Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're eating in front of people I think it's rude to not share food.
If your husband bought the same chocolates for the kids and forbid you from having one wouldn't you feel bad?
This. Why wouldn’t you share with your kids? Why not give a piece of chocolate for each family member after dinner?
Did your parents also limit your access to “nice” foods? If your dh was brought up in a family where food was shared equally among family members, including the “nice” foods, then his reaction is understandable.
I don’t get the « everything always has to be 100% equal » mentality. Not everyone’s tastes are the same, and everyone should be entitled to have their own special indulgence without doling it out equally among the family. I spend way more on my kids activities/toys etc than I would on myself and they’re hardly deprived in any way. If I want to splurge on an expensive box of chocolates myself and give the kids Hershey’s kisses I’m not going to feel guilty about it. My husband and I are both caviar fans and if we get an expensive jar for new year’s we’ll let them have a taste but I’m not going to allocate out 1/4 of the jar to my 4 and 6 year old, even if they do like it. We will however have plenty of other treats that we know they’ll enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe buy 2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're eating in front of people I think it's rude to not share food.
If your husband bought the same chocolates for the kids and forbid you from having one wouldn't you feel bad?
This. Why wouldn’t you share with your kids? Why not give a piece of chocolate for each family member after dinner?
Did your parents also limit your access to “nice” foods? If your dh was brought up in a family where food was shared equally among family members, including the “nice” foods, then his reaction is understandable.
I don’t get the « everything always has to be 100% equal » mentality. Not everyone’s tastes are the same, and everyone should be entitled to have their own special indulgence without doling it out equally among the family. I spend way more on my kids activities/toys etc than I would on myself and they’re hardly deprived in any way. If I want to splurge on an expensive box of chocolates myself and give the kids Hershey’s kisses I’m not going to feel guilty about it. My husband and I are both caviar fans and if we get an expensive jar for new year’s we’ll let them have a taste but I’m not going to allocate out 1/4 of the jar to my 4 and 6 year old, even if they do like it. We will however have plenty of other treats that we know they’ll enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you buy enough of the good chocolate for the kids to enjoy too?
The vast majority of young kids are not going to not going to distinguish between good chocolates and a box of Whitman samplers (or may even prefer the latter).
I would rather my kids eat good quality stuff and get a taste for it than accept crappy chocolates because you think they don't care. And I'm not a spendthrift kind of person.
It sounds like this is a big deal in your house. Buy a box for you, a box for dh, a box for the kids. I bet they care because it's "forbidden" but once they can have it and don't have to hide it from mom, they won't care as much.
I think it's weird not to share with your kids, we send them to preschool so they learn how to share, take turns, be empathetic humans, and then "but these are MINE" for no reason they'll understand...doesn't really make sense if you think about it.
This. Why wouldn't you share unless you can't afford it and it is a rare indulgence? People were always surprised that my preschooler liked goat cheese - well it was because I wouldn't buy American since I don't eat it myself. In general, I'd rather feed my kid quality stuff instead of m&m's full of food coloring - though he does eat that occasionally on Halloween, etc.
If the kids like it, cultivate good taste and eating better quality foods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you buy enough of the good chocolate for the kids to enjoy too?
The vast majority of young kids are not going to not going to distinguish between good chocolates and a box of Whitman samplers (or may even prefer the latter).
I would rather my kids eat good quality stuff and get a taste for it than accept crappy chocolates because you think they don't care. And I'm not a spendthrift kind of person.
It sounds like this is a big deal in your house. Buy a box for you, a box for dh, a box for the kids. I bet they care because it's "forbidden" but once they can have it and don't have to hide it from mom, they won't care as much.
I think it's weird not to share with your kids, we send them to preschool so they learn how to share, take turns, be empathetic humans, and then "but these are MINE" for no reason they'll understand...doesn't really make sense if you think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're eating in front of people I think it's rude to not share food.
If your husband bought the same chocolates for the kids and forbid you from having one wouldn't you feel bad?
This. Why wouldn’t you share with your kids? Why not give a piece of chocolate for each family member after dinner?
Did your parents also limit your access to “nice” foods? If your dh was brought up in a family where food was shared equally among family members, including the “nice” foods, then his reaction is understandable.
Anonymous wrote:If you're eating in front of people I think it's rude to not share food.
If your husband bought the same chocolates for the kids and forbid you from having one wouldn't you feel bad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is exactly what I picture OP doing every night to provoke that kind of reaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you buy enough of the good chocolate for the kids to enjoy too?
The vast majority of young kids are not going to not going to distinguish between good chocolates and a box of Whitman samplers (or may even prefer the latter).