Anonymous wrote:
I'm 19:39.
Contrary to popular opinion, yes, there are children who will go into FAILURE TO THRIVE, through not eating enough.
The idea that no child will allow himself to starve is a damageable myth.
My son was in failure to thrive as a toddler, and put on a high calorie diet, and is now again in the 2nd percentile as a tween, which is of great concern to his pediatrician.
Anonymous wrote:I feel sad for your DD.
I imagine her sitting at the kitchen table with a plate of cold food in front of her with two giant adults hovering, yelling at her, threatening her with punishments/taking away favorite things, your DD is probably in tears streaming down her cheeks, shaking, and totally baffled and confused.
Breaks my heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to a therapist with your husband. What you are doing is causing eating disorders.
This. I'm kinda horrified just reading this. Have you looked at any Ellyn Satter books, I think they could help you. You guys are acting in a very controlling way towards her eating habits, and it's already backfiring. This will only get worse without intervention.
OP here. So, we should just let her not eat? Go to bed eating two spoonfuls of pasta? Really???
Wow, the replies here are so bad. It's ridiculous. Wow, just wow...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm 19:39.
Contrary to popular opinion, yes, there are children who will go into FAILURE TO THRIVE, through not eating enough.
The idea that no child will allow himself to starve is a damageable myth.
My son was in failure to thrive as a toddler, and put on a high calorie diet, and is now again in the 2nd percentile as a tween, which is of great concern to his pediatrician.
There are FTT kids, but yelling at them to eat is not the solution.
There are indeed kids like this, but not sure if this is OP's kid.
OP, I am/have been in your shoes. When our kids don't want to eat what's put in front of them, they eat sloooowly, and just a few bites, my DH yells at them. I, too, get upset at them, but like you, yell less. We get upset because we don't want them to be picky eaters, and only eat what they like. We want them to learn that sometimes you will be served something you don't like, and you just have to deal with it.
We had a rule where whatever you didn't eat for dinner it was your breakfast or lunch the next day, and you don't get any dessert or treat until that meal is finished. We don't like to waste food either. It's happened a few times over the years. My kids are older than your's now, and while they still at times hem and haw when they are served what they don't like, they will still eat it. The older one has learned to eat whatever he doesn't like first to get it over with. I have toned it down, but DH still at times gets very stern with our younger one over this. I have told him to stop it because I don't want DC to have an eating disorder later in life. Just calmly tell your DC that she can have that for breakfast the next day. Again, if she doesn't have a case of failure to thrive, hopefully she will get the message.
I agree with you.. you shouldn't always just cook your DC's favorite. I try to cook a variety of things.. sometimes my favorite, sometimes one of the kid's favorites, and they both have different favorites. I'm not a short order cook. I don't cook things on demand. I can make allowances for a 5 year old, but when a 12 year old is over my house for dinner and doesn't like what's for dinner, I'm not making something else for that kid. Having a dinner party can be a pia when there are picky eaters.
Your DC is still young, so you will struggle with this. Be patient, and calm (I know.. it's hard. I can say this in hindsight).
You have to be a troll too, or just incredibly abusive parent. If you are for real you are creating eating disorders in your kids. You are a terrible parent, and not just garden kind terrible, but insane control freak who is emotionally abusing children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to a therapist with your husband. What you are doing is causing eating disorders.
This. I'm kinda horrified just reading this. Have you looked at any Ellyn Satter books, I think they could help you. You guys are acting in a very controlling way towards her eating habits, and it's already backfiring. This will only get worse without intervention.
OP here. So, we should just let her not eat? Go to bed eating two spoonfuls of pasta? Really???
Wow, the replies here are so bad. It's ridiculous. Wow, just wow...
Wow you are ridicoulous. You keep screaming at your DD yet that hasn't solved the problem. You and DH are not helping your daughter and now think DCUM will support you on this? Yes if she isn't hungry let her go to bed. Poor kid associates meal time with tension and screaming. I'd lose my appetite also. From your attitude it's clear how this became a problem in the first place. You and DH need parenting classes and your DD needs a supportive therapist.
OP why did you post here when it seems you don't actually want advice? I agree with the other pp's, you are setting your daughter up for an eating disorder later in life. I feel terrible for your daughter.
+100 OP, you and your husband are showing an OCD aspect in your parenting techniques. If your daughter inherited those tendencies, you're in for a lifetime of problems if you continue down this path. Please consider the above poster's comments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid falls in to one of two categories:
1. Normal light eater who will not let herself starve. In this case, you just need to provide the food and let her eat or not. OR
2. Has a medical issue and needs intervention by medical professionals which may include a gtube or other invasive thing.
In either case, screaming at her isn't helpful and you need help.
Best response so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm 19:39.
Contrary to popular opinion, yes, there are children who will go into FAILURE TO THRIVE, through not eating enough.
The idea that no child will allow himself to starve is a damageable myth.
My son was in failure to thrive as a toddler, and put on a high calorie diet, and is now again in the 2nd percentile as a tween, which is of great concern to his pediatrician.
There are FTT kids, but yelling at them to eat is not the solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to a therapist with your husband. What you are doing is causing eating disorders.
This. I'm kinda horrified just reading this. Have you looked at any Ellyn Satter books, I think they could help you. You guys are acting in a very controlling way towards her eating habits, and it's already backfiring. This will only get worse without intervention.
OP here. So, we should just let her not eat? Go to bed eating two spoonfuls of pasta? Really???
Wow, the replies here are so bad. It's ridiculous. Wow, just wow...
Wow you are ridicoulous. You keep screaming at your DD yet that hasn't solved the problem. You and DH are not helping your daughter and now think DCUM will support you on this? Yes if she isn't hungry let her go to bed. Poor kid associates meal time with tension and screaming. I'd lose my appetite also. From your attitude it's clear how this became a problem in the first place. You and DH need parenting classes and your DD needs a supportive therapist.