Anonymous wrote:Why don't you ask what your teen wants for dinner for the upcoming week? Does everything have to be "my way or the highway"?
Respect her decision especially if it's reasonable. Hec, not everyone likes XYZ food. I hate scallops. The smell, the texture, the look, the taste, everything. That's just me. It's not an uncommon thing.
Do you have any alternatives on hand - a bag of prepped salad and bread for grilled cheese, for example, for the days when you're eating, say, spicy Indian food that she hates?
Surely, you have food preferences yourself, no? Surely, there are certain dishes, flavors, ethnic foods, etc. that you don't like.
Anonymous wrote:I cook dinner and they don’t always eat it but I don’t make something different.
Often they eat my dinner and something else since they need more calories.
Sometimes I make them dinner that is higher in calories and more their “type of good” and I only eat a salad or bowl of soup or cottage cheese because I’m not that hungry or can’t eat that much fat or carbs.
I think it’s insane to expect everybody to eat the same thing every dinner.
I'm the quoted poster. I meant to also mention that our family is also pescatarian.Anonymous wrote:Sorry to be rude OP, but your kid sounds like a brat; "demanding" another meal. And you're wife sounds like a doormat.
This is how it works in my house. There are no other separate meals, my boys are 20 (home from college) and 15. It's one dinner for everyone. We make food that we know everyone likes. Sometimes there might be a slight accommodation if we know one person doesn't like something, ie. alfredo sauce on the noodles, which we know my youngest doesn't like, so we'll leave some plain noodles for him, but that's easy, doesn't inconvenient me, and doesn't take me any extra time. And, most important, he's not "demanding" I do this, I'm doing it because I want to.
This is how it's always been, so my kids know that refusing dinner is not an option unless they are willing to go without. They are free to make a salad or a bowl of cereal or just eat nothing. Honestly it's not a problem though, because 95% of the time we try to serve stuff that everyone likes.
Doesn't sound like your wife sees this as a problem and your daughter's now accustomed to this short-order cook situation that is going on. Not sure what advice to give you, but good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone eats my dinner.
I make some accomodations to taste (teen has a small list of things he isn't required to eat, so if I really want eggplant, I make two meals and I won't chop mushrooms too small to pick out).
From the time he was two I said "eating is to nourish your body. It isn't entertainment."
What about when your partner cooks? Same rules?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a teenager this is too much.
You need to have a heart to heart with your wife. Say you do not agree with making separate meals for the teen. If wife wants to baby the teen that’s on her. You think it’s bad parenting and you’re not going to enable or participate in this. Say you acknowledge that you can’t stop wife from doing it.
I don't have a choice but participate in it. If I don't, it's "I do more work than you (her job requires longer hours), you need to step up and do your fair share."....which I agree with...I just don't think creating more work in the name of spoiling a kid is a good way to do my fair share.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a teenager this is too much.
You need to have a heart to heart with your wife. Say you do not agree with making separate meals for the teen. If wife wants to baby the teen that’s on her. You think it’s bad parenting and you’re not going to enable or participate in this. Say you acknowledge that you can’t stop wife from doing it.
I don't have a choice but participate in it. If I don't, it's "I do more work than you (her job requires longer hours), you need to step up and do your fair share."....which I agree with...I just don't think creating more work in the name of spoiling a kid is a good way to do my fair share.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone eats my dinner.
I make some accomodations to taste (teen has a small list of things he isn't required to eat, so if I really want eggplant, I make two meals and I won't chop mushrooms too small to pick out).
From the time he was two I said "eating is to nourish your body. It isn't entertainment."
Anonymous wrote:For a teenager this is too much.
You need to have a heart to heart with your wife. Say you do not agree with making separate meals for the teen. If wife wants to baby the teen that’s on her. You think it’s bad parenting and you’re not going to enable or participate in this. Say you acknowledge that you can’t stop wife from doing it.