - I feel like parenting is no joke - when we were all pre kids and day dreamed about rocking them in the nursery and singing lullabies and now they are suddenly barfing on the lunch table (I had my own call with the guidance counselor yesterday b/c my child got hit on the playground - twice this week - if there isn't one thing there is another). Anyway, I'd see a therapist - it may be nothing it may be something - my arm chair diagnosis is some kind of anxiety, but regardless poor kid can't go to lunch afraid to eat - I'd request he eat in the guidance counselor's office today to just give him a break and allow him to eat while you get a referral from your ped. And, I'm sorry - it's an extra stress that will probably resolve but still another thing to worry about
Anonymous wrote:Honestly not trying to be snarky, but your sons needs are not the only child’s needs to be considered. Your kid barfed on the lunch table. Safe to say no one at his table ate lunch today. He may need to eat by himself until he pulls it together.