Anonymous wrote:A question for parents of teens, past and present.
What happens when your teen doesn't want the meal that is being planned/cooked? My theory has always been, as it was growing up, "You eat what the family is having, or you go without (or maybe you eat some fresh fruit as your meal)." That's the way it was growing up for me. The added bonus for my kid (over me as a kid) is that my wife (cooks three nights a week) and I (cook four nights a week) are much better cooks than my mom (seven nights a week) and dad (never) were.
When our daughter was younger, there were some dishes that were a stretch for her taste buds (e.g. a spicy Indian dish) that we didn't expect her to eat, so we substituted other things. Now that she's older, she can handle dishes like that.
Still, at least half the time, kid refuses to eat what is being planned and demands something else. Wife thinks this is fine ("she shouldn't have to eat something she doesn't want.")
Hence, two dinner meals are often cooked. One for the adults and one for the kid. Actually, this happens three times a day...I typically eat cereal for breakfast and a dinner leftover for lunch, while kid refuses to eat cereal or leftovers of any kind and expects a cooked breakfast (or at least a blended smoothie) and a cooked lunch. (And if course i get bitched at by my wife, because my kid refuses to eat anything i offer, so the breakfast and lunch duties fall to her, and that's somehow my fault.)
Is this normal and acceptable at this age?
Anonymous wrote:You sound bitter OP, almost as if you genuinely don’t like your wife and daughter. They probably don’t like you either.
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: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.
OP here. My kid refuses to eat grilled cheese or salad. Offering those as an option isn't an option. I know those two things are just random examples, but they're also random examples of her limited palate. We're also vegetarian (eat seafood), so further limited for that reason.