Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just live and let live. If you want to serve your kids different food than what you’re eating, go for it. I don’t get why you feel the need to say it’s “better” or make some broad pronouncements about kid food preferences and how they learn to eat (there’s a great book called First Bite: How We Learn to Eat about this, and it contradicts what you’re saying).
Every family is different, every kid is different, every parent is different. It’s important to me that my kids can be full participants in family meals and that they enjoy eating a wide variety of foods. I really don’t care if you feel otherwise until you tell me your way is better. It’s just smug and annoying.
PP with the $3000 dollars of feeding therapy behind me (and counting). Yea, all families are different. It was important to me that my child didn’t end up on a feeding tube. I would literally give up a kidney to have my child enjoy a wide at of food and be comfortable in any social setting. You seriously don’t know how lucky you are for that to be an option for you.
I’m sorry for what you’ve been through. I do have some exposure to serious feeding challenges through family members, so yes, I do know how fortunate we are.. I don’t know how you read this as criticizing people who are experiencing serious issues like you are. My whole point is that everyone is doing the best they can and what works for them and that looks different for different families. OP came in here saying the way they feed their family is “better” than what other people do and that’s what rubbed me the wrong way.
Wow can you really not understand how blathering on about how the big difference between you and the parents of people who struggle with this is because it’s IMPORTANT to you is not super tone deaf? Do you also interrupt conversations between women who are having infertility struggles and miscarriages to inform them how important it was to you to naturally conceive 7 children? Good grief. I feel terrible for anyone you talk to in real life who has struggles with feeding challenges. Get a clue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just live and let live. If you want to serve your kids different food than what you’re eating, go for it. I don’t get why you feel the need to say it’s “better” or make some broad pronouncements about kid food preferences and how they learn to eat (there’s a great book called First Bite: How We Learn to Eat about this, and it contradicts what you’re saying).
Every family is different, every kid is different, every parent is different. It’s important to me that my kids can be full participants in family meals and that they enjoy eating a wide variety of foods. I really don’t care if you feel otherwise until you tell me your way is better. It’s just smug and annoying.
PP with the $3000 dollars of feeding therapy behind me (and counting). Yea, all families are different. It was important to me that my child didn’t end up on a feeding tube. I would literally give up a kidney to have my child enjoy a wide at of food and be comfortable in any social setting. You seriously don’t know how lucky you are for that to be an option for you.
I’m sorry for what you’ve been through. I do have some exposure to serious feeding challenges through family members, so yes, I do know how fortunate we are.. I don’t know how you read this as criticizing people who are experiencing serious issues like you are. My whole point is that everyone is doing the best they can and what works for them and that looks different for different families. OP came in here saying the way they feed their family is “better” than what other people do and that’s what rubbed me the wrong way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just live and let live. If you want to serve your kids different food than what you’re eating, go for it. I don’t get why you feel the need to say it’s “better” or make some broad pronouncements about kid food preferences and how they learn to eat (there’s a great book called First Bite: How We Learn to Eat about this, and it contradicts what you’re saying).
Every family is different, every kid is different, every parent is different. It’s important to me that my kids can be full participants in family meals and that they enjoy eating a wide variety of foods. I really don’t care if you feel otherwise until you tell me your way is better. It’s just smug and annoying.
PP with the $3000 dollars of feeding therapy behind me (and counting). Yea, all families are different. It was important to me that my child didn’t end up on a feeding tube. I would literally give up a kidney to have my child enjoy a wide at of food and be comfortable in any social setting. You seriously don’t know how lucky you are for that to be an option for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two cents is that your kids eat a ton of sugar and hardly any protein.
Where are you getting this? Where is the sugar?
Anonymous wrote:OP, just live and let live. If you want to serve your kids different food than what you’re eating, go for it. I don’t get why you feel the need to say it’s “better” or make some broad pronouncements about kid food preferences and how they learn to eat (there’s a great book called First Bite: How We Learn to Eat about this, and it contradicts what you’re saying).
Every family is different, every kid is different, every parent is different. It’s important to me that my kids can be full participants in family meals and that they enjoy eating a wide variety of foods. I really don’t care if you feel otherwise until you tell me your way is better. It’s just smug and annoying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the advice to always serve your kids what the adults are eating. They don't want to eat it! We always put some of whatever we made on their plates but there are only a handful of things that we eat that they actually like and will eat more than a couple bites of (mostly simple pasta dishes). They don't complain, they just kind of eat around what we serve, fill up on milk and whatever carb is on the table, and that's it.
So I pretty much always serve them kid-friendly foods (healthy stuff -- yogurt and granola, pasta with simple pesto/red/butter sauce, a variety of fruits, whole grains, etc.) and they mostly just eat that. We always encourage them to try everything on the table unless it's an item they have an established aversion to. They will eat a bite of our main dish and will pick at some veggies, and then they fill up on a variety of the other stuff. It's all things that are easy to serve and we meal prep on the weekend, so it doesn't require extra effort. Though about once a week I'll also prep something I know they love and serve that as well. Like this week I did a batch of banana and oat pancakes that are easy to heat up and they love them plus they are a really healthy main course option (that DH and I have zero interest in eating -- we are having tacos for dinner and our kids hate tacos).
When we do hit on an item we all like, we obviously make it more often, but like I said this is mostly super simple pasta dishes, like spaghetti and meatballs, and we can't make them every single night.
I"m just throwing this out there because I constantly hear the advice about how your kids should "eat what you eat." But they don't want to! It does't taste good to them -- they have brand new taste buds, so strong flavors are too much for them, plus kids naturally gravitate towards foods that are sweeter and simpler. I figure as they get older they will naturally become more interested in more adult flavors and start to eat more of our foods.
I think it's especially damaging for families who have picky eaters (which is not something you can control -- one of my kids is much picker than the other and it's just a personality thing) who feel a lot of pressure for their kids to eat "adult" foods and it's just not a reasonable epxtations for most kids. My two cents.
You’re underestimating your kids and just taking the route that is easier for you…hopefully, this is the only area you’re bagging.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the advice to always serve your kids what the adults are eating. They don't want to eat it! We always put some of whatever we made on their plates but there are only a handful of things that we eat that they actually like and will eat more than a couple bites of (mostly simple pasta dishes). They don't complain, they just kind of eat around what we serve, fill up on milk and whatever carb is on the table, and that's it.
So I pretty much always serve them kid-friendly foods (healthy stuff -- yogurt and granola, pasta with simple pesto/red/butter sauce, a variety of fruits, whole grains, etc.) and they mostly just eat that. We always encourage them to try everything on the table unless it's an item they have an established aversion to. They will eat a bite of our main dish and will pick at some veggies, and then they fill up on a variety of the other stuff. It's all things that are easy to serve and we meal prep on the weekend, so it doesn't require extra effort. Though about once a week I'll also prep something I know they love and serve that as well. Like this week I did a batch of banana and oat pancakes that are easy to heat up and they love them plus they are a really healthy main course option (that DH and I have zero interest in eating -- we are having tacos for dinner and our kids hate tacos).
When we do hit on an item we all like, we obviously make it more often, but like I said this is mostly super simple pasta dishes, like spaghetti and meatballs, and we can't make them every single night.
I"m just throwing this out there because I constantly hear the advice about how your kids should "eat what you eat." But they don't want to! It does't taste good to them -- they have brand new taste buds, so strong flavors are too much for them, plus kids naturally gravitate towards foods that are sweeter and simpler. I figure as they get older they will naturally become more interested in more adult flavors and start to eat more of our foods.
I think it's especially damaging for families who have picky eaters (which is not something you can control -- one of my kids is much picker than the other and it's just a personality thing) who feel a lot of pressure for their kids to eat "adult" foods and it's just not a reasonable epxtations for most kids. My two cents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This obsession with kids having an adventurous palate is one of the most ridiculous things. It really doesn’t matter.
It also doesn't matter that some kids do. They aren't having adventurous palates at you, or at your kids. It's not a criticism of you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh FFS. What do you think kids eat all over the world, and have done for thousands of years? They eat the cuisine of their culture, spicy though it may be.
Sorry your kids are picky, OP, but don't pretend all children are like this. And don't pretend your choice to cater to them isn't part of why your kids are picky.
hmm.. I dont know about other cultures but in my North Indian heritage family..kids do have special food made for them that was separate from the Indian curries and sabzi gosht you eat as n adult. breakfast wud often be plain paratha and yoghurt with sugar whipped in or eggs & toast soldier- not a green chili and scallion omelette! a serving of pulao with ghee or kichri etc.. some kids want to eat spicy foods earlier and start asking for it bit no- one is given korma and palak right off the bat. grandmas would hiss that baby's sensitive tummy cant take it so until kids are like 5-7ish, separate food is served to them. lots of ghee filled food, yoghurt and fruit with fiber is fed to kids b/c they need the fat for their growing brains. same with almonds/nuts- we had to eat a handful of almonds every day and a bowl of kefir like yoghurt at lunch. We were also allowed sweets but limited eating sour foods. and egos is pretty common even in South Indian families but they are vegetarian more often and feed kichri instead of pulao.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your kids don’t eat any vegetables? Even if they eat healthy foods they still need vegetables. I’m a big believer in doing what works for your family and if this system works for you then that’s fine. My kid doesn’t like the same thing in tacos as I do not that doesn’t mean I want to make a separate meal. She can have the taco shell with some taco meat, Avacado and cheese….. I’m not forcing lettuce or salsa on her if she doesn’t like it.