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.

Sources

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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

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

  1. Elaine Avatar

    I appreciate what you had to say and felt pretty much as you did until I had my second child. 8 pound baby and 16 pound 1 year old. Didn’t reach the charts till after she was 2. I just kept offering her a variety of foods. She learned to eat almost whatever was served. We did realize she has SI Dysfunction . Had her tested when she was 5. She would not open her mouth as a baby until she smelled the food. She was a horrible nurser. I realize later she didn’t like the taste a lot of the time. As a 25 year old she still struggles to eat. but socially she can fit in. My pediatrician was great. Because I was concerned ( he was too) and made much of my own baby food and no sugar till they were older. I just kept offering her a variety. I had to ignore outsiders and people who gave in wanted advice. I did what I felt was right for my child. AND IT WAS HARD. I WAS ALONE. So there is always an exception. We all just do our best.

  2. Danchy Avatar

    I think the moderation is the key here, like everywhere else. There were certain types of food I really hated as a kid, and hate still. I certainly have received some “tough love” from my mum, but no amount of it would force me to eat some things. I remember when she tried to force me to eat a piece of bread, butter and honey for dinner in exchange for watching my favorite tv show – needless to say, I went to bed hungry and without watching it. Even know, as adult, if someone should force me to eat cheese, butter or any other milk product, I can honestly say, I would rather starve and die. That is how much I hate them! Now, I have a son who is not like most of other kids. He eats cooked veggies, and only pappers and carrots fresh. No salads or anything. But he adores brocoli, zucchini…put anything green on his plate and he will eat it, if it is cooked. But give him tomato sausce, and he won’t touch it. I am certainly not going to force him to eat tomates if he doesn’t want to. And I appreciate my mum has not attempted anything similar with me and milk products ever since.

  3. Sarah Avatar

    Who kidnapped Katie? I used to really love wellness mama but this is not the Katie I remember. All I see here is put downs rather than the helpful advice usually offered.

  4. Shusha Avatar

    Katie, thank you so much for this post! You wouldn’t believe how pleasant it is t read something so adequate and so similar to my own thoughts.. I’m originally from Russia and in my lifetime i’ve only met 3 picky eaters! Then i moved to the UK and out of all the people i know only 4(!) ARE NOT PICKY! That’s shoking to witness, and absolutely annoying to come across and it’s a nightmare to serve any food to such people (i simply don’t do it anymore as it’s a waste of both my effort and good food).. Thank you again, it’s warming to find people with the same “old-fashioned” tough love ideas and gives some hope 🙂

  5. Polly Avatar

    I think this is every mama’s dream. Would it be possible to share some tips as to how you managed to get your kids to love good food? So far, all I read is ‘do this not that’. I’m expecting in a few months and I would like my kid to grow up choosing nutrition.

  6. Stacie Avatar

    Nothing sets me off like cooking a meal and a child sitting there wrinkling up their nose and spouting off “I’m not eating that!” I just want to take the plate and dump it in the trash. We weren’t given a choice growing up. If there was a particular food I didn’t like (Ex. chicken livers) I simply didn’t eat it. I just ate everything else on the plate. No big deal, no fuss, no drama. I do sometimes give my daughter a choice between two things if I’m having trouble deciding or just not that hungry. I’ll say “Do you want bacon or pancakes for breakfast?” I’m thankful for a husband who eats whatever I plunk down in front of him. His mama raised him right. ?

  7. Kate Avatar

    First off pickiness is not the cause of obesity. Look at all the boomers who are fat and were part of the clean plate club.

    Secondly a picky child being fed food they are willing to eat is not going to make them “soft”. I’m not even sure in what way you are referring they will be “soft”.

    Third- people being picky about their food, whether they are a child or an adult does not make them an “inconsiderate jerk” as you so lovingly described your son if you didn’t put an end to his pickiness. It’s one thing to teach a child to politely decline food (that’s a good thing), but to insist children eat food to appease others is not fostering a healthy mindset on food. And the idea of teaching them to do something to app are others instead of kindly standing up for their boundaries and preferences is setting them up for the herd mentality in many areas of life, not just food.

    Finally, this angry, rant spiked, not evidence based rhetoric doesn’t inspire change.

  8. Ashley Avatar

    I had an abusive alcoholic step father with this same “you’re not going to be a picky little jerk” mentality. I still remember spitting food into my napkin so I could just get up from the table. So glad my mom divorced him after he almost killed her. The tone of this article is awful and what’s worse are the comments where others who love this article insult people taking issue with it (the article). I was a VERY picky eater as a child but I’m not an inconsiderate jerk adult. I have a very diverse palate and love hundreds of foods the child me would’ve never touched. Childhood pickiness is not indicative that said child will grow up to be fat, picky, or rude. Those are wildly broad assumptions to make based on someone being a picky eater as a child. I sincerely hope your future articles don’t take this tone as it certainly isn’t inspiring and doesn’t leave me wanting to come back for more Wellness mama.

  9. Sara Avatar

    Totally agree… We have picky eaters and we are trying hard to stop it! I do however disagree with free food is good food. I always have food with me, because a lot of places we go the food that is served is cheap junk full of food dyes and additives. Yes, my kids eat some bad things but I try my best to not let them have certain things, no matter where they are.

  10. Sherina Avatar
    Sherina

    I enjoyed this so much. I think i have done the same mistake with our first as he is really only interested in pizza, Green beans, yogurt, bananas, chicken nuggets, and the like. He would eat all kinds of foods like avocado, blueberries, soups, stews, and more and then it’s like a switch went off and he doesn’t want those things anymore. It’s frustrating as i so make healthy foods and ends up getting turned down. Then he’ll just resort to nursing an hour or so later and then i try again at the next meal time. Any suggestions on how to change this? You said it took you a couple of months with your first to change the way he ate. Can you share some things you did? I feel bad adding no to nursing sometimes even though I’m sure it’s part of him holding off, and I’m not sure how to do the whole well you didn’t want to eat so you go hungry now…do they get to eat something in the next hours or do you literally not let them eat anything until morning or dinner? Thank you!

  11. Gwen Avatar

    I’m in the exact same position- except with a girl not a boy. Apparently, she used to eat anything and has been allowed to phase out every fruit and vegetable until now she eats a horrendously unhealthy diet of chocolate, sweets and toast. Unfortunately, we only get to have her one night in fourteen, and her Dad understandably does not want to associate the little time she spends with us with hunger. I used to go out of my way to make the very few meals that she will eat, but I’m bored of them now, so I cook a balanced, healthy dinner, she refuses to eats it, she gets a plain ham sandwich.

    Her Mum has a terrible relationship with food herself and consumes various diet shakes only to binge on junk later. She pretty much shuts Dad out of any parenting decisions and the occasions he’s tried to discuss changing things she just stops him seeing his daughter til he backs down. At home, she gets to choose everything, and if there is a disagreement about where she spends a holiday- i.e. with Mum or Dad, she gets to choose. I’m always amazed when we go out shopping and she’ll just walk up to me with something- usually designer!- and say “I want this,” because at home, that’s how it works.

    So, food is basically part of a very big power game, where a 7 year old has come to believe she is the centre of the whole world and needs special treatment, and has learned to push the boundaries further and further, and is in this unenviable position of having the pressure to make choices way beyond the capabilities of such a small child.

    It’s such a shame, because she’s a funny, loud, bright kid, being made to take on the responsibility of making parenting choices that her Mum should be brave enough to make.

  12. Carly Avatar

    Katie,
    I was wondering if you could share a little more about your experience with transitioning your first son to a healthy diet. I’m relatively new to the wellness mama family and am a recovering junk-food-aholic. I have a very strong willed 2 year old who has been exposed to lots of junk food since his conception. We transitioned over to a healthy real food diet several weeks ago but my son is still refusing to eat at almost every meal. At most he will eat just a few bites of food per day dispite the variety I’ve been trying to give him. I’ve followed all of your rules about picky eating but it’s just not working. He would rather go to bed or accept any other form of punishment than sit down to a healthy meal. I haven’t cracked yet but I can feel myself getting close. He’s been dropping weight and he was relatively thin to begin with. I’m just so frustrated and feel like the most awful mother. Any advice would be much appreciated. I don’t want to go back to our old lifestyle but my son starving himself isn’t beneficial either. Please help!

  13. Autumn Avatar

    This is the best thing I’ve ever read! I agree with this 100%. I’m not a parent but I’ve worked with kids for 8+ years and it drives me crazy the crap that parents give their childen to eat because they’re “picky eaters”. Who’s in charge here, really?

  14. Jessie Avatar

    Hey,

    Katie, this post is so so good. I think every mom can relate to this and learn from this. You nearly reminded me of my childhood days. I don’t even remember my mom feeding me. The outcome is truly amazing as I am not at all a picky eater. In fact, I am very much comfortable with whatever I cook and eat.

    Thanks for reminding us that we ain’t doing doing good with our little one’s.

  15. Natalie Avatar

    I think that the idea that kids that are picky believe themselves to be “special snowflakes that deserve special privileges” is pretty aggressive. Some kids (mine) do have a pretty severe aversion to some textures. And some people are picky. I don’t believe in offering children alternate meals or allowing them to turn their noses up at everything. I have friends whose children have horrific diets and it is very concerning. However, I don’t believe the dinner table should be an autocracy. I do believe this can backfire. And I don’t believe that having your own opinions and dislikes and having a voice should earn a child the title (that has a clearly derogatory tone in this post) as “a special snowflake”. At our table kids are expected to try what is served and eat a balanced meal. And I, as a parent, have to use my skills of discernment to know when my child is just being picky for the sake of being picky and when they are really grossed out by something. AND they are allowed to have an opinion even if I don’t like it.

  16. Ana Avatar

    Totally agree! It’s crazy to see kids that won’t eat what’s put in front of them. In my house, there is no such things as “I don’t like.” You eat what your given.

  17. Nina Avatar

    I agree completely and thank you for the bit of tough love! No wonder we have special kids menus everywhere, there’s basically five choices and they’re the only things kids eat these days. I hate them.

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