T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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314.1 | Try mixing foods - favorites and non | LEZAH::MINER | | Thu Sep 06 1990 10:18 | 27 |
| I don't know if this is any consolation, but my 2nd child, Tommy,
is 23 months old and only weighs 23 lbs. He's in the 75% percentile
height and only the 10% weight. The pediatrician says that I shouldn't
worry because he isn't anemic, he's eating, just not in the quantities
that I would like. Also his father would probably register in the
same percentiles, 75% height, 10-15% weight, so there is some genetics
working here too.
May Alexander is just at a stage where he'd rather be doing than
eating. If you find that he will eat some things, give him those as
long as they are healthy. I find that Tommy goes through stages of
loving certain foods and then hating them a week later, only to return
to them a month later. Keep trying new and old foods. Put his
favorites in something that he doesn't necessarily like, like Pears
on top of yoghurt or on hot cereal. He might eat some if he tastes
the pears in there.
As long as the doctor considers him to be in adequate health for his
age, try not to worry.
p.s. We found that Tommy would reject food that we gave him but if
he sat on our lap while we ate the same food off our own plate, he
would eat all of ours! Strange, but true.
Good luck,
Dorothy
|
314.2 | Keep trying... | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Thu Sep 06 1990 10:24 | 38 |
| Have you discussed this with your pediatrician? What does he have to
say about it?
My youngest is a year old, and is getting into the only wanting to eat
whatever he can feed himself syndrome. Refusing my feeding him, yet
not really being able to feed himself the foods I would like him to
eat, which require a spoon or fork. What I try to do is give him some
finger foods, bananas let's say, and sit beside him with a bowl of
cereal and milk and pop a spoonful of cereal into his mouth whenever I
can (rather whenever he'll let me!).
Another thing you might try is spearing a piece of food onto a fork,
then handing the fork to him to put into his mouth. I am starting to
do this with raviolis, which all my kids LOVE, are quite healthy, but
are incredibly MESSY! :-)
Have you continued trying to introduce new foods? One thing I learned
was, even tho a child may refuse a food one day, on another day they
may decide they love it. And vice versa.
Some of the things Josh likes are: peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
hot dogs, spagetti with meat sauce, bananas, canned fruit, grapes,
Cinnamon Life cereal that's reached the soggy stage and is thus
chewable for him, Cheerios also soggy, Fig Newtons, Ritz crackers with
peanut butter in the middle, tomatoes, corn, peas, pizza!, bread and
butter, raisin english muffins, sometimes yogurt, and any kind of
pasta, plain or with tomato sauce.
Another thing, does your son ever eat with other children? It never
ceases to amaze me how other kids can influence the eating habits of
kids. Peer pressure starts early! Does he see other kids eating
things you might want him to try? Sometimes it works wonders if you
can put him with other kids his age or even a little older.
But try to take heart. A work mate of mine has a daughter who is now
five, who he swore absolutely grew up on nothing more than peanut
butter on bread, and water. Refused EVERYTHING else!
|
314.3 | hints | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Thu Sep 06 1990 10:53 | 29 |
| My Josh (14.5 months) has also become quite selective in his eating.
Here's some things that have helped:
Josh will eat more if he is allowed to sit on the kitchen floor
rather than in his high chair.
He likes his vegetables frozen (got this hint from another noter)
and straight from the package.
Will eat chicken if he is allowed to eat it from the bone but not
cut up. (We watch him closely for bones)
Loves breakfast more than any other meal so we pack on the calories
then. (oatmeal, micro sausage, peanut butter pancakes, a cup of
cheerios mixed with raisins--refuses any milk with his cereal)
Offer nutricious snacks throughout the day. His daycare thinks
he eats very well, so apparently other kids do influence him to
eat.
Josh loves cold pizza anytime.
Cheese sticks
Fish sticks
Basically, if i make the meal a power struggle Joshua will not eat,
if I relax and just accept whatever Josh will eat things go much
better.
Remember, at this age the growth has slowed dramatically, so it
makes sense that the appetite also slows.
Relax, the kid may slim down but he isn't going to become anorexic
at this age.
pam
|
314.4 | sounds pretty "normal" | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:03 | 20 |
| re: .1 and .3
It comes as some consolation that mine is not the only boy that isn't
too happy about eating dinner in his highchair. In fact, he eats
best when we try to shovel it in while he's in motion. He also
tends to linger in the chair a bit longer when we eat outdoors, but
those days are numbered.
I keep trying to make him sit in the chair through the meal but it
gets kinda ugly. I tend to let him down or hold him but am worried
that he is getting spoiled. What do you think?
At just about a year, Jason is getting very selective about what
he'll eat and letting me know when he doesn't want something (splat!).
He'll eat something everyday for days and then up and spit it out
the next day. So, to the basenoter, it sounds like your son is
pretty "normal"....and remember that old saying "this too shall
pass".
cj/
|
314.5 | | JURAN::QAR_TEMP | | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:53 | 13 |
| M son Joey 13 1/2 mo. is the same way. Today as a matter of fact I
asked my sitter if he eat's for her because he refuses to eat dinner.
This has gone on for a couple of weeks now a few bites here and there
and thats it. He will fuss till I take him out of his highchair. Joey
weighs 19 lbs. very short legged. not sure inches (baby book in diaper
bag). I told my pediatrician whats been happening and she said at
least he's not losing weight, if they start to lose weight it's a whole
differant story. Could be the teeth, or just a stage they go through.
Hope this helps. If you hear of anything please let me know!!
-Concerned Mom
|
314.6 | If he's healthy why worry? | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:58 | 18 |
| I had a breatharian child also. Perfectly healthy, and eats what she
needs for her growth pattern which has always been slow. (10th
percentile until this year) Instead of focusing on her growth or lack
there of I focused on the positives: She was easy to carry until this
year when at 4 1/2 she topped 38 lbs. Honestly they will discover food
when they are ready. My Dr. also has a fireball who doesn't gain wait
at expected norms, so she doesn't worry much either, now. Until Allie
was born, she used to fuss over Carrie's lack of growth, but now dr.
Laura has had one of her own.
One thing to remember, we aren't raising Herfords or prize pigs. These
are children who grow and learn at their own rate. As long as they are
healthy and happy and progressing, dont worry.
On another note Lolita my oldest was the same way. She is now 16, 5'6"
and 118 lbs. This from another slow growth baby.
Meg
|
314.7 | normal | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:10 | 57 |
| Kat, who's now a healthy active intelligent attractive 16, lived
for about a year and a half (from about 16 months to about 3
years) on a diet that consisted of:
A small handful of dry Cheerios and a small glass of milk for
breakfast
2 tablespoons of cottage cheese and a small glass of Hawaiian
punch for lunch (occasionally a canned peach half)
A few bites of steamed carrots, a tablespoon of mashed potatoes,
and one or two Gerber meat sticks for dinner, with milk
or Hawaiian punch.
Ice cream or M&Ms candies whenever she could talk us into it.
Towards the end of this phase, she added ravioli and cheddar
cheese to her repertoire.
She was so skinny she didn't even make it up to the bottom of the
doctor's percentile charts. But except for being thin and having
no appetite, she was perfectly healthy, so I just fed her what she
wanted and tried not to worry. I figured that if I pressured her
to eat, I was teaching her to disregard her own body's signals
about when she was hungry or full, and in the long run that would
cause more problems than being skinny would.
Is this the same Alexander who was just in the hospital for
surgery? That could easily affect his appetite and his eating
patterns. But it's a perfectly normal stage; it sounds like your
wife needs more comfort and attention than your son does.
I notice that most of the foods he likes are pretty nutritious
things. It would probably be best for his overall health to up
his intake of complex carbohydrates and perhaps fats without
introducing too many empty calories. Have you tried some
nutrient-dense, high-energy foods like nuts? Peanut butter is
often popular with kids, or you could try a cereal with almonds in
it, or mixing a handful of chopped walnuts in with his raisins.
Cheese on whole-wheat crackers is another snack some kids like a
lot. Some kids won't eat cereal plain, but they will eat it if
you mix fruit -- banana slices, raisins, berries -- into it. Or
try toast or waffles or French toast with sweetened fruit instead
of, or in addition to, syrup.
Those are just some ideas that come to mind. Oh, and some kids
have small stomachs and can't eat a very large meal; they need
extra snacks during the day. Make sure they're nutritious snacks.
We have a rule that if you want to eat something, you eat it
sitting at a chair in the kitchen. Beverages and popcorn are
exceptions, and the deck is an allowable substitute for the
kitchen. This is true for adults as well as for kids of whatever
age. We do this mostly to keep the mess confined to one area with
an easily cleaned floor. We don't make a scene about it -- if one
of the kids wants to play more than they want to eat, that's fine,
they can get down. But they can't come back to the table for more
food until after everyone else has finished eating.
--bonnie
|
314.8 | I had the same problem... | MLCSSE::LANDRY | just passen' by...and goin' nowhere | Thu Sep 06 1990 14:17 | 28 |
|
My oldest daughter (age 10) has never been much of an eater. She
wouldn't breastfeed and her bottle feeding wasn't much to brag about
either. She ate what she wanted to and when. (Although I did try
to keep her to a schedule with in-between snacks.)
She still isn't much of an eater.
Now, why am I not worried? Because when I was little I about a
tablespoon and a half of food every day. My parents went bonkers
trying to get me to eat. They tried everything from begging, to
bribing to punishment - EVERYTHING. Once I had to stay at the table
until I finished my dinner. I stayed there until 10:00 (I was about
8 and it was a school night!!!) and fell asleep at the table.
Eventually I went to bed without having to finish the dinner. Anyway,
I'm very healthy for the most part. I never had trouble keeping
up with my friends. Always had plenty of energy. I was just real
small.
So, I'm not going to push Juli if she doesn't want to eat. Of course,
if she doesn't eat meals, she doesn't get goodies. I'll let her
have carrot sticks and stuff like that between "meals".
Don't worry. Just make sure that your little one is healthy and
nothing else is the problem.
jean
|
314.9 | Switch to a booster seat?? | ICS::NELSONK | | Fri Sep 07 1990 17:25 | 12 |
| For those noters whose kids don't like the high chair any more.
Have you tried switching them to a booster seat? We did this
with James when he was about 20 months, and it improved his
mealtime behavior dramatically.
Try not to fuss. If your kid will drink milk, flavor it with
Ovaltine once in a while for a treat. Ovaltine is very nutritious,
and most kids enjoy it.
This morning, James ate graham crackers, raisins, juice and
Ovaltine for breakfast. Most mornings, all his wants is juice
and "my vi-min-min."
|
314.10 | FWIW | THEBUS::JENSEN | | Tue Sep 11 1990 12:37 | 23 |
|
Martin:
Our daughter is close is age and size to your son. She's 20# at 1 year
and we've been struggling with her over her "lack of interest" in food
UNTIL she started at the sitter's a few weeks ago ... and then we
discovered that:
She'll eat IF she has her own spoon in the other hand (doing nothing
but waving the air!)
She prefers finger foods:
. diced boiled hotdog (yuck!)
. toast with a thin film of pnut butter or jelly
. grilled cheese sandwich
. boiled macaroni's, egg noodles, spagetti (etc.....) - no sauce!
. CHEESE cubes!! and crackers (oyster, ritz, butter, saltines ...)
. scrambled eggs (which she eats with her fingers!)
. diced cheeseburger (not really her favorite, though)
. Trix cereal, raisin bran, rice/wheat Chex (overdosed on
Cheerios - and now doesn't like them) ... DRY! ... with
a diced REAL banana
. raisins, Pepperidge Farm goldfish and flutters, pretzel sticks,
slice of fruit (apple, pear ...), popcorn!,
|
314.11 | Snap! I've got a fussy 15 month old too | MAJORS::RUMBELOW | Three twoderful five words | Wed Sep 12 1990 08:24 | 41 |
| I can really sympathise with this. My 15 month old (Alison) weighs in
at 19.5 lb, and has given me a lot of heartache over her feeding habits
since the day she was born! I never got her to breastfeed, she was
really slow taking to solids, even slower taking to real food and now
has a small appetite and is a fussy eater. Oh how I envy people whose
children are like baby birds - keeping their mouths open to gulp down
spoonfulls of whatever's offered to them. Fortunately Alison has a
lot of redeeming features which make up for her erratic eating habits!
I cope by having absolute faith that Alison is the only person who knows
how much and what Alison wants to eat. If she refuses food I might
feel like saying "You ungrateful child, how could you refuse this meal
which your mummy has lovingly prepared" but instead I take a deep
breath and say "OK honey, if you really don't want it, you don't have
to eat it, after all, you know best how hungry you are". That calms me
down and stops me getting too upset. If she refuses a new food, I do
try re-introducing it a few days later - babies do often spit out
anything that's different, but when it stops being different, they may
find they like it. Also I don't try to introduce a new food as a
complete meal, but as a little taste during a meal that I know she
likes. I think it's up to me to carry on offering her nutritious meals,
but she does have the right to refuse them!
Also I have found that Alison has got a lot better about eating if we
have our meals at the same time. She tries to copy us, and has got
a lot better about using a spoon herself. I think it makes mealtimes
more relaxed - it takes the pressure off her because I am not just
concentrating on feeding her, but on feeding myself as well. She seems
to eat better without so much attention directed on her.
I hate to given advice because every child is different, and I can only
say what works for me and my child, but I would say forget about
calories and try to relax and trust Alexander to know how much, or how
little he wants to eat. If he is active and happy, then he must be
getting enough to eat.
Hope this has been some help
- Janet
|
314.12 | the "attention" factor makes the dif. | CLOSET::FONTAINE | | Wed Sep 12 1990 13:21 | 23 |
|
Janet hit the nail on the head with Andrew when she said her daughter
did much better at eating when there wasn't alot of attention on her.
Geez Janet, where were you about two months ago? I could have used
that suggestion BIG TIME. We just figured out that if there's a
"spot light" on Andrew (13 mos) when he's eating he's more inclined to
spit food out and act silly. Now we just treat him like he's one of many
and he's more inclined to eat the right way. And when he's getting
tired of the food, I give him the spoon and he feels himself with it.
He's really good at it too, but sometimes I have to assisted in getting
the food on the spoon. That trick is good for a few extra bites that
he wouldn't have normally eaten.
I've finally learned that he'll eat what he eats and I've also learned
that if he doesn't eat he'll get no jello for dessert.
Hopefully he'll soon make the connection that eat food = eat jello.
He's a jello fanatic. I used to give him jello even if he didn't eat
his dinner just to get something into him, but I guess that kind of
defeats the purpose and he knew that no matter what he'd get jello, no
more though.
Nancy
|
314.13 | Switch locations? | BRAT::SCHUBERT | | Wed Sep 12 1990 14:44 | 14 |
| My son went thru these stages also. What I used to do is get a
plateful of fruit, 'specially watermellon (his favorite), some
raisens, crackers and cheese, put on the TV to one of his
favorite cartoons or shows and tell him NOT TO TOUCH THAT PLATE.
Well, that would start it rolling, I'd leave the room to wash the
dishes or some domestic chore and come back into the room, and he
would be standing their giggling wildly with a mouth full of something.
Before you know it, he would just clean the entire plate off. He just
didn't like to eat at the suppertable! So we just switched locations
and he did just fine.
Alex is now 40 pounds, 39 inches at 3.5 years old.
|
314.14 | How come YOU can and I can't MOM?? | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Sep 17 1990 16:28 | 23 |
| AJ is a kid who never got out of the 20th percentile until last year. We
"thought" we had this problem with AJ, what we discovered was that
he was eating so much *it was good stuff* at daycare that he just
wasn't hungry at supper time. My provider will give her charges
goodthings like yogurt, graham crackers, cheese and whole grain
crackers. Beverages are always a pure juice (jucy-juice) or low fat
milk, never soda no sugary things allowed. I figure if he's eating enough
during the day, why make dinner an unpleasant scene? But I do insist on
him staying at the table while you eat, even if he isn't! This is the
child who's been requesting cucumbers since he was old enough to say
the word, and his favorite restaurant is Abdow's for Soup and Salad!
A related question: a recent thing while visiting my inlaws is they
give him ovaltine in his milk "just because". He never fusses over
drinking plain milk, we don't use those things. Occationally at home
he will request chocolate milk, we tell him that's something special
just at grampa's house, but on occation he see me do either Instant
Breakfast or Slim-fast, simply because it's quick and fewer calories
than a pastry. So how do I explain to him that mom can have chocolate
milk and he can't?? HELP!!
Lyn
|
314.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Sep 18 1990 12:42 | 11 |
| Re: .14
> Beverages are always a pure juice (jucy-juice) or low fat
> milk, never soda no sugary things allowed.
Clearly you've never tasted Juicy-Juice, if you think it isn't sugary!
True, it has "no added sugar", but it is high in juices that have heavy
sugar contents. I've stopped buying it in favor of less sickeningly-sweet
juices.
Steve
|
314.16 | Interesting article | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Tue Sep 18 1990 16:26 | 45 |
| re .14 Chocolate milk
Taken from the Tufts University Diet & Nutrition Letter, Aug. 1990
CHOCOLATE MILK MAKES THE GRADE
One cup of milk contributes at least one-fourth the recommended dietary
allowance of calcium for schoolage children and adolescents, making
it one of the best sources of that bone-building mineral for growing
youngsters. but when a child doesn't particularly like the taste of
milk, getting him/her to drink it often becomes a frustrating struggle.
That's particularly true when the well-meaning parents prohibit their
little ones from drinking chocolate-flavored milk, believing it's
a decidedly unacceptable alternative to unflavored varieties.
But "chocolate-flavored" is not necessarily synonymous with "less than
healthful" when it comes to milk. It may, in fact, be a simple solution
to a child who otherwise avoids milk altogether. Consider the results
of a recent look at the school lunch consumption of sixth graders in
two New York city classrooms. Upon measuring the actual amounts of
food the students ate and drank at nine separate lunch periods, New
York University researchers found that when offered whole milk, 1%
fat milk, or 1% fat chocolate-flavored milk, the students always
drank more of the chocolate choice, thereby taking in more calcium.
What's more, compared to lunches washed down with whole milk, the
overall fat content of meals that included the chocolate-flavored milk
were more in line with the guideline now recommended for those over the
age of two to consume less than 30 percent of calories as fat. That
makes sense, given the fact that both whole and 1% fat chocolate
flavored milk contain the same number of calories (about 150 per cup)
whereas the chocolate-flavored version contains far less fat: 23
calories, as compared with the 72 in whole milk.
Granted, in the best of all possible worlds children going through the
lunch line or home refrigerator would reach for 1% fat milk or skim
milk - particularly if they are overweight - thereby avoiding not only
the fat of whole milk but also the extra calories added by the
chocolate flavoring (about 50 per cup, mostly in the form of sugar, in
the brands that come with the chocolate already mixed in). Still, for
the milk resistant youngster whose calcium consumption tends to be on
the low side, 1% fat chocolate-flavored milk may well be just what the
doctor ordered.
|
314.17 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originalty is only undetected plagiarism | Tue Sep 18 1990 17:23 | 15 |
| re .14 and .15
There are many unsweetened juices that are just as sweet as soda pop!
Now, ideally you want to give the kids more than just the sugar in
pop but, sometimes too much juice isn't too good for them either
(diahorreah etc) ...
Now, I don't want to get into the battle of the sugars again in another
note, but I tend to treat juice like most other sugary drinks. It
makes the 2-3 spoonsful of sugar in a glass of chocolate milk look
like a diet drik by comparison. (juices have 6-8 spoonsful of sucrose
equivalent sugar in them per cup)
Stuart
|
314.18 | Juice-aholic | MCIS2::WALTON | | Wed Sep 19 1990 11:11 | 12 |
| I had this conversation with my pedi a few weeks ago.
After discussing Robby's diet, he labeled him a "Juice-aholic"
This is actually not a joke. After he gets a drink of juice, he gets
enough of a sugar high (from the 'unsweetened' juices, no less...) to
carry him for an hour or two, full of energy, and he doesn't really
feel hungry. And when he askes for more juice, of course I gave it to
him. This cycle goes on, and he is pretty much not hungry for most of
the day. We are now in the process of completely cutting out juice, going
to just milk and water for one month. I am going to watch his appetite
very closely for the next month, and see if it improves.
|
314.19 | Weaning? | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Sep 19 1990 12:19 | 4 |
| Maybe a way to wean him from the juice is to gradually increase the
ratio of water in the cup.
|
314.20 | Dilution is GREAT idea!!! | NEURON::REEVES | | Wed Sep 19 1990 12:43 | 11 |
| re: .19
Since my 11 month old is diabetic, the doctor's and nutritionist
recommended diluting his juices too. I have found it to work out
wonderfully, not only is he getting less sugar (we use no sugar added)
in his diet, but he is getting the water that he really needs.
I usually mix 1 part juice to 3 parts water.
FWIW,
Malinda
|
314.21 | Another "Juiceaholic" | CAPNET::AGULE | | Wed Sep 19 1990 13:55 | 9 |
| The "Juiceaholic" in .17 sounds just like Katie. She has always been a
drinker, with a bad appetite for "food". It's been a real problem in
our house too. I talked to our pedi he said at her age they don't want
to take the time to sit down and eat, kids would rather drink quick be
filled up then GO. I have a question, when you add water to juices,
does the child also not get filled up as much, or does the water fill
them up too?
Karen
|
314.22 | | NEURON::REEVES | | Wed Sep 19 1990 15:27 | 9 |
| re: -1
In our case Shayne seems to be just as satisfied with diluted juice
as with any other fluid, however when the nutrionist told us he must
have a morning, afternoon and evening snack she suggested formula and
not juice, but I think that was because he needs more of a protein
snack than just a filler.
Malinda
|
314.23 | Add "bubbles" to juice | CURIE::DERAMO | | Fri Sep 21 1990 13:38 | 6 |
| We dilute our son's juice, too -- but at his request. Since mom and
dad drink a lot of seltzer, Nick just has to have some: he requests
"bubbles" in his juice. The mix is about 50/50. The juice is apple or
orange. The seltzer is unflavored, made at home.
|
314.24 | Juicy Juice is AWFUL! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Sep 21 1990 16:05 | 10 |
| I DID try juicy juice well before AJ was a glimmer! It was awful, I
swore I'd never ask a kid to drink it! I do only Apple and white grape
juice in out house, the kind of colors that have un-stainable colors if
spilled! I buy the juice by the case either at BJ's or at the Veryfine
factory.
Still looking for ideas on what to do about "mom's" "chocolate milk.
Lyn
|
314.25 | bad news on chocolate milk | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Sep 26 1990 12:40 | 16 |
| In re: .16
It is true that milk is the main ingrediant of chocolate milk, and that
milk comes with plenty of calcium. However, chocolate chemically
combines with the calcium in a way that makes it indigestible. Thus
most of the calcium in chocolate milk is not absorbed by the body.
Thus the whole is less than the sum of its parts, which the Tufts
article didn't take into account.
I came across this last night reading an interesting book called
"Kitchen Science" (which I judge to be quite reliable). It deals with
the physics, chemistry, and biochemistry of cooking and eating; not
just what you should and shouldn't do, but why. Fairly enjoyable, too;
not heavy going. Currently available in paperback.
- Bruce
|
314.26 | My note was misinterpreted | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:26 | 20 |
| I think somewhere in this discussion my whole point has been missed so
let's try to ask it again.
AJ gets chocolate milk only rarely, only as a treat at grampa's house.
I don't even own anything stonger than sugar free hot chocolate powder,
and that about a box a winter. He drinks plain (1%) milk quite
willingly, infact he'd consume over 2 of the tupperware sippy cups at a
meal if we let him.
My question is more of explaination of the apparent lack of equality.
Since I will do either an instant breakfast or Slim Fast which gives
the appearance that I'm drinking chocolate milk, which it isn't. He
seems more upset that I can drink chocolate milk but he can't, not that
he's refusing to drink milk without chocolate flavor. I've tried
telling him it's "special chocolate milk for mom", and even let him
have the last sip or two, but not sure that's the right approach.
Any suggestions?
Lyn
|
314.27 | | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:31 | 9 |
| Here's my suggestion, Lyn:
Drink your slim fast or instant breakfast when AJ isn't around
and avoid the conflict. Or, drink it from an opaque cup so as
not to draw attention to the fact that you're doing something that
he can't. Maybe I'll draw flames on this, but I don't believe
in "do as I say, not as I do".
carol
|
314.28 | | TCC::HEFFEL | If I were a whale, I'd beach myself! | Wed Sep 26 1990 15:55 | 8 |
| Another vote for forego it.
(We try not to have things around the house that we don't want Katie
to have. This actually has benefitted me as well. I'm sure the lack of
chips and cookies and so on in the house was a factor in my recently losing
40 pounds.)
Tracey
|
314.29 | Ovaltine??? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Sep 27 1990 09:55 | 11 |
| You might want to check out the label on Ovaltine and see if
that's something you would be willing to let AJ have. We used to
drink it when I was little, and I've been told it's heavily used
in Europe. I know it's got malt and some other supposed nutrition
boosters in it. There is a chocolate flavor, but the plain kind
has a sort of chocolatey taste without any chocolate in it.
Then he could have some of that when you have your "chocolate"
milk.
--bonnie
|
314.30 | Older but no better - Martha | WMOIS::RAINVILLE | The view from the edge. | Sat Nov 24 1990 19:29 | 28 |
| I have a similar problem, but with a much older child. My son is almost
nine years old and only weighs 58 lbs. He is of average height for his
age, but buying clothes for him is difficult. Even the slim sizes are
too big around the waist! David was a good eater as a baby, it was only when
he got to be about 2 or a little older that he became so selective. He
currently eats no vegetables, no poultry except Burger King chicken
tenders, and the only beef he eats is a cheeseburger or meatloaf.He doesn't
eat any potatoes, rice or beans. Basically, his diet consists of plain
pizza, cheeseburgers, grilled cheese, meatloaf and spaghetti (he prefers
spaghettio's to homemade). He doesn't even eat peanut butter anymore!
He has gone from eating everything to gradually eliminating almost
everything from his diet. He won't even eat at McDonald's anymore.
I worry because everything he really likes is high in cholesterol,
but when you have a child like David you tend to be grateful for
anything he will eat! His younger sister eats everything that is
healthy....her favorite meal is a salad bar!
One tip to Alexander's mom....when both my children no longer wanted
me to feed them, I would make them soup. The veggies in the soup I
would put on the tray of the high chair and while they were busy
feeding themselves that, I would slip in spoons of the broth.
This worked well in restaurants, too. In my daughter's case, she
was insisting on feeding herself long before she had teeth. I used to
make sandwiches of the baby food meats and cut them into very small
cubes. She could handle those and was so happy to be feeding herself
that she would gobble them up with no complaints. Don't worry about
the mess of self - feeding. A baby's independence is very precious
to him and worth the extra clean-up if it encourages better eating.
You can always do what we did... get a dog to handle the spills!!!
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