A friend of mine just posted on FB that her daughter, who is about 5 or 6, wants to be an Ovo-Lacto Vegetarian and she's going to let her. My friend doesn't follow any special diet.
Would you allow your child to make this decision for themselves at such a young age? Of if you follow any special diet, would you inflict it on your child? 
Re: Children choosing their dietary lifestyle
My primary concern is getting my child all the nutrients she needs however I can. If she doesn't like veggies, she will get stuff in a vitamin form or other foods or PediaSure or something. I don't know that I'd let a small child choose to be vegan or anything like that though.....I assume 5 or 6 is too young to understand the lifestyle exactly.
Ahhhh, thank you for clearing that up! I put that because someone else commented and said it meant that! Confusing.
My first thought is, at least it's not one of these moms that lets their kid eat nothing but pizza and chicken nuggets.
Beyond that, I personally wouldn't let my child dictate their diet until they were old enough to understand their options and to tell me why they refused a specific food. That's just a maturity thing, though.
I was about that age when I decided I wanted to be a vegetarian, maybe even around age four. My parents supported me, even though they are big meat eaters. I refused to eat an animal, any animal. My parents have no idea where I got the idea that it was bad to eat animals, it's not something they taught me. They made sure I got enough protein from beans and nuts though, and my pediatrician was never worried. That lasted until about middle school, when I realized bacon, pepperoni, shrimp, and chicken strips were amazing! I still don't eat a lot of meat, and I really dislike beef.
So if my kid feels the same way, I'll go with it.
I think if a child voiced wanting to eat a healthier lifestyle, I would definitely support it within reason. If DH and I are not vegans I would not go out of my way to prepare a vegan meal for my 5-6 year old but I get so annoyed when the opposite occurs. We eat meat in our home but we try to buy only organic, grass-fed, healthier meats and I think that preparing a child early to make healthy eating decisions is so important.
I have a niece who pretty much eats only ramen and canned corn and everyone goes out of their way to prepare it for her. When we were visiting my IL's this past Christmas I was making lunches for the kids and I was making grilled cheese and salads (SS and SD eat whatever we make for them and actually enjoy salads). She pipes up and says "I'll have rice, I don't like grilled cheese or salad". I told her, "I am not going to cook rice just for you" and SIL comes out of her room and says "I'll make it for her, she won't eat anything else". I'm sorry but an 11 year old should not have that much say over her diet, especially when it involves nothing nutritious.
I am a vegetarian, and I plan to raise LO that way. I don't think of it as "inflicting" anything on her, though!
I set the age for allowing her to meat (if she wants to) at 10, although of course she isn't even born yet and that could change! I feel like many younger kids go through picky phases, and I wouldn't want to make such a major lifestyle change decision based on a picky phase. At 5 or 6, I'd say there'd have to be a really good reason for it, or some sustained interest to show me that next week, she's not going to decide she only wants to eat oranges and toast.
I could think of no better word than inflict, and the reason I chose it was not to discriminate against anyone who has chosen a different diet. I chose that word because my friend eats meat and her child has decided she doesn't want to. As her parent, she could tell her no.
So, in the same respect if those of you who are vegetarian/vegan, etc. had a child that decided they wanted to eat meat, would you let him or her? Or would you tell them no?
I myself am a pescatarian (I eat fish/seafood on occasion, no other meat) but in my case it's because I have problems with my digestive system breaking down proteins.
My sister decided she wanted to be a vegetarian pretty young, and my parents, my dad in particular fought her on it for years. He would make her sit at the kitchen table for hours until she ate her chicken, and she refused to eat it. Eventually they made her take supplements to make sure she was getting the proper nutrition.
On the other hand I've seen my little cousin and my other little sister say they were going to be vegetarians, and it lasted like 2 days. I think as long as they're getting the nutrients they need, which are probably coming from fruits and vegetables anyway, I wouldn't have a problem with it.
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I'd support it and ask kiddo to help me meal-plan. That we, as a family, would try different meals that they helped me plan/prepare.
But if they aren't interested in the planning/preparing of meals, then they aren't really interested in learning about it and I won't take it seriously.
This exactly.
I'm not going to buy or cook meat. However, at a certain age (don't know what that is yet), I won't try to rabidly control what he eats outside of the house. For me it would be violating my ethics to support animal agriculture, and I believe I have a right to maintain my household in a way that harmonizes with my beliefs. If our child doesn't share those ethics, he (again, at a certain age) can eat what he wants at restaurants and friends' houses. It's not so much making the decision for him, as making the decision for our household, in which he happens to live.
But the question of age is a big one. When he's little, our friends & family will know not to give him meat. I'm not sure at what age I would be OK with them feeding him meat if he asked for it.
same here.
I'm not having any of this preparing seperate meals for different family members malarky. My children will eat a varied, healthy, omniverous diet like we do.
I think this is a case of understanding the word differently. According to the dictionary, "inflict" means:
Those of us who don't perceive vegetarianism to be unpleasant or painful are taking issue with it for that reason, and since here the child is asking for this change, it is not exactly unwelcome. Maybe "enforce," "allow," or "encourage" would have worked better.
Sorry if it sounds like I am splitting hairs here. I just wanted to make it clear that we (well, I speak for myself at least) are not trying to jump on the non-vegetarian here or bash a particular parenting choice. It just comes across as a really negative word, so it makes it seem we need to defend our decisions.