Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound controlling. I'd binge at camp, if all my food was restricted at home and my mom was weighing me all of the time.
Are you the same person who posted about her son buying $20 lunch on a field trip? You sound the same. Stop pushing your food issues on your kid. Let him figure it out for a few weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound controlling. I'd binge at camp, if all my food was restricted at home and my mom was weighing me all of the time.
Children's food is restricted at home. All homes. This is totally normal. i don't know any kids who are allowed to eat whatever they want to eat. Not one single kid.
I don't restrict food at home. He makes choices and I make suggestions.
Let me guess...you offer sunflower seeds or chik peas as a snack and he gets to choose the lesser of the 2 evils? That's your definition of "he gets to make a choice"?
Ugh, posts like this are so lame. Debating and winning in your imaginary scenario. Why don't you make it a bit more challenging for yourself, PP?
His Dad screams at him every night at dinner, so at my home he picks a protein and a side. So yes there are broad nutritional ideas, but none of this eat your broccoli or else crap in my home.
Anonymous wrote:I can't believe the posters who claim chicken wings are a good source of fat and protein . No wonder so many kids are obese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound controlling. I'd binge at camp, if all my food was restricted at home and my mom was weighing me all of the time.
Children's food is restricted at home. All homes. This is totally normal. i don't know any kids who are allowed to eat whatever they want to eat. Not one single kid.
I don't restrict food at home. He makes choices and I make suggestions.
Let me guess...you offer sunflower seeds or chik peas as a snack and he gets to choose the lesser of the 2 evils? That's your definition of "he gets to make a choice"?
Ugh, posts like this are so lame. Debating and winning in your imaginary scenario. Why don't you make it a bit more challenging for yourself, PP?
Anonymous wrote:He said he had 10 chicken wings last night. Plus cookies.
Constipation is a real possibility though. So maybe it's not as bad as it looked.
But 10 chicken wings a night is not the right choice no matter what. The camp he's going to next has unlimited ice cream as dessert every night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you child is already in the overweight category, you are being way too controlling. He should be allowed to eat a meal until he isn't hungry anymore and it should bother you that he's still hungry after a meal. Even worse, you blame your son for overeating when he's hungry. Way to push your own food issues on your kid.
Yes, he should e allowed to eat as many fried chicken wings dipped in blue cheese dressing as he wants to, until he is full. OH BROTHER == WHAT BAD PARENTING ADVICE!! You can feed your own kids as much junk food as they want to eat until they are obese, but most intelligent educated parents choose not to parent that way.
Anonymous wrote:The bloated look is very likely constipation. I know my son came back from a week away and proceeded to go to the bathroom 3x per day for several days.
Growing boys eat a lot and they should not be limited. 10 chicken wings is not a lot and cookies are fine. Kids need protein, fat, and carbs and if you are limiting those things, he is going around hungry. Yes, pure sugar snacks should be limited but do not limit the protein portion of a meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound controlling. I'd binge at camp, if all my food was restricted at home and my mom was weighing me all of the time.
Children's food is restricted at home. All homes. This is totally normal. i don't know any kids who are allowed to eat whatever they want to eat. Not one single kid.
I don't restrict food at home. He makes choices and I make suggestions.
Let me guess...you offer sunflower seeds or chik peas as a snack and he gets to choose the lesser of the 2 evils? That's your definition of "he gets to make a choice"?