Now that I am a parent I can watch for these and other tactics.( I have seen Jessica spread out the content on her plate to make it look like she has eaten most of what she originally had. I laugh inside at the attempt and then think "c'mon Jess, you can come up with something better than that. Try again")
But more often than not, mealtime can be quite demanding on my patience. I feel like a broken record repeating the same phrases over and over. This redundancy makes me want to run full speed at a brick wall.... (did you get the visual?)
So after struggling with the meal/kid scenario for several years, I think that I have come up with a couple of solutions that I thought I would share with ya'll.
#1: If they don't eat what I have made for dinner, that is fine, they don't have to eat it......they just get to go to bed hungry.......oh and they get to eat their dinner for breakfast!!! After Cora went without dinner, breakfast, and lunch, she got hungry enough to eat the night before's dinner for a snack. I know it sounds cruel and pretty extreme but it works. All I have to do is mention having their dinner for breakfast and they comply.
#2This approach I thought of recently and it works well too. We have a 3-4 "corse" meal.
I will serve only the vegetables(their least favorite for the menu) as the "1st corse" and they have to eat a reasonable amount before they get the "2nd corse" which is their next least favorite. I do this until they obtain the coveted roll or meat or whatever it is as the last corse. The theory behind this one is that they will get the most nutritious food first and therefor by the time they get to the least nutritious they are full or nearly there. I am sure that there are many flaws and long term effects that my children will one day blame all their problems on, but for now this is what works for me and thats what I am going to do for as long as I need to.
If you have any input or constructive criticism, please feel free to share them with me.
Happy eating!!
-Carol
4 comments:
I'm impressed with your will power. I've given up on the food battle for the time being; we have a "try one bite rule" and sometimes even that seems like a struggle.
Way to go!xoxo GrR
I remember once running away from the meat loaf on the Sunday dinner table, durring prayer. Dad found me hiding under the piano bench. I love you,
Just don't make meat loaf like the kind we had to eat.
- Julie
Just Sunday night Hallie and Audrey would not finish their dinner. I reminded them repeatedly they got not more food the rest of the night. Including dessert. Again and again. Well, as I was making brownies Hallie looks into the empty bowl with brownie batter on the sides and says, "Is that food." To which I quickly reply. No not really. I then I saw EXACLTY what she was doing. Yes, It's food!!!!! Michelle and I were trying really hard not to die laughing. Thought you would appreciate the story.
P.S. Friends invited us for ice cream just as their food had been dumped in the trash. Talk about sadness and tears, BUT MAYBE they learned their lesson......
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