Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blueberries, milk and half a muffin
Oh! And a cheese stick that was requested after eating the above. How she only weighs 20 lbs is beyond me.
Really? That's not much food (unless she eats a lot more later in the day). My 2.5 year old is in a hungry phase. He ate the following:
5 oz milk, 1 scrambled egg plus a few pieces of my egg, 3 vegetable/fruit pouches, 1 piece of toast with a bit of almond butter. He tends to eat a ton at breakfast and lunch and skimp on dinner.
NP here. That's an insane amount, is he just high on the percentiles?
Is it really an insane amount? I guess my 14 month old is an endless pit...he's 50th percentile weight and usually eats: 2 scrambled eggs, 2-3 fruit pouches, 6oz Greek yogurt, 6-7oz whole milk, a muffin or toast with almond butter, and at least 1 banana (sometimes 2). He eats even more at lunch. I'm becoming very afraid for my grocery budget when he becomes a teenager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blueberries, milk and half a muffin
Oh! And a cheese stick that was requested after eating the above. How she only weighs 20 lbs is beyond me.
Really? That's not much food (unless she eats a lot more later in the day). My 2.5 year old is in a hungry phase. He ate the following:
5 oz milk, 1 scrambled egg plus a few pieces of my egg, 3 vegetable/fruit pouches, 1 piece of toast with a bit of almond butter. He tends to eat a ton at breakfast and lunch and skimp on dinner.
NP here. That's an insane amount, is he just high on the percentiles?
Is it really an insane amount? I guess my 14 month old is an endless pit...he's 50th percentile weight and usually eats: 2 scrambled eggs, 2-3 fruit pouches, 6oz Greek yogurt, 6-7oz whole milk, a muffin or toast with almond butter, and at least 1 banana (sometimes 2). He eats even more at lunch. I'm becoming very afraid for my grocery budget when he becomes a teenager.
now that is an insane amount! Growth spurt or is that normal everyday?
Seriously!!! That's more than most grown men eat!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just a glass of orange juice. He doesn't want to eat breakfast. He's fallen off the growth chart but the pediatrician assures us that everything is fine.
Can I ask what your ped's rationale was? I have never encountered this in practice (a child who doesn't eat falling off the growth chart and no concerns being raised...)
He eats dinner. We put him in front of the TV and shovel food into his mouth (but only pasta and rice because that's all he likes). We insisted that the doctor do blood work to see if anything is wrong. He was found to be anemic so we give him iron every day. The iron makes him constipated so we also give him laxatives. I was thinking of consulting a dietician but the inital consult is $300 out of pocket.
I think the doctor's rational is that he's always been small. He fell off the growth chart at 6 months but we were able to bring him back up by 9 months. It's dipped again and apparently that's his growth pattern.
Anonymous wrote:Instand oatmeal, yogurt, berries.
Anonymous wrote:Waffle, a cutie mandarin, a fruit/grain pouch, and some apple juice/water
Anonymous wrote:soy milk with molasses mixed in, a lemon blueberry raspberry muffin (homemade), apple amd strawberry slices, and some chickpeas roasted with maple syrup, cinnamon and coconut oil
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blueberries, milk and half a muffin
Oh! And a cheese stick that was requested after eating the above. How she only weighs 20 lbs is beyond me.
Really? That's not much food (unless she eats a lot more later in the day). My 2.5 year old is in a hungry phase. He ate the following:
5 oz milk, 1 scrambled egg plus a few pieces of my egg, 3 vegetable/fruit pouches, 1 piece of toast with a bit of almond butter. He tends to eat a ton at breakfast and lunch and skimp on dinner.
NP here. That's an insane amount, is he just high on the percentiles?
Is it really an insane amount? I guess my 14 month old is an endless pit...he's 50th percentile weight and usually eats: 2 scrambled eggs, 2-3 fruit pouches, 6oz Greek yogurt, 6-7oz whole milk, a muffin or toast with almond butter, and at least 1 banana (sometimes 2). He eats even more at lunch. I'm becoming very afraid for my grocery budget when he becomes a teenager.