Anonymous wrote:We're on the "no snack ever" team. We got to that because DD wasn't eating at meal times. Now she's hungry and eats all the meal that's offered. If she's dying of hunger she can get nuts or fruit (apple, banana or orange). We always allow nuts and fruit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are on the other end of the spectrum. No snacks ever. My 4 year old son just never asks so I never offer. He gets snacks at daycare and if the adults are snacking during the day, he is offered some and will eat it, but rarely does he ask for anything.
There are at least two posts in this thread where someone self righteously pronounces that their kid doesn’t have a snack ever and then in the same post talks about snacks their kid gets. Your kid has snack every day at daycare, and at other times too if the adult is having a snack. How is that no snacks ever?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read bringing up bebe, snacks are an american thing.
I give a snack after nap. It's usually cheese or yogurt and/or fruit. Sometimes it's refused and I start dinner earlier than usual. No snacks other than that, and he devours each meal without a struggle.
Snacking *all the time* might be an American thing, but other countries definitely have snacks. I recall my French teacher fondly recalling her after-school goûter--which was usually a baguette stuffed with a chocolate bar. The Brits have afternoon tea. The Spanish have merrienda. Eating something in the afternoon, especially kids having an afterschool snack, or adults having coffee/tea with a small treat, seems pretty common.
Anonymous wrote:Read bringing up bebe, snacks are an american thing.
I give a snack after nap. It's usually cheese or yogurt and/or fruit. Sometimes it's refused and I start dinner earlier than usual. No snacks other than that, and he devours each meal without a struggle.
Anonymous wrote:We are on the other end of the spectrum. No snacks ever. My 4 year old son just never asks so I never offer. He gets snacks at daycare and if the adults are snacking during the day, he is offered some and will eat it, but rarely does he ask for anything.
Anonymous wrote:Stay at home mom. We do ONE SNACK after nap at 4pm. That seems ok because they are usually legitimately hungry from their nap and it is an hour or more until dinner.
No snacks at the playground/museum, etc. I don’t like carrying food around. And then all they do is whine for a snack. If I don’t have it, they can’t whine for it.
Anonymous wrote:I feel part of this occurs because many parents keep a snack on hand and give it to the kid when they’re misbehaving which is happening because they’re bored. Car ride and bored? Snack. Bored in church? Snack. Bored at sister’s soccer game? Snack. So yes I feel this is created, if you’ve done these things.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly? I’m super type A about a lot of things. My kids eat healthy homemade meals everyday, but I am not going to fight snack battles.
I don’t have it in me.
However, I ONLY offer goldfish, there’s no other snack available. If they get sick of it they can wait until we get home. They know that’s all I have so a lot of the time they don’t bother asking. Consistency is key.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are in daycare. We have never and will never have snacks in the car. Our pediatrician very clearly told us that is a choking hazard--car is in motion/hits a bump, even a careful eater can choke. And you can't immediately get to them. Stop it.
Also, how obnoxious is that? Your kids demand something and whine and you cave? Every day? You are teaching them that it's OK to act that way. You are teaching them they don't need to have patience, or ask for things nicely.
Tell them N-O on car snacks.
Oh shut up.