Anonymous wrote:If he’s hungry he will eat. Seriously. When he’s hungry enough he will eat.
Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old is the same. She won't gag though and she willingly tries new foods, she just doesn't like them. She loves carbs and cheese (who can blame her) but beyond that it's really really difficult. I've stopped fighting and just keep encouraging and praising trying new foods. But it limits restaurants and makes social gatherings difficult. At a Mexican restaurant I told her I can ask for plain tortillas or she could just eat chips for dinner and that doesn't even work. She would rather cry herself to sleep from hunger than eat what I made for dinner. And I deconstruct a lot of it so people can choose their own veggie, sauces, toppings etc.
She helps make the weekly menu and helps me cook, and STILL doesn't eat it.
Anonymous wrote:As an adult picky eater, please know your son doesn't WANT to be this way. I'm sure he wishes he liked more, that he didn't worry when going to restaurants, or to people's homes, etc.
I was just somehow born like this, and although I eat more than the four things I ate at age 2 (yogurt, grilled cheese, pb&j, and I forget the other), I am still distinctly picky. Wish I weren't, but I truly hate a lot of foods.
Unless your son is a brilliant psychopath, he's NOT doing this to drive you crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spend hours each week planning, shopping, cooking, and preparing 90% of our family’s meals and my six year old is driving me up the wall. He refuses, unless coerced (“three bites of all new foods” “clean plate club or no screens after dinner” etc), to try any new foods. We spent years playing it cool, putting it on his plate and telling him he didn’t have to try it if he didn’t want to, etc and it did absolutely nothing. Everything he tastes he says he doesn’t like, and 50% of the time he gags when he is coerced into trying it. He will not try basic things—even sweet things, like cake or toast with jam or a different flavor of muffin! Foods he does like are rejected if they are cut in a different shape. He will not eat ANY convenience foods—yogurt, pizza, mac n cheese, quesadillas, chicken nuggets, nothing. I am just so frustrated by the unwillingness to TRY and the immediate rejection of everything after tasting it, without even thinking of whether or not it could potentially taste good.
I’m not very sure if I’m looking for advice, I just need to rant. Most resources for picky eating are for toddlers, and playing little games or cutting things into fun shapes is not going to convince a six year old.
Put the food on the table and that's that. He eats or goes hungry. If he doesn't eat then he is excused from table and gets ready for bed. He does this to get attention and you are letting him win. I told this story before but I'll repeat for your brnefit. My sister's son came to visit and stay with us for two weeks one summer. At his house he would only eat pizza, PB&grape jelly sandwiches, and french fries from McDonald's. I put dinner on the table and told him this was dinner in my house--no pizza, no PB&K, no Mac fries. Eat or go hungry. It was a simple dinner and he ate everything. He also told me that he was only picky at home because he knew his mother would give him all her attention.
You are the parent and his boss
Stop letting him rule the dinner table.
Anonymous wrote:If he’s hungry he will eat. Seriously. When he’s hungry enough he will eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he’s hungry he will eat. Seriously. When he’s hungry enough he will eat.
That doesn't solve anything though. My 10 year is more than willing to skip dinner knowing that preferred foods will be available for breakfast and lunch. She's fine with just those two meals.
My husband said when he was a kid if he refused dinner, they would serve it for breakfast. And if he refused it for breakfast, he would get it for lunch.
Not saying you should do this, but what would happen if breakfast also wasn't a preferred food?
Anonymous wrote:As an adult picky eater, please know your son doesn't WANT to be this way. I'm sure he wishes he liked more, that he didn't worry when going to restaurants, or to people's homes, etc.
I was just somehow born like this, and although I eat more than the four things I ate at age 2 (yogurt, grilled cheese, pb&j, and I forget the other), I am still distinctly picky. Wish I weren't, but I truly hate a lot of foods.
Unless your son is a brilliant psychopath, he's NOT doing this to drive you crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I think "picky eaters" is a rich white child problem. I bet poor children whose folks use food stamps eat whateve is put on the table and are bloody grateful for any food.
Anonymous wrote:I think "picky eaters" is a rich white child problem. I bet poor children whose folks use food stamps eat whateve is put on the table and are bloody grateful for any food.
Anonymous wrote:I think "picky eaters" is a rich white child problem. I bet poor children whose folks use food stamps eat whateve is put on the table and are bloody grateful for any food.