Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop giving you children so much unhealthy food & sugar from an early age. Also, don't ban it either. Moderation and a variety of foods are key. And stop blaming genetics for everything. Genetics have not changed so drastically over the past 50 years. The way we consume food has. But yes, blame it all on that sugar addiction your child was born with. lol
In fact I said the opposite- he doesn’t like sweets at all. We were both raised on the same diet (think healthy Asian diet) yet I have a extremely hard time resisting sweets. Kid doesn’t. Plus science clearly states genetics are in play. So it is super annoying when people smugly announce their kids don’t have issues bc of how they were raised. They just got lucky their kid didn’t pull that gene card. Over the past few weeks I’ve read several DCUM posts from parents struggling with a child’s sweet tooth. The parents don’t seem to be feeding the kids particularly poorly. The kids are just predisposed to love sweets.
Also you are right that we have changed in 50 years as far as food we consume. Those with the addiction issue have a much harder time nowadays bc sweets are everywhere and sugar is in everything.
Anonymous wrote:The New York Times just wrote a piece on this! In a nutshell, the advice was to let them go nuts on Halloween night (or whenever the big night is), then move to having it as part of dessert or snack (at set times). It recommends against the switch witch, but that's not something we do so I'm not familiar with how that works.
https://parenting.nytimes.com/feeding/halloween-candy-rules?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&fbclid=IwAR0sIQF0KKO_mv7tU4zcllwx8_0kTY25kUfVMxk6ddy-xdvQn6fO7uWVN-g
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We put it in a bowl on the counter and the kids had a free for all the first night. They'd have some more the second day and then it tapered off. I never had to make a strict policy. We taught our kids to self-regulate food in general pretty well.
How did you do that? I think people say this but they don’t really know what it is like to have a sugar addiction/food addiction.
It was just our lifestyle and modeled behaviors as they were growing up, I guess. Teaching moderation from an early age. Involving them from a young age in meal planning and cooking. I don't know what the magic answer is really. We've always had healthier diets, but we also aren't strict. It's true though, none of us has ever struggled with weight, but we aren't naturally skinny either. And we do love food and eating too. Most people aren't born with a food addiction. While genetics do come into play, it's majorly a learned behavior.
I feel you ought not be so smug. The latest science discusses how much genetics come into play. You may have kids who are not genetically predisposed to sugar addiction. Other kids might be differently pre-disposed. Good article below.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.usatoday.com/amp/110965186
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop giving you children so much unhealthy food & sugar from an early age. Also, don't ban it either. Moderation and a variety of foods are key. And stop blaming genetics for everything. Genetics have not changed so drastically over the past 50 years. The way we consume food has. But yes, blame it all on that sugar addiction your child was born with. lol
In fact I said the opposite- he doesn’t like sweets at all. We were both raised on the same diet (think healthy Asian diet) yet I have a extremely hard time resisting sweets. Kid doesn’t. Plus science clearly states genetics are in play. So it is super annoying when people smugly announce their kids don’t have issues bc of how they were raised. They just got lucky their kid didn’t pull that gene card. Over the past few weeks I’ve read several DCUM posts from parents struggling with a child’s sweet tooth. The parents don’t seem to be feeding the kids particularly poorly. The kids are just predisposed to love sweets.
Anonymous wrote:Stop giving you children so much unhealthy food & sugar from an early age. Also, don't ban it either. Moderation and a variety of foods are key. And stop blaming genetics for everything. Genetics have not changed so drastically over the past 50 years. The way we consume food has. But yes, blame it all on that sugar addiction your child was born with. lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We put it in a bowl on the counter and the kids had a free for all the first night. They'd have some more the second day and then it tapered off. I never had to make a strict policy. We taught our kids to self-regulate food in general pretty well.
How did you do that? I think people say this but they don’t really know what it is like to have a sugar addiction/food addiction.
It was just our lifestyle and modeled behaviors as they were growing up, I guess. Teaching moderation from an early age. Involving them from a young age in meal planning and cooking. I don't know what the magic answer is really. We've always had healthier diets, but we also aren't strict. It's true though, none of us has ever struggled with weight, but we aren't naturally skinny either. And we do love food and eating too. Most people aren't born with a food addiction. While genetics do come into play, it's majorly a learned behavior.
I feel you ought not be so smug. The latest science discusses how much genetics come into play. You may have kids who are not genetically predisposed to sugar addiction. Other kids might be differently pre-disposed. Good article below.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.usatoday.com/amp/110965186
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We put it in a bowl on the counter and the kids had a free for all the first night. They'd have some more the second day and then it tapered off. I never had to make a strict policy. We taught our kids to self-regulate food in general pretty well.
How did you do that? I think people say this but they don’t really know what it is like to have a sugar addiction/food addiction.
It was just our lifestyle and modeled behaviors as they were growing up, I guess. Teaching moderation from an early age. Involving them from a young age in meal planning and cooking. I don't know what the magic answer is really. We've always had healthier diets, but we also aren't strict. It's true though, none of us has ever struggled with weight, but we aren't naturally skinny either. And we do love food and eating too. Most people aren't born with a food addiction. While genetics do come into play, it's majorly a learned behavior.
I'm the oldest. I was four or five, and at a party playing around while all the other kids were lined up for ice cream. A parent asked my mom why I wasn't joining them - she said I'd never had it, and had no idea what it was. But there was no stopping me after I caught my dad putting sugar on the cheerios -- I didn't know this was even possible! I grew up to be a terrible sugar fiend.
With my middle sibling, the cat was already out of the bag. He grew up with sweets as an option. And really, he could take it or (mostly) leave it. "Aha!" Mom thought, "It's the lure of the forbidden that drives the desire."
Or at least that's what she thought until the youngest was born and quickly was revealed to have an even worse sweet tooth than I did.
You pretty much get the child you get.