
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. DS started eating lunchables everyday (started k this year). I fully admit it's a combo of convenience and wanting to make sure he eats enough to have the energy to get through the day.
DS doesn't like juice so he brings a water bottle every day and I pack him fruit in addition to the turkey lunchable (grapes, strawberries or oranges). Is this honestly so terrible?
The good news is that the damage you are doing now won't show up for decades. Your kid will be slightly more likely to develop athlosclerosis, obesity, diabetes, autoimmune disorders, more likely to have a stroke...but on the other hand, they will probably be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to let you stupid PC liberal communist elites tell me what to feed my child. Lunchables will not hurt them, it's just food. I grew up on TV dinners (we are TV people too) and Kool Aid and I am just fine. If there was anything wrong with Monsanto, Roundup or GMOs, they would not be allowed in the food supply, they are just fine. I have the right to choose to feed my family whatever I want, organics are for suckers. My kids are not fat, but they refuse to eat much veggies, and I am very busy so Lunchables a few times a week is NBD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the convenience but just read that packaged deli meats are one of the worst things to eat, full of sodium and preservatives.
I don't get it. Is it hard to pack a lunch that doesn't all come in one box? This task is just not so overwhelming that I opt to give my kids the nastiest available product instead of spending 5 minutes doing it.
I was thinking the same thing. I pack my kid's lunch every day and it takes less than 5 minutes to make a sandwich, put some fresh fruit in a baggie, grab a yogurt, add a couple of cookies, fill up her water bottle and throw everything in her lunch bag. It's not that hard.
The plastic encasing the yogurt will disrupt your child's endocrine system and make them fat, eventually give them man boobs if they are a boy. I don't wish this for your child BTW.
Wow, you would think that three decades of children eating yogurt would have convinced you that this is not a crisis waiting to happen. Now scoot, you need to find a wooden toothbrush with natural bristles. Man boobs!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the convenience but just read that packaged deli meats are one of the worst things to eat, full of sodium and preservatives.
I don't get it. Is it hard to pack a lunch that doesn't all come in one box? This task is just not so overwhelming that I opt to give my kids the nastiest available product instead of spending 5 minutes doing it.
I was thinking the same thing. I pack my kid's lunch every day and it takes less than 5 minutes to make a sandwich, put some fresh fruit in a baggie, grab a yogurt, add a couple of cookies, fill up her water bottle and throw everything in her lunch bag. It's not that hard.
The plastic encasing the yogurt will disrupt your child's endocrine system and make them fat, eventually give them man boobs if they are a boy. I don't wish this for your child BTW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the convenience but just read that packaged deli meats are one of the worst things to eat, full of sodium and preservatives.
I don't get it. Is it hard to pack a lunch that doesn't all come in one box? This task is just not so overwhelming that I opt to give my kids the nastiest available product instead of spending 5 minutes doing it.
I was thinking the same thing. I pack my kid's lunch every day and it takes less than 5 minutes to make a sandwich, put some fresh fruit in a baggie, grab a yogurt, add a couple of cookies, fill up her water bottle and throw everything in her lunch bag. It's not that hard.
The plastic encasing the yogurt will disrupt your child's endocrine system and make them fat, eventually give them man boobs if they are a boy. I don't wish this for your child BTW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. DS started eating lunchables everyday (started k this year). I fully admit it's a combo of convenience and wanting to make sure he eats enough to have the energy to get through the day.
DS doesn't like juice so he brings a water bottle every day and I pack him fruit in addition to the turkey lunchable (grapes, strawberries or oranges). Is this honestly so terrible?
The good news is that the damage you are doing now won't show up for decades. Your kid will be slightly more likely to develop athlosclerosis, obesity, diabetes, autoimmune disorders, more likely to have a stroke...but on the other hand, they will probably be fine.
Well that is the difference. You believe lunchables are poison and I do not. We have scores of people in our family who have lived into their 90s. I just don't believe the organic hype. I feel sorry that your kids don't get to eat any treats. However it's your family and your business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at a school not allowing plastic sandwich bags. what are they going to do, suspend your kid? fuck this world.
Agree with you pp. Is this a private school?
Yes, it is a preschool/k. It's in the handbook as a guideline. People follow it because they do things that way anyway. I've never heard of it being an issue. I'm not sure why anyone would think lunchables and disposable plastic containers were preferable to healthier foods and reusable containers. I just don't see how the convenience outweighs the nastiness of the food or the wastefulness of either a lunchable or a Baggie. I don't want my kids thinking it's good/normal to generate that much trash. When they go to public school, they will continue to take their lunch in little tupperwares and with a cloth napkin. I also send silverware!!
Hahahahaha!!
Cloth napkin and silverware sound so proper. I had a friend who would do that for pizza. She didn't like getting her hands dirty. Very proper and polite.
I send it because it's washable, not because it's proper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at a school not allowing plastic sandwich bags. what are they going to do, suspend your kid? fuck this world.
Agree with you pp. Is this a private school?
Yes, it is a preschool/k. It's in the handbook as a guideline. People follow it because they do things that way anyway. I've never heard of it being an issue. I'm not sure why anyone would think lunchables and disposable plastic containers were preferable to healthier foods and reusable containers. I just don't see how the convenience outweighs the nastiness of the food or the wastefulness of either a lunchable or a Baggie. I don't want my kids thinking it's good/normal to generate that much trash. When they go to public school, they will continue to take their lunch in little tupperwares and with a cloth napkin. I also send silverware!!
Hahahahaha!!
Cloth napkin and silverware sound so proper. I had a friend who would do that for pizza. She didn't like getting her hands dirty. Very proper and polite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at a school not allowing plastic sandwich bags. what are they going to do, suspend your kid? fuck this world.
Agree with you pp. Is this a private school?
Yes, it is a preschool/k. It's in the handbook as a guideline. People follow it because they do things that way anyway. I've never heard of it being an issue. I'm not sure why anyone would think lunchables and disposable plastic containers were preferable to healthier foods and reusable containers. I just don't see how the convenience outweighs the nastiness of the food or the wastefulness of either a lunchable or a Baggie. I don't want my kids thinking it's good/normal to generate that much trash. When they go to public school, they will continue to take their lunch in little tupperwares and with a cloth napkin. I also send silverware!!
Hahahahaha!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at a school not allowing plastic sandwich bags. what are they going to do, suspend your kid? fuck this world.
Agree with you pp. Is this a private school?
Yes, it is a preschool/k. It's in the handbook as a guideline. People follow it because they do things that way anyway. I've never heard of it being an issue. I'm not sure why anyone would think lunchables and disposable plastic containers were preferable to healthier foods and reusable containers. I just don't see how the convenience outweighs the nastiness of the food or the wastefulness of either a lunchable or a Baggie. I don't want my kids thinking it's good/normal to generate that much trash. When they go to public school, they will continue to take their lunch in little tupperwares and with a cloth napkin. I also send silverware!!
Hahahahaha!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at a school not allowing plastic sandwich bags. what are they going to do, suspend your kid? fuck this world.
Agree with you pp. Is this a private school?
Yes, it is a preschool/k. It's in the handbook as a guideline. People follow it because they do things that way anyway. I've never heard of it being an issue. I'm not sure why anyone would think lunchables and disposable plastic containers were preferable to healthier foods and reusable containers. I just don't see how the convenience outweighs the nastiness of the food or the wastefulness of either a lunchable or a Baggie. I don't want my kids thinking it's good/normal to generate that much trash. When they go to public school, they will continue to take their lunch in little tupperwares and with a cloth napkin. I also send silverware!!