Anonymous wrote:Remove the battle & emotions surrounding this.
Pick a breakfast time. Set out what you wish to offer for breakfast. Simply invite her "Breakfast time." 20-30 minutes later breakfast is cleared up, without any parental fuss & tantrums because you didn't get things to go your way.
Approx. 2.5 hours later. Repeat with snack.
Noontime. Repeat with lunch.
Another 2.5 hours. Snack.
At least 2.5 hours after snack, repeat with dinner.
No foods offered in between these times.
*Optional: a small bedtime snack
When there is no battle of the wills, pressure, disappointment or screaming she will come around.
Anonymous wrote:And what was the worst thing that would happen if you never overcame your picky eating? Come on. This is such a small issue in the grand scheme of things. You wouldn't have gotten into college? You wouldn't get your first job? You wouldn't be able to run for president? No one will ever marry or love you?
And sure. Yes we control many things for our children.
But I believe that we control what we will cook and serve and they get to control whether they're going to eat or not. There is no way that picky eating has as many lifelong adverse effects as disordered eating does from being forced to eat
The fact that you can't see that and keep making false analogies oh, well. I don't know what to tell you
Anonymous wrote:Hey OP tell your pediatrician that you and DH yell at your daughter to get her to eat and see what he says.
Anonymous wrote: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...
As the mother of a 32lb 4yr old boy, yes. Yes you should let her not eat unless your pediatrician thinks there is an issue and she needs feeding therapy. You should read Ifs Not About the abroccoli or Ellen Stter. You decide what and when to eat. The kid decides how much to eat - including none. You could also try working with your daughter to find things she likes to eat and let her have unlimited amounts of those. My son likes unsweetened apple sauce and whole milk. If he doesn’t like what we have for dinner, he can have that or a bowl of cereal. If you are yelling also, I think you need therapy yourself. I feel bad for your daughter and hope she doesn’t have lifelong issues with food and her weight.
In short, you are letting your child pick what they want to eat. What happens if you cook something your DC doesn't like for a week? You'd be ok with your child eating cereal for a week?
NP but yes I would. If I was really stupid enough to cook a week's worth of meals that I know my kid hated or my kid was so picky or adverse to eating that he would choose to skip it, then cereal it is.
I don't see healthy eating as some kind of parenting win or fail. It just is.
I do not have a picky eater. I have a kid who eats just about anything that he comes across. But I was a rather picky eater as a kid and now I'm the most adventurous adult eater I know.
Taste evolve and change over time so I'm not going to make every meal, which is family time, some kind of stupid freaking battle over stupid green beans or what have you.
You, Op anyone else who feels like food should be about a really needs to met that this is a control issue for you.
Anonymous wrote:A 5 year old girl that is 34 lbs is in the 10th percentile. I don't see the issue.
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...
As the mother of a 32lb 4yr old boy, yes. Yes you should let her not eat unless your pediatrician thinks there is an issue and she needs feeding therapy. You should read Ifs Not About the abroccoli or Ellen Stter. You decide what and when to eat. The kid decides how much to eat - including none. You could also try working with your daughter to find things she likes to eat and let her have unlimited amounts of those. My son likes unsweetened apple sauce and whole milk. If he doesn’t like what we have for dinner, he can have that or a bowl of cereal. If you are yelling also, I think you need therapy yourself. I feel bad for your daughter and hope she doesn’t have lifelong issues with food and her weight.
In short, you are letting your child pick what they want to eat. What happens if you cook something your DC doesn't like for a week? You'd be ok with your child eating cereal for a week?