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M. Wood's avatar

I absolutely love that you aren’t making this a fight or power struggle. Division of responsibility when they are young, and then let them make their own choices as they age. He will eat what is comfortable and safe for him and eventually (yes maybe even as an adult) try more things.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

As my mother used to say, "From your mouth to God's ear"

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DS's avatar

I have two picky eaters (ages 9.5 and 11.5), and I am trying to cultivate detachment but it's HARD. And exhausting. I basically end up cooking two dinners each night, and it does suck the joy out of cooking (which I LOVE). And you know what I am fed up with? "Helpful ideas" like "put it in a muffin tin" or "cut into interesting shapes." Do you really think I have not tried that, Barbara?!

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

SO exhausting. "Do you really think I have not tried that, Barbara?!" 🤣

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SD's avatar

So true! I also love the "I would never let my kid get away with that?" So. . . what would you do? Tie him to his chair and force feed him? I have one kid that literally ate nothing for 48 hours because we didn't have anything he liked in the house. You can't beat that unless you want to make your life miserable. He is a teen now, and I was more excited than I have been in ages when he ate multiple pieces of baked chicken last night. Pretty innocuous food, but he had never eaten more than one bite before.

We have done all the things, and my other kids are good eaters. I have come to terms with the fact that he will always be at least somewhat picky, It is annoying, especially when wanting to try new restaurants, but we will all survive.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

I often wish we'd been able to have a second child, just so that I could see for myself this *isn't my fault. So many friends with multiple kids, and one's super-picky while the rest are fine. It's not about the parenting!

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collazoprojects's avatar

My oldest (now 10) ate EVERYTHING when she started eating solids. And I DO mean everything. But now... forget it. She and her two younger siblings also specialize in craptastic diets and, for the most part... I don't put up resistance. I'm more worried about created disordered eating habits than a few years (albeit formative ones) of food that I wouldn't necessarily choose for them. Thanks for normalizing this view with this post. <3

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

I was sooo proud of myself for raising such a great eater--until my son turned 2, pesto was his favorite food. Sometimes I bust out the pictures we took of him devouring things he won't even look at now, just to torture myself. I have very real worries about disordered eating at this point. It seems like the best thing I can do is *not push, which is so counterintuitive and hard.

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BethanyG's avatar

My kid has luckily outgrown the picky phase. But when we were at the height of it, serving a variety of small dishes where you could make your own (think assemble your own bowls, quesadillas where you could make your own toppings, a charcuterie board with a side of raw veggies, that kind of thing) usually helped us not lose our minds.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

I try to include that kind of setup in several meals each week, Bethany!

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Kim's avatar

I have twins (10), one pickier than the other probably due to sensory issues. I make one dinner and they eat it or don't but they have to sit at the table for ten minutes. I thought this would take the fight out of dinner but I still feel angry that I worked hardish to cook a tasty meal that they won't even try. I keep waiting for that magical moment where they will try something given enough exposures but nah. I get annoyed that their ped is zero concerned even though they eat no vegetables and apples are the only fruit and very little protein. He says they are growing, and they are, but they're not learning healthy eating habits, something I've had to teach myself as an adult. Some nights I just give up and let them have Easy Mac because it's easier. Sigh.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

But from everything I've read, your ped is right! As long as they're thriving, we're supposed to present food and let them decide whether and how much to eat. If they can learn to listen to their own bodies, they'll be fine. Of course, I have completely failed at doing this, but it does seem that pushing only backfires. And the anger I feel when he rejects food is still very real--I'm just trying hard not to give in to it.

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Kim's avatar

You're right and I'm letting my own issues get in the way. He does have issues with meltdowns at the end of the school day and I do think he's just hangry because he eats chips and ice cream for lunch instead of the lunch I've packed him (something I'm just LETTING GO because I'm not there to enforce and at least he's eating something) and then I have to deal with 30 minutes of meltdowns when he gets home. Just eat some peanut butter crackers, dude!

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

Sister, I am the queen of letting my own issues get in the way. Letting go of the fact that my kid skips lunch most days was my first step towards regaining some of my equilibrium. The rest is following, slowly. Lately he's been refusing breakfast, too, which makes me suspect he's got access to some pretty tasty junk food while he's at school. He doesn't come home nearly hangry enough to have not eaten since 6AM! But yeah, nothing I can do about it. He's a teenager!

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Jes's avatar

"Eat or don't" and "Don't yuck my yum" are said many times each meal. I just want to stop the whining and face making. One of them does it before the second has tried anything and immediately says they don't like it. Luckily, they aren't starving but I do try to get them to eat a couple bites of everything on their plate. If they don't want to eat tomatoes they must not be hungry enough for more bread. Sometimes it turns into a battle and I have to remind myself that I'm in charge of what and when and they're in charge of how much they eat.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

Remembering who's in charge of what is the hardest part!

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Jonathan's avatar

Mine are 7, 4 & 2 years. My 2 year old daughter eats everything with reckless abandon. My boys, however, are about as picky as they come. We've started setting a timer at the dinner table. So far this has gone ok. They start to eat a little after getting bored. Not a singable success, though every little bit helps!

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

Indeed! I know it's hard, really, really hard, but it does seem that the less we push these kids, the more likely it is they'll start to eat.

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Jennifer's avatar

Letting go and just riding it out worked for me with my youngest (now age 11), upon the advice of our pediatrician. We sat through many nights of, "I don't think I will like this dinner, mama!" where he'd just drink his milk and push food around on his plate while the rest of us ate. I'd remind him it was a long time till breakfast but it didn't phase him. Then in the morning he'd be ravenously hungry, often eating 2 breakfasts! He liked most breakfast foods, so I'd load him up on scrambled eggs, toast, yogurt, etc., knowing he was at least getting one decent meal a day. Eventually (like several years later...no quick fix here!) he started taking the occasional bite of this and that and discovering it wasn't as disgusting as he'd imagined and we went from there...he started helping me plan and cook a meal or two each week, we ate more "assemble your own bowl" type meals and he started trying even more new things. He still doesn't like certain foods but will usually eat them with minimal complaining now.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

That's so great! My guy has always been more than willing to skip a meal rather than eat something he *thinks he won't like. And closing the kitchen between meals has only prompted him to become a sneak eater. I can't catch a break!

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Megan's avatar

So what you're telling me is that this won't get better for my 6-year-old in the foreseeable future?

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

Not necessarily, Megan! I've done A LOT of research into this and many kids turn a corner around age 8. I'll cross my fingers that happens with yours!

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Sarah's avatar

My oldest two definitely started changing around 8. My youngest is still 7, and he’s still a meal pain in the rumpus. My 15 year old will try almost anything now, he eats a huge variety of food and he was a picky kid. My 9 year was a nightmare who wouldn’t even touch fruit! Now she tries a fairly wide variety and has certainly expanded the number of things she actually likes. It just kind of happened on its own, like some miracle. Lol

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Karin's avatar

Ha, I'm that nightmare who to this day will still not eat fruit. There are some where the smell literally makes me gag. I can go into dry heaves just thinking too hard about certain fruits!

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

I'm the same way with sour cream! I struggle to sit at the same table with it. Greek yogurt, too.

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Megan's avatar

My sister is like that with bananas. I used to chase her around the house with them when we were kids.

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Jennifer's avatar

Around age 8 is when mine improved!

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Kate Irwin-Smiler's avatar

I'm trying to detach emotionally from whether or not my 9 year old eats the dinner I make. She's old enough and capable enough to fix something for herself if she doesn't like what I've made (even if that's just a bowl of granola and yogurt, or heat up some leftovers, or make a peanut butter sandwich). But I know I react so much better when she'll at least *try* whatever it is, because I don't make things I know she doesn't like. I don't ask her to eat chicken, I moderate spice to her level, and even as I realize I'm getting more ... open to mushrooms I'm not ever going to cook them for us as a family. Just, please, give it a few bites, kiddo. You're welcome to not like it & get something else.

And we had grand designs of her cooking dinner a night a week. That seems like "a lovely wish" at this point.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

The emotional response is so intense. I still struggle with it, even though I *know saying anything will only make it worse.

Nine might be a wee bit young to be responsible for dinner once a week--but you can start slow, maybe once a month, or every two weeks?

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Lindsay McG's avatar

It’s the ungrateful eaters that really get my goat! Picky is part of it, but it is the tween attitude and the other stuff that’s the worst! Plus, I have a very small son and it’s hard to not get wrapped up in nutrition- and by that I mean that chicken and white rice shouldn’t be daily staples, let alone Costco chicken nuggets and top ramen. Right?!??

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

Oh lord, my son's nutrition at this point is garbage. He eats tons of fruit, thank heavens, and if there's plain chicken or steak he'll participate, but other than that he's really limited. He likes a specific kind of ramen, ideally in homemade chicken broth, and a specific type of pizza (no sauce, with black olives)... And the rest is empty calories, pretty much.

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Amanda's avatar

Took my pickyish kid to the supermarket yesterday, where he surprised me by asking to dry sliced chicken breast from the deli counter! Apparently he didn't realize chicken also came as lunch meat, only turkey - and he hates turkey (for Thanksgiving, I had to roast him a separate tray of chicken drumsticks). I mean they taste basically the same to me??? But he was amenable to the chicken, and the deli guy gave him a sample slice which was shockingly well-received, so that's his latest go-to snack now.

Like you, I've stopped suggesting or offering, and he's also gotten super into cooking lately, too. Even if it means cooking stuff he himself won't eat.

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Debbie Koenig's avatar

VICTORY is sweet! Harry discovered pastrami, of all things, recently. I'm glad he added a new food but sheesh, that's not exactly a healthy option.

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