DS was a good eater, now he barely eats anything i put in front of him. He is starting refuse foods he used to love. There have been days where he won't eat any meal. He gets so whiney later because he's hungry but still won't eat what I offer. What should I do? Am I supposed to keep offering the same food for snack time and then the next meal even if I know he won't eat it then either? I'm supposed to give him something I know he likes along with the food he doesn't right? Do I give him a different food for snack? I'm so lost.
Re: eating issues-I'm getting so frustrated
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I can sympathize as I have one of the pickiest eater on my hand. It's so stressful and frustrating, I totally get it. How old is your son? I can't tell by your post.
I'd have the doctor check him to make sure that he is not sick or has any mechanical issues, so no soars in his mouth or anything like that and then just keep offering him the 3 meal and 2 snack and be patient. If nothing is wrong, then the doctor will tell you that "they won't starve themselves, they'll eat when they're hungry."
My DD is 14 months old and we've been dealing with eating issues since she turned one, although she was not a great eater to begin with. My ped was finally concerned about the volume of her food intake after she saw a week's diary of what she had eaten so even though DD doesn't have any mechanical issues, we are seeing a feeding therapist weekly at $150 a session (we haven't met our 3K deductible so we're paying for each visit out of pocket for now). I can not tell you that the therapy is helping, I wish it was, but we are continuing with it so she could be monitored.
Here are a few of things I’ve learned from our meal time journey, hopefully some of it is useful to you:
-Don't react or push him to eat if he doesn't want to eat. I try to stay neutral (it’s hard) but I found that if you don’t react either way she eats because she wants to. She is not looking to get a reaction out of you. One thing I learned through all this is that you CAN NOT make him eat if he doesn't want to eat, he'll spit it out. You don't want to get in a power struggle with him over this because he will win. I totally understand that you're worried about his food intake, trust me, I worry about mine daily, I have a stubborn little one that barely eats anything nor does she drink. She's had 4 oz of liquid today for example, 3 oz milk, 1 oz water and it's 2:15 already. For breakfast she had 2 blackberries, 1 blueberry (refused waffles), for lunch she had a tiny piece of tofu as big as a nickel and 4 peas, and a tiny piece of carrot (refused everything else).
Edit: and for dinner had 1 oz of milk, 2 edemame, 2 peas and a piece of broccoli as big as a quarter. The rest of dinner was refused, it was pasta with chicken and veggies.
-Ped told me to give her the same tray of food at the next meal if she refuses it previously. I tried it a couple of times and it doesn’t work. I absolutely do not make her a “new” or “different” food if she decides to refuse eating but I don’t give her the same thing at the following meal either.
- I always include something that I know she likes and something new or a dislike..
-They go through phases where they really like something and can’t get enough of it but then one day they stop liking it, it’s normal. Just keep offering it. DD went through a pea phase, that’s all she’d pick out of her food and then stopped liking it, now she’s indifferent I think, she eats it sometimes, ignores it other times.
-I eat with her at each meal and I try to focus on my own meal, sometimes I talk about how my food tastes or when DH is eating with us we talk about other things. We try to “ignore” DD until she shows signs that she wants “help” or just wants our attention. I’ve tried it all and this seems to work the best for us so far.
-Since my DD's issue is food volume, one thing that I've found somewhat helpful is to offer a variety and hope that she'd eat a little of each thing.
-When it looks like DD is done eating, she starts playing with the food or tosses them on the floor, I take it away after a warning.
-Sometimes when DD is not eating and seems like she wants to play, I use it to practice her language skills (this was a good tip from the occupational therapist). Just the other day I taught her to "poke" with her fork. I'd say "poke" "poke" "poke" and she was trying to immediate me and say it while actually trying to poke a piece of food and I didn't tell her to put it in her mouth, she did it on her own. So it became interesting for her and she was engaged to play and then eat her food. Now she tries to do it while going pppp ppp..:) It's cute.
-There are kids who don’t go through this picky stage and there are going to be moms who will tell you that “they just let the kid decide when/how much to eat and their kids eat great!” or repeat the "kids don't starve themselves" line. Don’t let them make you feel bad, they are just lucky moms who have good eaters in their hands. I admit I am jealous of moms who have it easy and wish that I had a good eater too but it is what it is..
I am hopeful that there will come a day that our kids will eat without driving us crazy
My job is to prepare healthy meals...my kids job is to eat it. I do my job well...she decides if she will suck at her job or not!
My daughter (14monnths) is typically a great eater but we are starting into this phase. I also run a home daycare with 5 kids of varying appetites. Some are extremely picky eaters.
I serve the food and I am neutral as to what and how much they eat. I ensure there is one 'safe' food with each meal so they are not starving. I serve small amounts so not to overwhelm and I give plenty of refills.
If a child chooses to eat nothing so be it. I don't comment...I just wait until meal is over and clear the table. They wait until the next meal to eat the next foods served. I would not re-serve the same plate. Not with toddlers. If you have a 6 year old that is being difficult maybe...but toddlers just don't get it and they won't change their thoughts on the food that quickly.
Make sure you are not over serving milk or formula...they do need to be hungry to push themselves to try foods.
OK, well I do believe you are trying to be helpful, so I won't jump all over your case, but I just think that statistic is a bit off, probably a simple mixup on your part or an exaggeration on the specialist's. In any case, I'm glad you are finding your child's treatment helpful and it is kind of you to share your experience with others.