Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I drank juice and soda as a kid, I have a three-coke-a-day habit now (also drink juice and put sugar in my coffee) and have NEVER had a cavity. (not overweight, either.) Therefore your experience is invalid.
(anecdote =/= data)
What is your point? We should be giving our kids 3 cokes a day so they can be like you.
Anonymous wrote:
I drank juice and soda as a kid, I have a three-coke-a-day habit now (also drink juice and put sugar in my coffee) and have NEVER had a cavity. (not overweight, either.) Therefore your experience is invalid.
(anecdote =/= data)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we don't love our children as much as you.
Seriously? Are you that insecure as a parent?
Anonymous wrote:We never prohibited anything but didn't offer it yet. I grew up in another country where juice made from scratch - 1 orange or 2 cups of fresh fruit for each liter of water - blended every morning available for sipping all day long including with meals. This was true for every family I was friends with growing up.
We never paired milk with meals either (what a stupid combination anyway, right? Milk steals all the iron from the food you're eating not to mention screwing up your blood's pH).
Anyway, DD just now started going places like bday parties and playdates where they offer this boxed crap and she HATES it. She's free to take whatever she wants when we're at parties and she often eats a bite of cake at most and every time she sips the boxed stuff she says YUCK.
Anonymous wrote:
Just FWIW, although there is a lot of discussion about caloric drinks and the obesity epidemic, many of my childhood nutrition books also say the opposite: kids, unlike adults, CAN fill up on liquids, so if there is any concern about your child not gaining enough weight (and this may not be a concern for you-- my daughter is in a low percentile and is perfectly healthy), it's a bad idea to let her fill up on juice. I know that if my daughter gets a juice box, she will not eat any of the snack that accompanies it, because the juice is just so totally Awesome and Enough for her. Said juice box contains only 40 calories. A meager snack for a growing girl.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sick of the moms that give me the stink-eye when they see see my kids drinking juice!
My youngest daughter has been constipated since birth and two different GI specialists have told us that we must give her apple, pear and prune juice, in addition to her OTC meds and fiber.
My other daughter is a fainter due to low blood pressure. She also doesn't like to drink anything...and has been that way since she was a toddler. The heart specialist said she must stay well hydrated to keep up her blood volume. We battle with her daily to drink water and milk but when it's hot out we have to turn to juice to keep her drinking something.
I have had friends come over to my house and make strange comments about the juice in our fridge. On hot summer days at the pool I've had friends act annoyed that our daughters are drinking juice boxes in front of their kids. You'd think i was letting my kids snort coke next to their children! People needed to stop assuming they know better than everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I drank a lot of juice as a kid. I have a ton of cavities and have spent thousands of dollars as an adult on root canals and other dental work. Juice is a once in a while treat for my kids and they don't mind at all.
I drank juice and soda as a kid, I have a three-coke-a-day habit now (also drink juice and put sugar in my coffee) and have NEVER had a cavity. (not overweight, either.) Therefore your experience is invalid.
(anecdote =/= data)
Anonymous wrote:I drank a lot of juice as a kid. I have a ton of cavities and have spent thousands of dollars as an adult on root canals and other dental work. Juice is a once in a while treat for my kids and they don't mind at all.