Dear Parents, We Owe it To Our Kids to Stop Picky Eating

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Dear parents- we owe it to our kids to stop this
Wellness Mama » Blog » Motherhood » Dear Parents, We Owe it To Our Kids to Stop Picky Eating

Stop what? Well, lots of things actually: We need to stop buying unhealthy foods, feeding them too much sugar, and not giving them enough time outside to play.

The thing that I’ve noticed in an increasing amount lately that we also really need to stop doing:

Letting our Kids be Picky!

Yes, I said letting.

Yes, I mean letting because we allow them to develop this habit. I’ve been to other countries, I’ve seen kids scarf down olives or snails or even balut (yes, really).

Let’s also not forget, as our parents were so keen to remind us, that there are children in the world who would be grateful for any food at all. I certainly heard about the starving children around the world when I wasn’t happy about eating my dinner. Do our kids hear about them?

In fact, I actually remember saving my birthday money once to donate to Food for the Poor because I actually felt bad about those starving kids.

Was it Guilt?

Probably, but it encouraged me to save money for those in need and to eat my freaking brussels sprouts, so I’m grateful for it.

Parents in my parents’ generation also had a pretty set in stone menu each night at dinner. They served:

  1. What mom cooked
  2. Hunger

We were never forced to eat, but we most certainly didn’t get to choose what we were having for meals. We were *shockingly* expected to eat what was served. My parents didn’t seem to feel much sympathy for my plight of not liking certain foods.

In fact, when I saw this movie in theaters as a kid (yes, I’m that old), this line seemed somewhat familiar:

Most of the time, this included vegetables and wasn’t a food that I loved. But I ate it. And I didn’t complain. And now I’m all grown up and not a picky eater at all.

You Know What Else?

Most of us managed to make it through childhood without starving. We eventually learned to eat foods we didn’t like. We don’t even need therapy for it.

Our parents had better things to do than cajole or encourage us to eat foods we didn’t like. They certainly had better things to do than open a 24/7 restaurant devoted to our whims.

They also didn’t lose sleep over our food preferences.

Have our Kids Gotten Soft?

Let’s think about this. As kids, most of us ate vegetables. And meat, or we didn’t eat that meal. We made it to adulthood, and though I could argue it on a few points, most of us are relatively competent adults.

Yet, everywhere I go in the US, kids are coddled and catered to.

They are asked questions that I certainly never heard and you probably didn’t either.

Questions Like:

“What would you like for dinner?”

“Would you like a snack?”

“Do you want the Dora gummy bears or the Minions ones?”

They are Told Things Like:

“Oh, that’s ok if you don’t like that, we can make something else.”

or:

“You don’t have to eat your meat and vegetables before having dessert… I’ll get it for you now.”

And those aren’t even the worst examples I’ve heard.

In fact, at a recent meal at our house where there were 18+ kids, all of the parents served each of their own kids food. (The food was amazing too- steak, grilled veggies, etc.).

I told the collective group of kids that there was fruit salad after dinner for everyone who ate their veggies.

One kid got upset and started complaining because “But mommy, I want fruit salad right now.”

At which point, he was catered to and given fruit salad by his parents without having to eat other food, in front of all the other kids who did have to eat what was served to them.

Seriously?

This is a small and insignificant example but it violates two social principles that I was taught as a kid:

  1. When you are at someone’s house, you eat what is given and you thank them for it.
  2. Free food is always good food.

Somewhere along the line, we started thinking that our kids get input into what they should eat. We forgot an important point:

Parents are Responsible for the Nutrition of their Children

This is a relatively simple concept but I don’t see many parents who seem to understand it.

Think about this- a toddler (or any age child, really) is not the best judge of what should be eaten. He or she is also not the best judge about when bedtime should be or how often he or she should bathe.

That toddler is probably not even an expert at wiping his own bottom yet, but somehow we think we should give him input into his nutrition.

When studies increasingly show that the foods a child eats in the first few years of life are vitally important for lifetime health, we think we should outsource that decision to a three year old?

Are You Kidding Me?

Would we let our kids decide how often they should go to school? Or change their underwear?

What about deciding how much TV they should watch, or whether or not getting a pet tiger is a good idea?

So why are we letting kids dictate something even more important?

Yes, it Might be “Mean”

In a child’s eyes to not be given the food they want. It can also seem “mean” to give them boundaries and rules, but these things are necessary to avoid having whiny, entitled children who live in our houses until they are 40.

Will it Still be Cute Then?

Is it cute when a grown-up comes to your home for a meal and refuses to eat the meal you’ve prepared simply because they don’t like one of the ingredients?

I know a few of these adults, but I’m certainly not raising any!

Listen to this podcast episode on Umbrella Parenting and Raising Children With Strong Coping Skills with Dr. Jen Forristal.

Here We Go…

I know, I know, I hear the objections now.

What about kids with allergies? Or special needs? Or disorders that affect their ability to eat certain foods?

Of course, there are exceptions to any rule and these circumstances dictate a little more leeway, but I have yet to find any condition that completely kept a parent from feeding their child any healthy food whatsoever. If your child has a condition that makes him allergic to anything but chocolate milk and cotton candy, I apologize, but I haven’t encountered this yet.

What I have encountered are many children who think they are a special snowflake with special privileges who get served special food.

I’ve also encountered a lot of obese kids. And kids with health problems.

And it Breaks my Heart

Because kids don’t buy happy meals on their own.

They also don’t habituate themselves to crap foods on their own. We feed them bland white foods and then wonder why they only like bland white foods.

I know because I did it to my first child at a doctor’s recommendation.

And he was a freakin’ picky eater for a couple of years before I realized my kid was going to be an inconsiderate jerk when it came to food if I didn’t change something.

So I Did

I think they call that parenting.

It certainly doesn’t mean I always have the answers (or even that I usually do).

But I do know this:

It took me a few months to help transition my picky temper tantrum pitching child to an adventurous eater who loves broccoli. I know it is possible.

I also know I haven’t had a picky kid since him. You know what changed?

Me.

Tough Love

Here’s a dose of something we aren’t giving our kids (or ourselves) very much: tough love.

As parents, we owe it to our children to help them become well-adjusted, healthy members of society. One of the many small ways we can do this is by teaching them the basic idea that food is for nutrition first and enjoyment second.

That we only get one body and we should take care of it.

And that it isn’t ok to live off of granola bars and chicken nuggets. That they will survive eating brussels sprouts and meat. And *gasp* even salads and olives and beets and every other food that we think kids won’t like.

Because at the end of the day… if our kids grow up fat, picky and sick, we have only ourselves to blame.

Dear parents… let’s stop the picky epidemic. Today. 

Important note: This post addresses the attitudes relating to food as much as the foods themselves. Of course, there are times and medical conditions when a varied diet may not be possible or recommended and these would require adjustment. I’m certainly not advocating that we force feed our kids or never give them any choices at all, only that we encourage an adventurous attitude toward trying new food and a kind and respectful attitude when refusing foods, especially after trying them. (For example, “no thank you, I’m not hungry” rather than whining and complaining). That is a manners issue and not a food issue at all. It is also something that every parent can work with a child on.

I wrote this post years ago about our guidelines for meal times and how we encourage our children to eat a variety of foods in case it is helpful for more specifics.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

245 responses to “Dear Parents, We Owe it To Our Kids to Stop Picky Eating”

  1. Barbara Avatar
    Barbara

    This may not relate completely to your article, “There was no tough love when I was growing up, just ‘parenting”. We grew up to be good honorable people because a 2 wonderful people raised us to be just that.

    Mama always said we should clean our plates, “Remember all the starving children in China.” and once (and only once) told her to send it to them. In those days spanking was legal and she verbally and physically taught me not to EVER disrespect her again…………and I didn’t…ever.
    I can’t tell you the number of nights I sat at the table until bedtime because I wouldn’t eat Lima beans or chilly for supper. Believe me, at 6 or 7, that’s the end of the world! You know what, I still won’t eat Lima beans or chilly, and my mother and I both survived my childhood.
    Eventually, she said, “That’s alright, you’ll eat when your hungry enough.” She was right, breakfast was a long time coming.
    We reached a happy medium though, she would make a sweet cornbread, she called Johnny-cake and we all ate that with wed. night chilly and if I only dipped a corner of the bread in the chilly sauce, she was satisfied or, she’d put a Lima bean on my plate and said, again, you’ll sit at the table until you clean your plate and you eat that bean. (Darn it, she put the dog our too! ) I was doomed!
    I swallowed it with water, like a pill. But Mama was happy and when Mama was happy, everybody was happy.
    I lost her last month at the age of 93 and bless her, I bet she got tired of hearing, me say: “You’re right Mama, absolutely right.”

    1. Pat Avatar

      It was parenting in the same mild format my parents took on us. No spanking although we knew it was an option mom would exercise if we didn’t obey. I went on strikes if it was chilly of any kind, I would simply refuse to eat. My father whom was raised to eat whenever he wanted, would say, if she doesn’t want to eat leave her plate aside, when she gets hungry she can come and eat. He was right as I was allowed to eat without being forced. When chilly was put in the food, I would cry and go on a hunger strike, to teach her to not put chili in the food and it worked.

      Your story sounds much like the way it was in our family, no tough love, just wonderful parenting styles.

  2. Mia Avatar

    I absolutely loved this article! Facts, common sense, and advice, all mixed with a little snarkiness. I snickered a few times, like when I read this:

    “What I have encountered are many children who think they are a special snowflake with special privileges who get served special food.”

    I had to check that I was actually on your site because the tone of this was much different than your other posts, but it is much welcomed. Please let out your sass more often, this was such an enjoyable read!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      Thanks for your comment Mia. I struggle with balance when it comes to my writing (many earlier posts were much snarkier), so this is one that went in the other direction. Thanks for reading!

  3. Pat Avatar

    I recall being a picky eater and coming from a similar household as you mention, I recall going on hunger strikes, and my mom would worried sick I wasn’t eating. It was horrible for me as a kid to eat what I thought was not good to eat. To date I’m still a picky eater so to all mom’s with picky eaters be gentle with such children. We know what’s good and what’s not good to eat.

    1. annie Avatar

      I remember being made to eat meat. It was almost impossible to choke down. Now I’m a vegetarian married to a compassionate carnivore. I think this blog post is a little nasty. Kids who don’t like this or that food aren’t inconsiderate jerks destined for diabetes. They may have sensory issues, or they might just not like to eat what you do, or they may have a serious aversion (as I did to meat). That does not make them ungrateful selfish slobs, any more than your health choices make you a sanctimonious snob. There are several rants tangled together in this post, and they are actually separate issues. Whether kids should have a choice in what they eat (I say yes. My daughter doesn’t like lettuce. No romaine for her, we serve tabouli) is a separate issue from allowing them to eat junk. My daughter has choices: this healthy food or that healthy food. Another issue is manners. If my daughter is offered something to eat by a host and she doesn’t want it, she says thank you, but I’m not hungry, that’s very nice of you to offer. Another issue is fostering an adventurous eater, which I have done … by offering choices. My daughter knows our deal: she will try anything, but she doesn’t have to eat it if she doesn’t like it. So she tries everything! She’s curious and excited. She loves fresh raw veggies and fermented food and rainbows of food. My mother never asked me what I wanted for dinner. When.I ask my daughter what she wants for dinner, she says broccoli soup!

    2. Julia Avatar

      The idea that you can “make” someone like something by making them eat it makes me so sad. The idea that children are obese because they weren’t forced to eat whatever someone offered them is not only sad it’s dangerous. If you want children to eat enough then they have to decide how much to eat. Using food as punishment and rewards has been shown over and over again to back fire. Especially not being able to have dessert until you eat your vegetables. I have a very selective eater, there was a point where there were less than 10 foods that he would eat. And there were times when he would go for over 2 days without eating and then eat so much when I “let”him eat something he liked that he would throw up. Following Ellen Satter’s Food Rules has helped our family so much. Raising children with a healthy attitude about food is more important to me than raising kids who eat what they’re told, just because they’re told. http://www.ellynsatterinstitute.org/htf/howtofeed.php

      1. Wellness Mama Avatar

        I want to clarify- I never force my kids to eat if they truly aren’t hungry and I am opposed to that as well. I just don’t let them choose cheetos or freezer waffles over what I’ve cooked for dinner. I don’t use food as punishment or reward (but we do keep fruit and sweets to the evenings for adrenal purposes). Just wanted to make it clear that I never force feed my kids and always give kids a choice to not eat if not hungry. On top of that, we just give each child one bite of each thing I make and after he or she eats that, he or she can request more of any or all foods. This way, we encourage trying new things without requiring them to eat a whole plate of anything.

  4. Diana Avatar

    Yes! Tough love is an ingredient that is so missing these days that I believe our generation benefited from! Let’s bring it back, to the table and to other areas of our lives and our children’s lives!

  5. Clare Avatar

    I approve of message plus postings about same. As a grandmum and now a great same, I have made a study of adult Food Fussies. My own agenda with a rowdy three was that I never associated food with any kind of “punishment” but heh heh I will serve the carrots, the zucchini, the broccoli relentlessly along with stuff you like and I will insist nicely that you try two bites. I later in life discovered that the counteraction was to pass the zucchini under the table to big sis whereupon she would ask to be excused to go to the bathroom–but at least no food fussies. I suggest that in divorces and familial disruptions, plus at certain ages or sibling pecking order, Food Fussiness is a kid’s first shot at a power trip…they’re fairly powerless otherwise. But I truly believe that rules and boundaries are part of what makes kids feel secure. Permissiveness equals insecurity. Hence two bites is the rule, and since I’m the boss see “relentless”. However, since parents are supposed to be in charge, it can be negotiated around or the food fussy as power trip is liable to continue into adulthood–it is also a great attention-getting device, if you have ever seen a presumed adult harassing a poor waiter or waitress over something trivial. Another device I recommend is that once a week, we all including adults dress up slightly more than “casual” and conduct ourselves with our very best manners and interactive politeness, just to show we all know how to do it. We took our kids out to eat at reasonable budgetary intervals to reinforce the larger “socialization” process Occasionally an older lady would stop by our table and beam “my, such nice POLITE and well behaved children”. I decided wow, reinforcement, good idea, so post empty nest I do the same for other people’s kids…it may not literally ‘take a village” but volunteers always welcome. I do plead tolerance for some individual tastes where children are indeed individuals: I have known vegans who were opposed to meat from childhood; meat eaters who were carnivores early; people who loved veggies or lemon sole at first blush, etc. My daughter hated eggs from about 8 months on and I conceded maybe she knows something I don’t–couple of allergic reactions later confirmed. There’s a wide selection of nutritious stuff to offer and to make a BFD out of it may court the battle of wills or be just the negative attention somebody wanted. Above all, blessings on wellness moms, it takes more creativity and cleverness than rocket science.

  6. Edith Thurman Avatar
    Edith Thurman

    THANK YOU!!! As a mother of a kid your age, yes I took her to see that movie when she was two, and we went about 6-10 times she loved it so much! She also did not get to pick what she ate! Why because my mother, and grandmother did not give them the choice either! I know our parents were not always perfect, but we did survive, and learn, grow. I think it’s sad these days that kids do not know what it means to go outside and play! To keep themselves occupied instead of it being their parents job to make sure their not bored. I think we went too far in the opposite direction! That could be why the world is full of people who expect everything to be handed to them, and catered to. There’s a thin line between parenting and codaling!

  7. Ellen Avatar

    Awesome! Absolutely awesome! So much wisdom there and a joy to read.

  8. Maui Arevalo-Hernandez Avatar
    Maui Arevalo-Hernandez

    I live on the island of Kauai in Hawaii. I grew up with a fisherman for a dad and ate anything he brought home as a catch. Even raw fish! Shock! ….Ive been reading your blog for a long time but have never left a comment before,but this particular post really spoke to me. I’m very conscious of the amounts of sugar and junk food I feed my kids and it comes from no where else other than love. My struggle is when other people want to judge you for “depriving” your kid. The other day I had 3 of my kids with me and I wanted to meet my friend and her daughter for lunch. After agreeing to go eat somewhere I normally wouldn’t take my kids *tacobell* cough*..bec ause I didn’t want her to feel like I was so strict I couldn’t let them have a bean burrito once in a while. But,When we get there she orders her 4 year old daughter a GIANT slurpeethat she gets to tank down while she waits for her food. Okay,this friend has been my friend a long time she KNOWS I would never let my kids tank a slurpee before they eat. But she never tells her daughter no to sweets even if it’s a social courtesy to not eat a treat right in front of 3 other kids who can’t have it. So my kids are siting there just watching their friend get to tank sugar before she’s even eaten aND of couse they want some toobut know i wont let them. It makes me very sad because I know what that sugar is doing to her little body but my kids had to just sit there and watch her drink her treat in front of them, because her mom can’t tell her no.. and somehow in their minds I’m the bad mom. It really frustrated me! Long story short, soo proud of all the mama’s out there who get criticized for “depriving” their kids of sugar just because they want them to be healthy good eaters.keep it up!

    1. Elizabeth Gonzales Avatar
      Elizabeth Gonzales

      I think there should be more Moms like you! You are a great Mother! I have friends that get hurt feelings because they tell there kids ‘no’ to something and they say “oh, you’re a mean mommy”. Well, remember you are not your kids’ friend! It is not your job to ‘be nice’ all the time, or work for your kids approval! We are not short order chefs either, you get what you get.

    2. Judy Avatar

      I feel pressure to cave in when my kids are around others who get to have all the junk too. Its like I’m some kind of radical by not allowing my kids to eat junk. I just laugh and say “yeah I’m such a mean Mum.”

    3. Elizabeth M. Avatar
      Elizabeth M.

      My siblings down to as young as five would have no problem watching another kid eat junk. Nutrition and healthful eating are table discussions at our house and it goes a long ways. The seven and nine year old were visiting with an 11 year old friend. The friend was eating junk food in front of them and saying to them “I bet you want some?” The boys responded with everything that is bad about the food that the friend was eating. When they had had their say the friend said that he didn’t want to eat anymore.

  9. Dani Welton Avatar
    Dani Welton

    Yes! I dont serve kid food. They might not be adventurous eaters, but they love real food.

  10. Sara Avatar

    Well said Wellness Mama! This same line of reasoning applies to almost every other “parenting dilemma” Parents are in charge, and children should obey cheerfully and immediately. Scientific research has proven over and over that the happiest children are the most obedient children..

    1. Tania Avatar

      I would like to see thr research that links happiness to obedience.

      1. Lisa Avatar

        some of the comments on here are shocking. The glee with which parents discuss being the boss. Just horrid and I feel sorry for the parents who were obviously psychologically damaged by their own upbringings and think the only way to parent is by being a controlling dictator. Very, very sad

        1. LaraS Avatar

          Those complaining about Katie’s tone, please just don’t read on… 😛

          Nobody said anything about being a controlling dictator. Children need boundaries and a sense of what is right and wrong instilled in them… lovingly, of course, it goes without saying, and the two things are actually compatible, even if it might sound a bit extragalactical to some. Then, when they are grown up, they will be responsible persons and useful citizens, someone nice to be around, and not like some 40-year-old jerks who think they’re the centre of the universe, treat everyone else as if they existed to cater to them, and expect their parents to pay the rent of their apartment for them.

          There is nothing sad about parents teaching their children, nothing sad about parents being responsible and holding themselves accountable for their children’s education and wellbeing. Also, I’d be careful of using the words “psychological damage” for what you’re alluding to. You’re being rather impertinent, if you don’t mind my saying so. If you’re ready to let your three-year-old decide what she’s going to eat, who she’s going to slap in the face when she wants to, and when you’re going to bed, go ahead… just remind me not to hire her, or anyone like her, when she’s grown up.

          1. Lea Avatar

            Where is the “like” or up vote button when you need it! Love this LaraS!

  11. Meredith Avatar
    Meredith

    My daughter is pretty adventurous with food but I struggle with my younger son. He seems to have sensory issues and will not eat ANY veggies or fruits except peas and the puréed squeezie pouches. He has been taken off dairy so now his tiny list of foods has gotten even smaller (he won’t eat any nondairy yogurts) If anyone can recommend a resource to help in this, I would be so grateful!

    1. Amber O Avatar
      Amber O

      If he likes the squeeze pouch things, buy reusable ones. Purée fruits and vegetables together. Be sneaky!

    2. Catherine Avatar
      Catherine

      Hey, I dont know what kind of food issues/allergies you are dealing with, but two of my sons have a ton of food allergies, and we found a facebook group called sarah’s fpies clubhouse that is great. Moms share all their tricks, frm recipes for only a few foods to dealing with birhday parties. There area lot of wonderful fbgroups dealing with that kind of stuff. Also, a nutritionist and food therapy may help too. They give you lots of pointers to overcome issues. One of my sons is so picky and we held the line at first but he didnt care and just wouldnt eat, and his weight got too low, so we caved and i know im spoiling him foodwise now but its that or him becoming badly underweight. The squeezy pouches are great because you can mix so may healthy things, like mild bqby spinach and they wont even know. Freezing works well too, making smoothies or pops with the puree. Kids love anything frozen or on a stick. Anyway, good luck!

    3. Karen Avatar

      Hi Meredith, you are right to suspect an underlying condition. My daughter does not eat any fruit and most vegetables and she is now 35 years old. It has to do with coarse texture. This is not a “fussy” trait but an actual condition and extends to clothing – only very soft fabrics are wearable. Unfortunately I can’t remember the name of the condition but I am sure Google will come up with it.

      1. Jennifer L. Avatar
        Jennifer L.

        My husband is the same. He says it’s a texture issue, but I can’t see how watermelon and broccoli both won’t down, even if pureed in soup or something! Our family is on the craziest diet–I need a Venn Diagram to feed everyone. I wish I could be polite enough to allow my kids to eat Country Crock spread on white bread and cereal when they visit their grandparents, but I don’t. We’re picky to the point of others taking it as rude (sorry, the kids can’t have Dairy Queen, even if Nana is treating…). If only the rest of everyone didn’t eat such garbage a lot of the time! I don’t know how you do it and still maintain some grace. I shudder when people offer my kids Goldfish crackers or random boxed cereal “snacks.” Our diets are far from perfect at home, but I don’t feed them food from boxes as a general rule of thumb. My oldest only wants to eat white-ish foods even though I prepare a lot of different things and give lots of choices. My youngest is starting to turn up her nose at everything starting the meal with “I HATE broccoli” and then flings it off her plate. Joy! Huzzah on the manners lessons! We’re just a bunch of barbarians over here. I really am at a loss sometimes how to navigate all the food issues and I like your blog header that it really ought not be this difficult! Sigh!

    4. Maranda Avatar

      My kids eat a lot better since I put them on juice plus. The more veggies you get into their bodies, the more the body craves it! Taste buds will change.

    5. Amanda Olsen Avatar
      Amanda Olsen

      Yes! We have Autism in the house (multiple children) and texture and looks, smell, can all limit a varied diet. I have done as suggested and snuck healthy foods into dishes where they “disappear”, such as avocado into their berry smoothie. I did it a number of times asking how it was and receiving positive feedback before I told them what was in it. They now dislike their smoothie without the avocado, which was unheard of before. There is hope!

  12. Lane Avatar

    I completely agree that we need to teach our kids good manners and how to make healthy choices as an investment in their health.

    The language and tone of this article seemed different from what I’m accustomed to reading on this site. It left me with a funny feeling…

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      Sorry it wasn’t all rainbows and unicorns today, but there are some days I hit my limit and the snark comes out, especially on topics that I’m passionate about…

      1. gowri Avatar

        Hi Katie,
        I liked this article, But I have to agree the tone is very different in this article compared to rest of the posts.

        1. laura Avatar

          I think her tone was appropriate. Her frustration directed at parents who cater to their children’s every whim was clearly articulated. As a parent of 5 small children who has witnessed other parents give in to their children over and over, then wonder why their kid is a picky brat 10 years later,I feel her tone was spot on. Sometimes you just need to tell it like it is and be direct so no one misunderstands your meaning.

          1. Victoria Avatar
            Victoria

            Spot on…..and yes too many parents cater to their children’s every whim. Mothers are not short order cooks and children must be taught to respect and be thankful for their food and the efforts to prepare it. Children are taught good nutritional habits and self care by responsible parents. It’s too easy to give them junk food and call it dinner. Katie, your children are very blessed indeed! ?

        2. laura Avatar

          From the moment our children started to eat should food I used a small food grinder to make their food. I simply used what we ate for any given meal, ground it up and fed it to them. Since we already eat healthy I didn’t need to adjust the salt or the seasoning. I let them get used to the food we ate. Sometimes they wouldn’t eat it and I would supplement with nursing. Sometimes they wanted to play with it and eat it off their fingers. It made a mess but they were still being exposed to the way I cooked. They are all much older now and very rarely do we have issues and if we do it is always about control. It’s up to them if they decide to go hungry. I provided them food. And I refuse to be a short order cook.

          1. Je'Nelle Avatar
            Je’Nelle

            We feed our baby girl much the same way, but I don’t really grind stuff up. I just cut it I smaller pieces. I’m getting a little frustrated because lately she’s just been throwing her food and it’s hard to get her to eat the veggies. All she wants is fruit! (Or pasta if we’re having it) she’s only 11 months old, so I don’t feel like she’s old enough to make her go to bed hungry… And she won’t bc she’s still nursing as well…but any ideas on how to get her to eat the healthier parts of the meal too? I don’t want to cater to her and give her something else, but I also don’t want to be up nursing her all night bc she wouldn’t eat our food and now she’s hungry…

      2. Barbara Avatar
        Barbara

        Honey, If you walked on water, we’d call you Jesus. Your female, normal and a mother, enough said.

          1. Barbara Avatar
            Barbara

            You have enough on your plate without beating yourself up. Do the best you can, believe it or not, you and your kids will survive their growing up and they WILL appreciate you.

      3. Jackie Avatar

        Katie, while I agree with much of what you said, at 49 years of age, I still have bad memories of the dinner table as a small child and a mother who put the food on the table and that was it. I had an aversion to textures of many foods that I outgrew eventually. Dealing with a picky eater can go the slow and easy route to get the same results in the end.

        I was fortunate that I worked with 2 mothers of grown children when my kids were little. One had 6 children and one had 7 children, not to mention the grandchildren between the two of them. After talking with them about picky eaters, I combined what they said with my own ideas and here is what I came up with.
        They had to try two bites of a food, even if they had it before and didn’t like it. If they didn’t want to eat it, they had to say, “No, thank you.” Politely. NO, I repeat, NO screaming or whining. If they didn’t want to eat what I made, they could fix their own food but with only one choice: a peanut butter sandwich ( I am not a paleo person, nothing against it but not for me also, it wasn’t well known at the time). I was not willing to have the dinner table turn into a battleground and I was not willing to make another meal when there was one already prepared. Eventually, the oldest and pickiest got sick of peanut butter and began to eat a bigger and bigger variety of foods. Now, he is probably the most health conscience of all of them. His diet is far from perfect but for a 21 year old who is mostly moved out working full time and going to school full time, he does pretty well. Now, 2 of my kids are grown and one is nearly grown. They eat most things and don’t complain. They each have things that they don’t like and if they don’t want what I made, they fix their own meal. All are healthy. All maintain a healthy weight.

        I did this because I really wanted my kids to feel that they had control of themselves. I wanted them to be able to say, “No,” to certain things but to also be polite and respectful. I also didn’t want them to feel like disliking something meant that they were misbehaving somehow. I really wanted them to be able to say “no” to other things that seemed wrong, if they ever came up in life.

        I would like to add that no way, no how, not in this lifetime, did they run the show about what was for dinner. Some of the pickiest kids I knew were also the most overweight. The kid would “only” eat chicken nuggets or some other crap almost every night. Mainly, this is easier for the parent. I don’t say this as a criticism, but a reality that can be easily overlooked when our lives get hectic. Both parents working full time on different schedules is frequently not a “choice.” It wasn’t for me when my older 2 were little. It was a financial necessity. My job was high stress and because of the unpredictable nature of my work, I frequently had to work over time and rotate on-call hours (get to work in no more than 30 minutes after being notified).

        My goal was to overcome picky eating without turning my kids into spoiled brats and without driving myself crazy. I didn’t want the evenings that I was home, especially when we were all there, to be unpleasant. Like my husband and myself at the time, lots of people are working weekends, holidays, and odd hours. All of us weren’t at the table at the same time very often. Also, dinner was often the end of a long and extremely stressful day.

        All I can tell you is that this worked for us and was relatively painless and not frustrating most of the time. As a former picky eater myself, I didn’t want to take the hard line with food but still wanted the kids to eat fairly healthy without a lot of fuss. I am not saying that this approach is right for everyone but it was right for me.

        1. Wellness Mama Avatar

          Thanks Jackie for the thoughtful and helpful comment. I agree with you on all counts and I’m going to edit the post to include a link to a much older post I’ve written that includes many of these points: https://wellnessmama.com/8024/food-rules/

          To clarify- I follow much of the same thing (though our kids can only get leftovers if they truly won’t eat a food), and make them try only one bite of each food before requesting more of any food. It has worked really well for us as well.

          I also absolutely agree with the “no thank you” and I think that is what frustrated me the most with recent cases is that there were two issues going on: the child’s refusal to try a food and the child’s disrespect/whining toward the parent. I love your solution that separates the manners and the food as two different issues.

          1. Julie Avatar

            So you will give some other leftovers if they wont eat the main meal at all? I am trying to figure this thing out myself.

          2. Brittany Avatar

            What do you do when you have an extremely strong willed child who will absolutely under no circumstances take the ‘one bite’?

      4. Tracey Avatar

        Lol… You should hear on the days I get into a rant about all of my little pet issues. Most days I can keep under control and just be nice but sometimes you just need the unvarnished truth

      5. Emily Avatar

        Hi Katie! I’ve been learning from your blog for years. I smiled and even laughed out loud when I read the especially snarky bits because it’s just so real. I feel like you are a friend who is having a rant and I’m honoured that you chose me to be a listener to your frustrations. 🙂

      6. Mary Avatar

        No need to offer any apologies. If readers are offended, that’s their problem. You wrote an amazing article! I laughed, I learned, I loved it!! I have some changes to make with my son (as does my husband) after reading your article. I appreciate your candor and will share this wonderful piece of parenting advice with my family and friends. Katie, your website has changed my life and health, and that of my family. I’m so very thankful about 4 years ago my friend said “check out this wellnessmama website”…and I did…and I changed every household cleaning product, every personal care product and everything I put in my grocery cart. I don’t know you, but what you do amazes me. Thank you for sharing your many gifts!

      7. Karen S. Avatar
        Karen S.

        So true life isn’t always unicorns and rainbows but your nasty tone in the article is going to turn a lot of people off from being willing to hear what you’re saying. Also I find it ironic that you’re telling people that if their children grow up to be fat it’s the parents fault when you yourself appear to be somewhat fat.

        1. Cairo Avatar

          Ok that was uncalled for. No matter what someone eats, there’s bound to be differences in body types. And her tone may have been snarky, but it wasn’t nasty. Please calm down.

        2. LaraS Avatar

          She has a condition which affects her hormonal balance and is one of the few people I know who is actually doing something about it (among the cartloads of people I know who have the same condition and sit on their behinds all day content with stuffing themselves with pills and changing nothing).
          She manages a household with six children whom she homeschools and for whom she cares for herself (as well as having a business, a garden, and who knows what else), so if her outward appearance doesn’t appeal to you, I’m dreadfully sorry, but I think we can agree she is healthy and full of energy regardless. Which we can’t say for the diabetic and obese or overweight children that make ONE THIRD of American children, which, sorry, but as someone from that remote place called “the rest of the world”, I think is a signal there is something seriously wrong with your society as a whole. And it takes bravery to speak out about it, because so many people dislike naked truths.
          So woooooo!, Katie, go for it!!

        3. Hannah Avatar

          Indeed it’s more about gratitide and parenting. At our table… There’s alot of “Wadda ya say” … and now our young ones say THANKYOU to the person that serves them without being told.

          But this is the way I see it..

          Health is important — but a part of being “healthy” is also enjoying your food and gatherings with family. It’s how you bond and create memories! We should look forward to eating.

          – Also wether a child is picky or not, is simply not going to have a taste for most green. spinach, broccoli, avocados, etc.

          This is why I make smoothies with almond butter, a dab of chocolate syrup, and sneak in spinach.

          This is why I make broccoli and cabbage with left over bacon grease and or butter. More smiles
          than complaints and that’s all we parents hope for.

      8. Maranda Avatar

        When you are passionate, it resonates. These are the comments that most impress upon my heart…

        Love all your recipes, thoughts, and thank you for your time and research. It’s most helpful.

    2. Robin Avatar

      I agree – I usually appreciate the tact and respectful candor of this site when discussing controversial topics like this. But this was a bit more judgemental than usual. I wonder if helpful tips would be better – I’m sure all “these” parents aren’t spineless. Life is hard and sometimes we need truth with gentle advice instead of judgment.

      1. Mary Avatar

        Robin, the fact that you think this subject is “controversial” disturbs me.

        I found the article both respectful and unvarnished. Katie is shining a light on a critical topic. I found it refreshingly honest. Unfortunately, “gentle tips” don’t work for those parents who are the worst offenders – they want to stay in a state of oblivion, likely because, as you point out, life is hard. I am friends with many of these parents. But life being hard is no justification for sacrificing a child’s health. Someone needs to speak up for these poor children, and I am glad Katie is brave enough to do so. We wouldn’t provide “gentle tips” on why not to give your child a cigarette each day so why would be do so when the stakes are just as high with regular consumption of junk “food” in childhood?

        1. Bizzie Avatar

          Thank you, Mary, well said! And sometimes we need tough love, Robin. If I had 18 kids come over for dinner and none of them ate what I served, I’d be pretty pissed too.

    3. Tina Avatar

      I agree about the tone of the article, I get the point but it seemed a bit aggressive

    4. Adrienne Avatar
      Adrienne

      Sometimes parents need a wake-up call. Life isn’t always warm and fuzzy and the truth can be hard to swallow. She spoke the truth in this article and she wouldn’t have done it if she didn’t care. I have so many friends who need to read this article because truly, what we feed our children and the habits we allow them to form are life vs. death.

  13. Lea Avatar

    Yaay Katie! May this be taken to heart! I was a very picky kid that was NOT catered to. I was still very picky for many years into adulthood but I made myself eat things I didn’t like anyway. Now I am on a very restrictive diet due to Hashimotos, candida and food allergies. And it’s just not a big deal that I can only eat about 20% of the foods in the universe and I don’t *like* about 50% of the things I can eat. I am so grateful my mom and caregivers insisted on being mature enough to make wise decisions so I could be empowered to do it on my own when I became mature!

  14. Raquel Bryant Avatar
    Raquel Bryant

    This was one of the best articles I’ve read in a long time!

      1. Rukiyat G Avatar
        Rukiyat G

        Indeed!! I love this “soapbox moment” Wellness Mama! Great points and excellent blog. Thank you!

  15. Mary Avatar

    Completely agree. I am guilty of much of what you mentioned. I never had a choice of what I ate. I ate what was prepared for the family. Many parents, myself included have given too much control to their kids. $600. cell phones!
    Way too indulgent. I am slowly changing, more boundaries, less accommodations

  16. Jane Avatar

    our table rule: Come to the meal thankful or walk away hungry. Thankful that dad has a job, mom has skills to cook, farmers know how to grow healthy foods. thankful to friends or family for inviting us over. Sometimes our children would get sent away from the table to adjust their attitude. They would be instructed privately on gratefulness. Games where played to introduce new foods, stories of far away places regarding food origin were told. meals were messy and loud, but all were grateful.
    today I have two lovely, healthy, grateful, helpful teenagers, whom I honestly enjoy. We can take them anywhere and be assured that they will be polite, grateful and even adventurous in what they eat. Be brave parents, stay strong. 🙂

    1. Cindy Avatar

      Xlnt article, Wellness Mama. A little history….. Our mother believed in serving balanced meals and always prepared healthy food, quite unlike our southern relatives who believed that our family ate “rabbit food.” We usually salad and vegetables with midday and evening meals. Needless to say, most of our cousins are obese and diabetic – yet we are not. I went on a hunger strike at about age 3 or 4. As a result, our parents agreed that if we had tasted something and did not like it, it was OK to say so. In my case, the disliked food was cold fried eggs and cold oatmeal (being the youngest, I awoke and had breakfast later than the rest of my family, who arose at the crack of dawn and had breakfast earlier). Quite unsurprisingly, now that I think about it, just about everything I tasted, I liked. The exceptions are sauerkraut, raspberries, rhubarb, and, one time avocados though I absolutely love avocados today. I have our mother to thank for a lifetime of healthier food choices. I did become a vegetarian and do not eat meat or meat byproducts, and that has been entirely my own decision although our parents did respect it. Thanks. Great article!

    2. Barbara Avatar
      Barbara

      What a wonderful story, thanks for sharing. My son would eat the table if I let him, no problems with food.

    3. Denise Avatar

      I love your table rule: “Come to the table thankful and hungry.”
      Amen! I’m using that rule for sure.

    4. Amy Avatar

      Oh Jane I love this! I wanted to leave a comment- but you took the words right out of my mouth! To me the real issue is gratefulness and attitude. Of course kids can’t be expected to like every food put in front of them, but I do expect that they try it, and are grateful / appreciative of the work that went into the meal.

  17. Betty Avatar

    We had one major food fight with our oldest child when she was 7yo. She was newly adopted and trying to establish her boundaries, so she refused to eat what was served (chicken & mixed veg’s). After an hour of just sitting at the table, she finally fell asleep on the table. We put her to bed. The next morning, I fixed hot pancakes for her brother, and pulled her uneaten dish out of the refrigerator, slapped some cheese on the veg’s, & served it to her again. She finally caved in and ate 4 bites of it. Then I allowed her to have pancakes. She learned that she either eats what I serve or she goes to bed hungry. She is now 17 and we have NEVER had any other food battles since that time. Her younger brother & sister also learned and never learned “pickiness” as a result. I decided I’d rather fight one big battle one time than to fight lots of battles for the rest of life.

  18. Nancy Avatar

    I agree 100% In my house growing up me & my 3 sisters ate what was cooked or we went hungry!That is how I have/am raising my kids. my daughter is now 19 & thanx me for making her eat certain things. My son who is 11 isn’t happy about the rule but its been that way his whole life. If he truly doesn’t like something I wont make him eatit again, at least not for awhile. Taste change so we try again in about 4-6 months. Sometimes he likes it & other times it’s still a no go.

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