DS has always been an awesome eater. Literally, eats anything I give him, fruits, veggies, protein etc. The last probably 1-2 mos he has gotten progressively more difficult, boycotting foods he historically loved. He will no longer eat berries, yogurt, apples, butternut squash to name a few. I find that he is eating more mac&cheese, pasta with broccoli, and organic chicken nuggets than I care to admit because they are quick and easy weeknight go tos that he doesnt fight me on and maybe I created a monster. My other problem is....my SIL watches DS 3 days a week and my parents pick him up from daycare for me 2 days a week and feed him dinner. I find they are both very quick to give in when he protests food and I come home and DS had rice and a squeezer for dinner as opposed to the roasted chicken, brussel sprouts and rice I had left for him. Today for example for breakfast I sent DS scarmbled eggs with peppers onions and cheese. My SIL said he was crying and threw the eggs so she made him a waffle. He just ate this for breakfast on Sunday, so I know he will but he is difficult to get started and they just give in. I am at a loss for what to do. I want him to keep eating healthy but he is putting up a fight with anything decent lately and since I am not there 24/7 its getting harder and harder for me to enforce.
What do you do when your kid refuses to eat what you serve?? Also-do you still feed your LO or do they eat 100% on their own? I am wondering if I do what daycare does, put the food on his tray and walk away he will eventually eat it....
Re: Newly picker eater and childcare
We switched over to letting DD2 feed herself with utensils about a month or two ago, and it's going really well. She probably would have been ready earlier. Now she wants to eat everything with a spoon. Everything.
Also, I don't think the daycare strategy you described will necessarily work at home. There is this phenomenon with kids where they eat things in social settings they might not eat at home. Just last week we had a playdate with another family and the kids ate so much fruit they about cleaned us out. Mine like fruit, but they never eat that much, and the other mom said the same. It's a group dynamic thing, I think, so I wouldn't try to impose the same rules at home as your daycare has. Just my two cents, though, you could try it and see if it works!
BFP1: DD1 born April 2011 at 34w1d via unplanned c/s due to HELLP, DVT 1 week PP
BFP3: DD2 born Feb 2013 at 38w4d via unplanned RCS due to uterine dehiscence
DS1: Quinn - 10.22.10 and DS2: Cole - 01.18.13
"You reach deeper until you can find the strength. That's all life is, one big fight after another."
Angel babies: 9/19/07, 10/08/09, 1/05/11
We are in the same boat. My once great eater now has decided he has a delicate pallet for cr@p food....screw the veggies and fruit and anything healthy LOL Literally I give him something and his words are "something else?" Kid you are getting what I serve....you will come back when you are hungry!
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
1) the meal I just cooked
2) some prepared baby food for toddlers (we have some in the cabinet for just in case) that I heat in the microwave if she says she wants it, or
3) leftovers that I heat in the microwave if she says she wants it. Here there could be 2 options if there are 2 meals leftover in the fridge.
Whatever she says she wants, though, that's it. I don't heat up 3 different things. The only way she gets 2 things is if she tries the meal we eat, doesn't like it, and goes for a second choice. If she wants leftovers and I heat them up, she gets that or nothing. I don't heat up another round.
Maybe that sounds a little less intimidating than preparing 3 separate meals to offer?
BFP1: DD1 born April 2011 at 34w1d via unplanned c/s due to HELLP, DVT 1 week PP
BFP3: DD2 born Feb 2013 at 38w4d via unplanned RCS due to uterine dehiscence
Their taste buds continue to change and develop throughout their toddler and younger years. Mine used to be a fantastic vegetable eater; now he will only eat them in their pureed form. Our toddler class teacher told us they often meet their caloric needs for the day before dinner, so if they don't want to eat dinner, not to stress about it.
If I know I'm making something he won't like, I will offer a small alternative + what I made (just in case). But if he refuses dinner, then oh well. I don't want him to think that I am a short-order cook. Knowing that his caloric needs have been met for the day helps. :-)
Its helpful to know others are going through the same thing! Also...DS doesnt understand bargaining. Like I cant say to him "take 2 bites and then I will give you a cheese stick bc you keep asking for that." It will be so much easier when I can bribe him HA
"You reach deeper until you can find the strength. That's all life is, one big fight after another."
Angel babies: 9/19/07, 10/08/09, 1/05/11
This is how Roo is but lately when I give him food he stuffs so much in his mouth he sometimes chokes. It's a little bizarre.
Regarding utensils, he's okay with a spoon but still has some fine tuning to do. I usually help him a little otherwise food falls off and he gets frustrated and winds up with his hands in his dinner.