Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you have too many rules/restrictions about eating. As long as it’s a healthy snack, it’s not impacting the eating of actual meals and no one is obese, what’s the issue?
Eating anything in the car is disgusting. I don't care if it is an apple or a bag of Goldfish or what.
Unclench
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you have too many rules/restrictions about eating. As long as it’s a healthy snack, it’s not impacting the eating of actual meals and no one is obese, what’s the issue?
Eating anything in the car is disgusting. I don't care if it is an apple or a bag of Goldfish or what.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you have too many rules/restrictions about eating. As long as it’s a healthy snack, it’s not impacting the eating of actual meals and no one is obese, what’s the issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Bingo.
Exactly. Snacks are the new pacifier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why the 45 minute soccer game HAS to have a snack schedule for parents to haul to the field. It's ridiculous!
This drives me completely crazy. And every week the snacks get bigger. The parents who bring them think they are so gracious and kind to bring vast quantities of snacks, and enough for all the siblings. I have multiple kids who all play a sport. I'm about to simply give up on feeding my kids on Saturday's because they are GIVEN BY OTHER PEOPLE so much food and sugar (e.g. gatorade) at games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes, but it's not snacking all. the. time. Like one pp mentioned it's the constant snacking in the morning, at the playground, on the car ride back, before lunch, after nap, at church, before bed, the soccer practice. That's where it's an American thing and she's right that is stems from boredom.
Correct, if you'd read bringing up bebe then you'd know she covers this goûter. It's also why I do offer an afternoon snack after nap to try to extend dinner to a time where DH will be home and we can eat 1 meal altogether.
The general notion of always having snacks on you (multiple snacks! your bag is basically a vending machine!) and plying your children with them at the first sign of a whine is what's american.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes, but it's not snacking all. the. time. Like one pp mentioned it's the constant snacking in the morning, at the playground, on the car ride back, before lunch, after nap, at church, before bed, the soccer practice. That's where it's an American thing and she's right that is stems from boredom.
Correct, if you'd read bringing up bebe then you'd know she covers this goûter. It's also why I do offer an afternoon snack after nap to try to extend dinner to a time where DH will be home and we can eat 1 meal altogether.
The general notion of always having snacks on you (multiple snacks! your bag is basically a vending machine!) and plying your children with them at the first sign of a whine is what's american.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes, but it's not snacking all. the. time. Like one pp mentioned it's the constant snacking in the morning, at the playground, on the car ride back, before lunch, after nap, at church, before bed, the soccer practice. That's where it's an American thing and she's right that is stems from boredom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Bingo.
Exactly. Snacks are the new pacifier.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Bingo.