Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Gosh… really, there not going to have a healthy relationship with food because they had lunch at lunch time instead of sugar water?
Yes. Freaking out over a popsicle a day is not normal. It's a popsicle.
Was someone freaking out?
Yeah OP. Posting here is a freak out. Have fun with your eating disorder. Try not to eff your kids up too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not saying anything to them. It’s been in the 60s here, there isn’t any heatwave and if anything the kids are shivering cold and wet here because they do water play before the popsicle. But anyway if DC doesn’t eat lunch then it’s cranky town all afternoon, which I don’t want to deal with as I am working from home with sitter.
As for not being able to transition them without a popsicle… ok. I’m not American but that just seems like a nice analogy for what is going on here.
If your kid is full from a popsicle, you need to get him to a GI doctor.
+1
A popsicle is fruit juice (unless they are shelling out for the all-fruit ones). Would you freak out because they gave your kid a glass of juice? Same thing. Summer in DC is hot, this is a way to keep kids hydrated, and it's summer camp, which is supposed to be fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Gosh… really, there not going to have a healthy relationship with food because they had lunch at lunch time instead of sugar water?
Yes. Freaking out over a popsicle a day is not normal. It's a popsicle.
Was someone freaking out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Gosh… really, there not going to have a healthy relationship with food because they had lunch at lunch time instead of sugar water?
Yes. Freaking out over a popsicle a day is not normal. It's a popsicle.
Was someone freaking out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Gosh… really, there not going to have a healthy relationship with food because they had lunch at lunch time instead of sugar water?
Yes. Freaking out over a popsicle a day is not normal. It's a popsicle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not saying anything to them. It’s been in the 60s here, there isn’t any heatwave and if anything the kids are shivering cold and wet here because they do water play before the popsicle. But anyway if DC doesn’t eat lunch then it’s cranky town all afternoon, which I don’t want to deal with as I am working from home with sitter.
As for not being able to transition them without a popsicle… ok. I’m not American but that just seems like a nice analogy for what is going on here.
If your kid is full from a popsicle, you need to get him to a GI doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not saying anything to them. It’s been in the 60s here, there isn’t any heatwave and if anything the kids are shivering cold and wet here because they do water play before the popsicle. But anyway if DC doesn’t eat lunch then it’s cranky town all afternoon, which I don’t want to deal with as I am working from home with sitter.
As for not being able to transition them without a popsicle… ok. I’m not American but that just seems like a nice analogy for what is going on here.
Why is your kid so full from a popsicle? That seems concerning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Gosh… really, there not going to have a healthy relationship with food because they had lunch at lunch time instead of sugar water?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not saying anything to them. It’s been in the 60s here, there isn’t any heatwave and if anything the kids are shivering cold and wet here because they do water play before the popsicle. But anyway if DC doesn’t eat lunch then it’s cranky town all afternoon, which I don’t want to deal with as I am working from home with sitter.
As for not being able to transition them without a popsicle… ok. I’m not American but that just seems like a nice analogy for what is going on here.
Anonymous wrote:As someone with an actual eating disorder, this forum makes me sad how messed up their food issues are. People dont get how it can seriously mess up their kids. I may have issues with food, but I work really hard to make sure my kid has a healthy relationship with it.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not saying anything to them. It’s been in the 60s here, there isn’t any heatwave and if anything the kids are shivering cold and wet here because they do water play before the popsicle. But anyway if DC doesn’t eat lunch then it’s cranky town all afternoon, which I don’t want to deal with as I am working from home with sitter.
As for not being able to transition them without a popsicle… ok. I’m not American but that just seems like a nice analogy for what is going on here.