Eating.

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We also do multi vitamins. Otherwise she'd be without the necessary vitamins, I fear. :-(

the tip of the tongue taking a trip tralalala (stevienixed), Sunday, 29 March 2009 08:01 (fifteen years ago) link

our 4-yr-old settled into a pattern about a year and a half ago that has proved resistant to all efforts at broadening. he eats:

-- cereal for breakfast (the gerber oatmeal)
-- macaroni and cheese for lunch (we get annie's brand, which is theoretically marginally better than straight-up kraft -- his favorites are the noodles shaped like rabbits, so this is known colloquially as "bunny cheese")
-- chicken noodle soup for dinner (favorites are either alphabet, star noodles, or the ones with dora-the-explorer shaped noodles)
-- with all meals, we still feed him gerber pureed vegetables, because he'll gulp down green beans and carrots all day as long as they're not in physical, crunchy form.

the only major variation to this is that he will eat pizza, so sometimes we do that for lunch or dinner. he also likes cinnamon toast, crackers, oreos and ice cream. and that is really just about it. he has never liked any kind of juice, so all he drinks is milk and water (which doesn't bother me, since it probably helps his teeth to not be drinking anything sweet). our doctor has basically said, as long as he's eating, growing, gaining weight, don't worry about it. i see people feeding their kids indian food and thai food and italian food and get jealous, but then i think about what i ate when i was 4, 5, 6 or 7, and i think it was pretty much cereal, peanut-butter-and-jelly and spaghetti. so i shouldn't complain. we are hoping to get the younger started earlier on eating more things, in hopes of giving him a broader palette and also maybe influencing his older brother.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 29 March 2009 15:33 (fifteen years ago) link

oh, and the older kid doesn't like any kind of fruit, in any form. it's odd, since he does like sweet things. but i think he has some food-texture issues (which probably tie in to some of his other issues that i mentioned on another thread). in any case, we've found over time that trying to cajole, bribe, bully or otherwise compel him to eat or even try things he doesn't want to is an excercise in frustration for everyone. he's immensely stubborn about this, and he would rather (as demonstrated repeatedly) go to bed with no ice cream than put anything in his mouth that he doesn't want to.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 29 March 2009 15:36 (fifteen years ago) link

-- with all meals, we still feed him gerber pureed vegetables, because he'll gulp down green beans and carrots all day as long as they're not in physical, crunchy form.

this is interesting because beeps has texture issues too and ate vegetable in puree form quite happily. maybe we should try that again.

I wish I was the royal trux (sunny successor), Sunday, 29 March 2009 16:41 (fifteen years ago) link

Never thought of that. Should have since Ophelia used to eat the veggie pots that Elisabeth ate proclaiming the fruit pots were awesome. roffle. Ah well. I'm not too bothered really. She grows, she's happy. I figure she'll grow out of it. For now I force her to eat at least two pieces of veggies.

the tip of the tongue taking a trip tralalala (stevienixed), Sunday, 29 March 2009 20:43 (fifteen years ago) link

six years pass...

A significant portion of my starch is coming from beer.

calstars, Friday, 24 April 2015 02:19 (eight years ago) link


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