Anonymous wrote:My DH says he ate PB&J every day at school for 3 years straight. He has a totally normal, healthy diet as an adult.
He makes our DD lunch every day. She wants nutella & jelly (on wheat). Every day. And he makes it.
I'm horrified by this. But he has read the labels on the nutella and the PB and he swears that it's equally healthy. I swear it's not.
Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:I don't see a problem with letting your kid have a pb&j every day. If you use wheat bread and a low-sugar jelly then it's not necessarily bad for her. Besides, she's going through a big change (going into kindergarten) and it might be comforting to her to have a consistent and familiar food every day for a while.
Anonymous wrote:daily 2-3 times a day (usually 2 though). BEFORE you start in, until you have walked a mile in my shoes DO NOT JUDGE. My DS has senosory issues and eats a limited diet. We try slowly to expand it (with the help of professionals). PBJ and a nutritional suppliment drink are staples in his diet right now. He goes through phases where he will try other foods and drop the pbj for several months. Then it's back to dropping a host of different foods and back to pbj. My goal is to watch to make sure he doesn't loose weight (BTDT and it's not fun when your kid drops weight consistently instead of gaining it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the concern over PB&J sandwiches? I am asking sincerely. Are they considered non-nutritive?
OP here. My concern is about the jelly, and about the lack of variety in her diet.
Anonymous wrote:Every day. Sometimes more than once a day. And shock and horrors, not on whole wheat bread, not with fresh, organic peanut butter, and not with unsweetened jelly.
Anonymous wrote:Didn't have time to peruse every response, but OP, maybe you can convince your daughter of the awesomeness of PB& banana, or other fruits?
There are so many delicious variations out there..... mmmmm.
But to answer the question, I'd let my kid eat it every day, but this is coming from a house where peanut and almond butters are eaten out of the jar with spoons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also have a special needs son (he's 10) who has major sensory issues and only eats 5 things. I'd be THRILLED if he'd eat a pb&j. I guess if you don't have major health concerns that you're constantly dealing with and running to specialists 3 times a week, these are the things you worry about.
I find comments like this very irritating. "My special snowflake only eat chocolate pudding. I guess anyone who worries about feeding their child 23 pudding cups every day must just have way too much free time.". Uh, no.
Parents of typically developing kids know that nutrition is one of the ways they can help their kid stay on track. The fact that your kid was born "off-track" is completely unrelated to the parenting choices that are developmentally appropriate for a typical kid. Your attitude isn't doig the SN community any favors. Many Parents of SN kids feel very isolated, and the attitude that Parents of NT kids aren't allowed to discuss normal concerns isn't going to encourage anyone to reach out and bond over the things all parents have in common.
You are a jerk pp. Total jerk. Actually, I am thinking of worse language....