My super-picky son has been on this yogurt-only-for-dinner kick for god knows how long now. I was talking to our DCP about it, and she was telling me that he eats EVERYTHING the other kids eat! Our DCP provides lunch, but i was still packing up a lunch for him because i THOUGHT he wasn't eating "real" food! Boy was i wrong. He eats mac & cheese, pasta, meatballs, soup, waffles, pancakes, etc. But once he's home for dinner, and on weekends, nada...zilch...nothing. Yogurt yogurt yogurt.
What do i do? Everyone tells me that it's because of the other kids...maybe i should have cardboard cutouts of the kids eating in our house
But seriously, yogurt every single night? Do we put a real dinner in front of him and let him fuss and cry and go nuts and tell him that this is dinner, no choices? OR do we not make it a power-struggle and just give him both the yogurt and something else, and let him choose, which i know he'll choose the yogurt?
Re: LO eats better at daycare than at home!
You answered your own question. My bet is that he knows if he's at home and he fusses, he gets yummy yogurt for dinner. Also, that is NOT making it a power struggle. You are still leaving the choice of if/how much to eat up to him.
Bar tab = $156,000, Bus to Foxwoods = $0, Puking in the Stanley Cup = Priceless
Thanks! So just give him the mac & cheese, no other choices...and if he doesn't eat and complains, just let it go?
I'm trying to make mealtime pleasant in the hopes that it would make him less picky and enjoy eating more, but it's tough! It's hard for me not to freak out when he doesn't eat and think that he's going to starve...but i know he won't!
LOL, maybe worth a shot!
I would make the change at dinner slowly. Offer yogurt plus something you know he ate at daycare and liked. Then slowly cut back on how much yogurt he gets, while increasing the amount of dinner food until you offer just dinner food and don't back down from that point on. If he's still hungry then he will have to eat the regular dinner food. If you don't like the idea of a slow change then I would go with a straight change, no more dinner yogurt and only offer a regular dinner plate. Your LO is going to be mad about it at first but if you'll have to be very strong on not giving in. Even if he wants to come back later and eat, it is just more dinner food not something else. I know my LO would be better off with a quick switch but she's a fighter and I know how long she will probably last on her stubborn refusals but every one is different and it's really up to you how you want to do it.
I think we may try the slow switch for a few days. I don't know if it will work, but I guess it's worth a shot. I think the hard part for us is knowing that if we don't give in, he's going to bed with nothing in his stomach. I know he won't starve, but I just feel awful for that. But on the other hand, you're all right...he's wants yogurt because he knows he'll eventually get it...mommy always gives in! Sigh!
Who knew having a picky eater would be so frustrating!
Thanks! I kind of drilled into them for more info yesterday and here's what i found out:
If he likes what they put in front of him, he has no problem eating it. Sometimes he likes to be fed, sometimes he likes to feed himself...depends on the food. If he doesn't care for the meal, he politely pushes the bowl away. No fuss, no temper tantrums.
Remember, giving in on these things now is setting a tone for much bigger struggles later in life. Stand strong on this issue. You know that he is a big eater at daycare so if he goes a night or two without eating anything for dinner it won't be too big of a deal. Maybe start this process on a Monday so that he doesn't go a whole weekend without eating if he decides to be super stubborn! Good luck.
My daughter is a pretty good eater, and usually has 2 helpings for lunch at daycare. Some nights she'll just pick at her food at home, or be all cranky about it and have a tantrum and we just get her down and that's that.
Remember, if they eat a lot all day, they just really might not be hungry for dinner. A toddler truly does not need a lot to sustain themselves and some days they literally aren't going to be that hungry. Other days they'll eat everything in sight.
This is my 18-month-old to a T. He eats at ton at school, and he eats pretty decently at dinner most nights, but nothing like I hear how he eats at school. And some nights, he just picks at dinner - he ate half a slice of pizza last night and one corn on the cob the night before. Then he gets down, plays for a few minutes, gets his bath, has some milk and goes to sleep without much fuss. I figure if he's still hungry, he'll be much crankier. I've just decided his appetite is bigger during the day.
DS has started fussing during lunch and dinner too, but I know he eats everything at daycare. I really agree with people when they say having other "bigger" kids around does aid in compliance. I've learned that if DH or I eat alittle off his plate he will get on board. If that doesn't work I let him sit there till eats at least 50 percent of what's on his plate.
I used to get really frustrated when I would put his plate down and he would fuss, but I've learned to give him some time to "explore" it and he may eat after a couple of minutes.
DS has started fussing during lunch and dinner too, but I know he eats everything at daycare. I really agree with people when they say having other "bigger" kids around does aid in compliance. I've learned that if DH or I eat alittle off his plate he will get on board. If that doesn't work I let him sit there till eats at least 50 percent of what's on his plate.
I used to get really frustrated when I would put his plate down and he would fuss, but I've learned to give him some time to "explore" it and he may eat after a couple of minutes.