Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don't you suggest on the next night the kid comes over that they kids get to help you plan the menu and make the dinner - many kids will eat what they make, and having input into the meal will be fun for all.
OP here. I do this with my kids in the morning on the drive to school. They're pretty good about coming up with decent dinner ideas. Then in the course of the day, I shop for the ingredients and get most of the dinner prepped if not fully made. When the kids get home from school everyone does homework. The idea of taking 3 or 4 kids to the grocery store to go food shopping and then getting home to assist with homework and make dinner sounds daunting to me. I know there are people out there that can do this, but I'm not one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don't you suggest on the next night the kid comes over that they kids get to help you plan the menu and make the dinner - many kids will eat what they make, and having input into the meal will be fun for all.
OP here. I do this with my kids in the morning on the drive to school. They're pretty good about coming up with decent dinner ideas. Then in the course of the day, I shop for the ingredients and get most of the dinner prepped if not fully made. When the kids get home from school everyone does homework. The idea of taking 3 or 4 kids to the grocery store to go food shopping and then getting home to assist with homework and make dinner sounds daunting to me. I know there are people out there that can do this, but I'm not one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you suggest on the next night the kid comes over that they kids get to help you plan the menu and make the dinner - many kids will eat what they make, and having input into the meal will be fun for all.
Anonymous wrote:A guest should eat what is served and not demand other food. The mom should have been upset that her child was acting so rude.
OP - you serve whatever dinner you have planned. If the child doesn't eat it so be it. You also will have to teach some manners and explain when he is guest at someone's house, that he should taste what is served, not declare it tastes bad, and not ask for something special to be made. Lastly, no dessert while he is at your house. Serve it to your own kids after he leaves.
If he complains or his mom complains, let her know she is free to make other child care arrangements.
Anonymous wrote:Stay the course. If he were hungry he would eat. He is not going to starve between lunch and getting picked up if he gets milk and bread.
He needs to learn that the world does cater to his narrow tastes. You are providing a safe place, a meal (even if rejected). You are not a short order cook.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here---For those of you that offer alternatives, how to you handle a it? For example--my son will eat meatloaf. It's not his favorite dinner, but he will eat it. However, if a PB&J sandwich was also offered, he would select that. So how do you handle offering one child a different option that you don't want the other children to also have? And I don't want to get into a habit of alternatives being available for dinner.
Private conversation with my son that explains why the other kid has special rules. That it is generally your house your rules, but also stress that you are not his mother and this was the compromise you agreed upon. Say that this compromise is the only way to keep having him as a regular guest, and part of the compromise is that the compromise doesn't affect the rules for your own children.
Anonymous wrote:OP here---For those of you that offer alternatives, how to you handle a it? For example--my son will eat meatloaf. It's not his favorite dinner, but he will eat it. However, if a PB&J sandwich was also offered, he would select that. So how do you handle offering one child a different option that you don't want the other children to also have? And I don't want to get into a habit of alternatives being available for dinner.