Posts tagged as:

patience

12 tips for feeding picky eaters

by Kelly on October 28, 2009

in food,kids,parenting,patience

Sometimes you have to feed the stuffed animals too!

Sometimes you have to feed the stuffed animals too!

When I was a kid I was well known as being one of the most picky eaters on Earth. I adored candy, and still have quite a sweet tooth (see my tip for Halloween at the bottom of this post). As a kid I would eat an entire block of Kraft cheddar cheese after school. I don’t think it really qualifies as cheese, maybe cheese “product”. Fruit, I would eat with abandon. Veggies were okay. I had a deep distrust of anything animal and loathed milk.

I HATED onions with a passion most people save for terrorists and Charles Manson. When I was 9 my onion loving dad told me I would someday grow up and like onions. I refused to believe it, and wrote him a note which I dated and signed that said simply, “I will NEVER, EVER eat an onion.” (I do eat onions now, so 9 year old me was wrong)

My kids are the payback for the grief I caused my parents. I have 4 kids that are various levels of picky. Finding meals that incorporate 1 thing that everyone can eat, some veggies, and whole grains can be a tremendous challenge.

Here are 12 ways we feed our picky eaters without breaking the bank.

  1. Compromise: The kids want white bread, but you want them to eat whole grain. Try products that meet both your needs like this whole grain white bread from Wegman’s.
  2. Pick your battles: Choose the best foods and keep finding new ways to offer them.
  3. Find balance where you can: For instance, you may think your child needs more greens, so start by offering green fruits, and bland veggies like green beans that can be coated with butter, dressing, or ketchup.
  4. Try new things: Don’t be afraid to offer new things, or try different recipes. Just make sure you have 1 thing on the table your child will eat.
  5. Offer less options: Fabulously Broke shared that her mom had an eat it or starve policy. While they be too extreme for some parents, we should not be expected to be short order cooks serving different meals to each member of the family.
  6. Keep trying: Research has shown that a child needs to be introduced to a new 5-10 times before they accept it. Don’t give up just because your child says they “hate” something.
  7. Make it fun: The he half of Vilkri shared that his family makes pasta and then everyone “customize(s) their toppings.” Other ideas, use cookie cutters to shape sandwiches, have a tea party, have a food from every color of the rainbow, or choose foods that start with the first initial in everyone’s name.
  8. Offer treats: Treats should not be tied to finishing your meal, or cleaning your plate. Offer a fixed number of treats per week or day and let your child choose when to have them. (via my friend Liz)
  9. Have a backup food: Dina Rose shares a great tip, have a backup food. One your child LIKES, but doesn’t love. That way if they refuse their meal you have an alternative.
  10. Don’t make food=reward: Research has shown this can have a negative impact on the reward, and the enjoyment of the food. 
  11. Enlist your child’s help: Have you cooked with your kids? Even wee ones love to help dump things into batter, or take a turn stirring. Older kids can even prepare full meals. IF you have a young child I HIGHLY recommend getting a Learning Tower. It has enough room for more than one child, and is a safe way for them to help. For older kids choose kid’s cookbooks. A few of our favorites can be found in my Amazon shop.
  12. Keep junk out of the house: This tip isn’t just for the kids, it’s for adults like me who can’t help themselves. I’d rather spend more money to go out to an ice cream shop, than to have it sitting in the freezer calling my name, or having the kids beg for it every 5 minutes.

With Halloween only days away, I have no candy in the house. We’ll pick it up the day before Halloween. We also offer the kids a bigger treat, or small toy in exchange for some of their candy. That way they get full enjoyment of a handful of pieces, and the rest we can give away. This keeps both us, and the kids healthier.

What tips do you have? Tricks? Ideas? Share them in the comments. I’d love to hear from you.

For more ideas read Melinda Fulmer’s article in the LATimes online.

For FABULOUS kid’s sized cooking utensils, shop at For Small Hands, where you can find many things Montessori,  or check out Williams-Sonoma Kids, which has recipes, tools and ideas galore.

Kelly

You found it!

*links to Amazon are affiliate accounts, meaning I get a few ¢ents if you order through my link. :)

Want more Centsible Life? Stop by my about page , sign up for FREE email updates, or sign up for my FREE RSS feed. You can also follow me on twitter.

{ 16 comments }

lessons from a puppy

by Kelly on March 20, 2009

in patience,puppy,update

p3160177

One thing about having a new puppy at home is that I have little to no time to waste on Facebook crawling, clearing my GoogleReader, and sleep!

While it is a huge amount of work, it is well worth it, and here are several of the lessons Appa has taught the kids and us these last 2 weeks.

Kids

1) always put your shoes away: it wasn’t enough that mom asked you to do it, or that you couldn’t find them when you are looking for them, now if you don’t put them away the puppy eats them

2) watch where you walk!: since we’re still house training and sorting out the “poop” spot, the kids need to watch their step

3) don’t run in the house: before mom would yell at us if we ran in the house to get outside!, now if we run in the house Appa will jump on us and try to playfully bite us (he thinks we are one of his 10 siblings)

4) don’t yell in the house: ditto above, when we get excited the little teeth come out! (don’t worry mom and dad are training him)

5) put your toys away: much like your shoes, Appa will chew on your toys when you leave them out. no one wants to go looking on the other end for the pieces that are missing!

6) MOST IMPORTANT LESSON OF ALL: love him, and tell him what a good boy he is every day.

Mom and Dad’s lessons

1) Never take your eyes off the puppy, the second you do he is going to do something that is NOT good.

2) All the puppy wants is love, give him lots of it. (just like the kids!)

3) Never take your eye off the puppy, the second you do he is going to do something that is NOT good.

4) Be patient. He will eventually learn the couch is not his bed, and your right shoe is not his toy.

5) Never take your eye off the puppy, the second you do he is goign to do something that is NOT good.

6) Watch out for wet spots and brown spots. (eww)

7) Never take your eye off the puppy, the second you do he is going to do something that is NOT good.

Appa is a great puppy, I mean just look at him! He loves people. So much so that every time someone is walking ACROSS the street he wants them to stop and say hello. Such the social butterfly!  We are working hard on training him right now, which is WAY more work then I thought it would be (especially since I have to do so much of it!). But like raising the kids it’s a lot of labor at first and then you fall into routines and get used to each other.

He is also a little stinker. But then you look at him, and <sigh>.

Kelly

PS I was the only one in the family in the anti-puppy camp. Guess who changed my mind?

{ 3 comments }

I’m back!

by Kelly on January 13, 2009

in patience

For those of you who have been loyal readers, I’m sorry I’ve been gone for a few days.

In the process of switching over my hosting to Dream Host, I first emptied the site, and then broke it. Thankfully I have a super supportive husband who happens to work on a website for a living, so he fixed me up. I’m going to have to be creative to pay him back.

The thing is if I had just taken my time I would have been able to mirror the site so it looked the same, and then seamlessly switched over. And again, if I had just taken my time to redirect my old address (which is long and cumbersome, thanks Apple!), to the shorter version 9in case anyone had the old address on feed, or bookmarked) then  wouldn’t have broken the site. By broken I mean, there was no style, and the admin page wouldn’t come up.

Last night, the hubby fixed it and I started adding my old entries (sans photos since I have to upload those from my other computer). All the old entries are here now. (big sigh of relief!) Sadly I couldn’t bring the comments over, though I may add them in when I get time.

The big changes are the look of the blog (what do you think?), and the lack of ads. I will be adding ads at some point, mainly to help cover my hosting and domain costs, but I have to figure out what service I want to use and how to do it. This time I’m going to be patient, so I don’t break things again!

This morning I did my usual routine of getting the big girl and the hubby out the door on time, and then I sat and ate breakfast and looked at the blogs I like to read. (I use Google Reader) I came across this post at Get Rich Slowly. So, so timely. I feel like the Universe is telling me to be patient, and just slow down. This has always been a tough thing for me to do, so I’m focused this morning on being more deliberate in my actions and words. Maybe I should have gone to yoga last night.

I’d love to hear thoughts on how the site looks. How do you achieve patience?

Kelly

Related Posts with Thumbnails

{ 0 comments }