Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.
OP here. I did not “prod,” I did not push food. I simply said the vegetarians should go first to make sure they had enough mac and cheese. And then a total of FOUR kids told me they didn’t like this or that, without me questioning. I didn’t push, no one had to take anything, but 13 is old enough not to just walk up to your host and be like, “I don’t like this and that.”
I think you’re being overly sensitive. So they told you they don’t like Mac and cheese. This isn’t criticism of you. It’s just like if you offered me a glass of wine and I say I don’t drink. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.
OP here. I did not “prod,” I did not push food. I simply said the vegetarians should go first to make sure they had enough mac and cheese. And then a total of FOUR kids told me they didn’t like this or that, without me questioning. I didn’t push, no one had to take anything, but 13 is old enough not to just walk up to your host and be like, “I don’t like this and that.”
I think you’re being overly sensitive. So they told you they don’t like Mac and cheese. This isn’t criticism of you. It’s just like if you offered me a glass of wine and I say I don’t drink. It’s fine.
How about a “No thank you; but I’d love some water if that’s OK”…no one cares that you don’t drink. This is the point, no yapping required, yes please or no thank you.
I’d love some water if that’s OK? If that’s OK?!! Why do you think your guests must bow down to you, queen OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.
OP here. I did not “prod,” I did not push food. I simply said the vegetarians should go first to make sure they had enough mac and cheese. And then a total of FOUR kids told me they didn’t like this or that, without me questioning. I didn’t push, no one had to take anything, but 13 is old enough not to just walk up to your host and be like, “I don’t like this and that.”
I think you’re being overly sensitive. So they told you they don’t like Mac and cheese. This isn’t criticism of you. It’s just like if you offered me a glass of wine and I say I don’t drink. It’s fine.
How about a “No thank you; but I’d love some water if that’s OK”…no one cares that you don’t drink. This is the point, no yapping required, yes please or no thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.
OP here. I did not “prod,” I did not push food. I simply said the vegetarians should go first to make sure they had enough mac and cheese. And then a total of FOUR kids told me they didn’t like this or that, without me questioning. I didn’t push, no one had to take anything, but 13 is old enough not to just walk up to your host and be like, “I don’t like this and that.”
I think you’re being overly sensitive. So they told you they don’t like Mac and cheese. This isn’t criticism of you. It’s just like if you offered me a glass of wine and I say I don’t drink. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:I served strawberry and vanilla cupcakes and my 7 year old’s birthday party a month ago, and a little girl wrinkled her nose and announced loudly “I DON’T LIKE VANILLA CUPCAKES”. I smiled warmly, told her “aw too bad, at least the birthday girl loves them!”, and thanked God my children aren’t rude. I’ve also stopped serving gluten free or dairy free versions of dishes at birthday parties. People with allergies are welcome to eat fruit or veggies! Or bring their own food. It was getting too excessive to provide for every contingency, and I’ve noticed that the tide has turned on the social pressure to attend to every dietary restriction for children’s parties. I’m grateful for that!
Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.
OP here. I did not “prod,” I did not push food. I simply said the vegetarians should go first to make sure they had enough mac and cheese. And then a total of FOUR kids told me they didn’t like this or that, without me questioning. I didn’t push, no one had to take anything, but 13 is old enough not to just walk up to your host and be like, “I don’t like this and that.”
Anonymous wrote:I served strawberry and vanilla cupcakes and my 7 year old’s birthday party a month ago, and a little girl wrinkled her nose and announced loudly “I DON’T LIKE VANILLA CUPCAKES”. I smiled warmly, told her “aw too bad, at least the birthday girl loves them!”, and thanked God my children aren’t rude. I’ve also stopped serving gluten free or dairy free versions of dishes at birthday parties. People with allergies are welcome to eat fruit or veggies! Or bring their own food. It was getting too excessive to provide for every contingency, and I’ve noticed that the tide has turned on the social pressure to attend to every dietary restriction for children’s parties. I’m grateful for that!
Anonymous wrote:I served strawberry and vanilla cupcakes and my 7 year old’s birthday party a month ago, and a little girl wrinkled her nose and announced loudly “I DON’T LIKE VANILLA CUPCAKES”. I smiled warmly, told her “aw too bad, at least the birthday girl loves them!”, and thanked God my children aren’t rude. I’ve also stopped serving gluten free or dairy free versions of dishes at birthday parties. People with allergies are welcome to eat fruit or veggies! Or bring their own food. It was getting too excessive to provide for every contingency, and I’ve noticed that the tide has turned on the social pressure to attend to every dietary restriction for children’s parties. I’m grateful for that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s irritating and I empathize.
Although I do have one kid with restricted eating who wouldn’t eat either of those things. I don’t think I would have told you in advance because it would have been an awkward “just fyi my kid probably won’t eat any of that because she has unusual food restrictions but please don’t make her anything different I will just feed her before she goes….” But I think she would not have said anything (since she’s embarrassed about her issues) and would have taken a small scoop of Mac and cheese, pretzels, fruit and sort of mushed the Mac and cheese around her plate. And then had cake.
It sounds like you threw a nice party and I’m sure the boys had fun and didn’t put as much thought into this as you did.
Please teach your daughter not to waste food. If she knows she won't eat it, don't take it just to make it inedible and then throw it out. Tell her to take what she will actually eat and to just say "I'm picky, but I'm happy with my pretzels!" or whatever.
But OP would have preferred they put food on their plate even if they didn’t want it.
That isn’t what she said. She said for them to put on the plate what they want, without feeling the tell her what they don’t like. If you don’t like the mac and cheese and nuggets, then you take a plate and put on it some fruit and pretzels and cake and be quiet.
It’s possible OP prodded them by asking why they don’t have any mac and cheese or would they like them some…and that is when they said they don’t like it. In which case, well…she asked.