How to Get Your Kid to Eat: But Not Too Much
By Ellyn Satter
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Reviews for How to Get Your Kid to Eat
4 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great book, it really is more about parenting and psychology than it is about nutrition. Very practical advice, applicable to adults too. I liked it better than child of mine from the same author.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5How to Get Your Kid to Eat: But Not Too Much probably could have been shortened to a brochure in order to get the main point across, but I’m still very thankful that we have the book in our home library. Hayden is not much of an eater, unless you count bread, fruit, pizza, chicken nuggets and boogers as a well rounded diet. This book has tried to tell me that it will be okay, though. My job is to provide him with food. His job is to decided what and how much to eat. We’re getting there. At least he isn’t throwing temper tantrums when solid vegetables are on his plate any more.While the book doesn’t have all the questions and answers I would like it to have (such as, how do I get my child to eat a vegetable that doesn’t come from a baby jar and what about when the kid asks for seconds of bread at the dinner table but has touched nothing else?) it’s a start at least. I can admit that I don’t look forward to the first time another mother sees that Hayden may have a portion of dessert with his dinner, watches him scarf it down and then ask to be excused. But at least my three-year-old says, after he’s finished eating his carbs, “May I be excused now?”
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Brilliant. Excellent ideas coupled with excellent presentation. This book should be in every parent's toolbox.Parents are in charge of what food the child has to choose from and when food is presented.Children are in charge or how much they eat, what they eat, and whether they eat anything.The goal of parents should be threefold:- Provide children with the nutrition and calories they need to grow.- Help them learn to enjoy many different kinds of food.- Give them an opportunity to learn to self-regulate their eating; to know what hunger feels like but that it's not disasterous; to provide their own calorie regulation.I would recommend this book OVER a pediatrician's advice about feeding.
Book preview
How to Get Your Kid to Eat - Ellyn Satter
How To Get Your Kid To Eat . . . But Not Too Much
Ellyn Satter, RD., A.C.S.W.
Bull Publishing Company
Boulder, CO
Copyright © 1987 Ellyn Satter
Bull Publishing Company
P.O. Box 1377
Boulder, CO, 80306
(800) 676-2855
www.bullpub.com
All rights reserved. No reproduction or use of the text or illustrations is allowed without the express permission of the publisher.
Printed in the U.S.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Satter, Ellyn. How to get your kid to eat
but not too much.
Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Children
Nutrition. 2. Child rearing. I. Title.
RJ206.S243 1987 649’ .3 87-25620
ISBN 978-1-936693-29-0
Cover Design: Robb Pawlak
Cover Illustration: Kit C. King
Interior Design: Detta Penna
Text Illustrator: Ken Miller
Chapter Opening Art: Karen Foget
Production Manager: Helen O’Donnell
To Donald Williams, who knows children, and David Bull, who knows books.
Acknowledgements
This book did not come from me alone. My family, friends and colleagues gave generously of their time, expertise and encouragement, and I thank them.
For professional contributions and evaluation of the manuscript: Jack Bailey, Ph.D.; Melinda Bailey, Ph.D.; Bonnie Broderick, R.N.; Crista Dean, R.D.; Richard Guthrie, M.D.; Thomas Linscheid, Ph.D.; Deb McMillan, M.S.; Susan Nitzke, Ph.D.; Karen Ostrov, Ph.D.; Gail Price, Ph.D.; Deborah Roussos, M.S., R.D.; Erica Serlin, Ph.D.; Leona Shapiro, Ph.D.; Tom Tatum, M.A., CCC-SP; and Donald Williams, M.S.S.W., A.C.S.W.
For expert and resilient collaboration in putting together our mutual endeavor: Pat Anderson, David Bull, and Helen O’Donnell.
For love, encouragement, tolerance, distraction, humor, family maintenance and even word processing: Larry Satter, Kjerstin Satter, Lucas Satter, and Curtis Satter.
For her exquisite drawings: Karen Foget.
Table of Contents
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF FEEDING
1. All About Eating
What It’s Like for the Child
Why This Book?
A New Look at Feeding
Problems with Feeding
Summary of the Book
2. Quit When the Job Is Done
The Division of Responsibility in Feeding
How It Applies
How It Helps
Limiting Your Efforts
Dividing Responsibility as Children Grow Up
3. Pressure Doesn’t Work
Almost Everybody Forces
Forcing Can Take Many Forms
Pressure Can Be Forcing Food In
Pressure Can Be Withholding Food
Pressure Can Be on Food Acceptance
Children Vary in Their Eating
Forcing Can Make a Child Grow Poorly
Children Can Call Out Forcing
Even Subtle Forcing Backfires
Parents Must Understand Why They Force
4. How Much Should Your Child Eat?
You Can’t Predict
Children Vary Day-to-Day
Children Vary Child-to-Child
Controlling Amounts Doesn’t Work
Growth Is Determined Mostly by Genes
Helping Your Child Like His Body
Understanding Kids’ Growth
Surprises in Growth
Girls and Dieting
5. What Is Normal Eating?
Definition for Adults
Variations in Normal
Temperament
Hunger
Love of Eating
Food Preferences
Tempo
Capability
Difficulty Learning to Eat
Miscellaneous Glitches
6. Nutritional Tactics for Preventing Food Fights
Choose Age-appropriate Food
Have Regular Meals and Snacks
Take Snacks Seriously
Making Eating Worthwhile
Make Some Modifications
On the Matter of Vegetables
About Milk
Considering Meat
On Breads and Cereals
Margin of Error
The Dietary Guidelines
The Problems of Excess
Set Reasonable Goals
FEEDING AS YOUR CHILD GROWS
7. The Newborn
Feeding the Newborn
Learning How Babies Talk
A Spitting-up Problem
Observe Feeding Interactions
Feeding Small Babies
Observing Your Baby
What About Spoiling?
Feeding and Growth
Obesity
Poor Growth
8. The Older Baby
The Six- to Twelve-Month-Old
Parenting
The Mechanics of Feeding
Starting Solids
Table Food
Feeding Going Well
Feeding Going Poorly
The Consequences of Poor Feeding
The Rewards of Good Feeding
9. Is Your Toddler Jerking You Around at the Table?
Understanding the Toddler
Parenting the Toddler
Going Along, Helping
Setting Limits
Hanging in There
Choose Your Battles
Have Regular Meals and Snacks
Make Mealtime Pleasant
Hang Loose About Food Acceptance
Don’t Short-Order Cook
Be Realistic About Amounts
Get There First
Keep Her Comfortable
Know Your Audience
Know Your Nutrition
Don’t Be Too Free with Juice and Milk
Don’t Make Dessert a Reward
Help Your Child Be Successful with Eating
Keep Her Safe
Obesity
Ignore Miscellaneous Kinky Behavior
10. The Popular Preschooler
Understanding The Preschooler
Childishness
Purposefulness
Parenting the Preschooler
Supporting Your Child’s Initiative
Parenting with Food
Have Structured Meals and Snacks
Avoid Pressure on Food Acceptance
Mealtime Behavior
Make Maturity Demands
Trust Their Desire to Grow
Teach Your Child How to Behave
Avoid Forcing
Obesity
Television
11. The Industrious Schoolager
Understanding the School-Age Child
Early School-Age
Late School-Age
Parenting the School-Age Child
Setting Limits
Tasks, Teaching, and Encouragement
Praise and Recognition
Working Things Out with Other People
Meals
Idiosyncracies
Managing Hunger
Mealtime Pleasantries
Single Parenting
Snacks
Experimenting with Eating
Fluctuations in Appetite
Finickiness
Interceding for Your Child
School Lunch
Don’t Be Too Protective
Dieting
Let Her Take the Lead
12. The Individualistic Teenager
Understanding the Adolescent
Physical Changes
Patterns of Thinking
Sexual Maturation
Why Parents Don’t Like the Teen Years
Teaching Responsibility
Emotional Maturation
Problems
Authoritative Parenting
Letting Go
Parenting with Food
Extremes in Eating
Nutritional Risks and Safety Margins
The Parent’s Role
Advice and Encouragement
Avoid Criticism
Eating For Sports
Weight Reduction Dieting
Eating Disorders
SPECIAL FEEDING PROBLEMS
13. The Child Who Grows Poorly
Feeding Problems Should Be Suspected
Distinguishing Poor Growth from Slow-But-Normal Growth
Naturally Slow Growth
The Sick Child
Problems with Breast-Feeding
The Child Who Is Defiant About Eating
The Child Who Won’t Progress
Failure to Thrive
Failure to Engage the Child
The Case of the Pursuing Parent
Establishing Normal Feeding
14. Helping All You Can to Keep Your Child from Being Fat
Maintain a Healthy Feeding Relationship
Using Indirect Methods
Maintain the Structure of Meals and Snacks
Teach Orderly and Positive Eating
Cut Down on Feeding Cues
Keep the Caloric Density of Food Moderate
Don’t Feed Unnecessarily
Think of Your Child as Normal When Making Feeding Decisions
Use Your Own Good Judgment When Setting Feeding Limits
Encourage Exercise
Let Your Child Develop the Way That’s Right
Help Your Child’s Self-Esteem
Redefining the Problem
Don’t Harp on Your Child’s Weight
Keep Your Fingers Crossed
Don’t Be Tempted to Impose a Diet
The Cure May Not Work
Don’t Blame Yourself
15. Eating Disorders
What Is an Eating Disorder?
Stories of Eating Disorders
The Eating Behavior Continuum
The Consequences of Dieting
Mid Range Eating Disorders
Starve-Binge Cycle
Types of Eating Behaviors
Treatment
How Treatment Works
What Can We Do to Prevent Eating Disorders?
16. Feeding the Child with Special Needs
The Child Who Has a Hard Time Eating
The Child with Developmental Disabilities
The Critically Ill Child
The Child Who Hasn’t Eaten
The Eating-Phobic Child
Prematurely Born Children
Diabetic Children
The Child Who Has a Hard Time with Food Selection
The Child Who Has a Hard Time Eating Enough
Cystic Fibrosis
Congenital Heart Defects
Tube Feeding as a Supplement to Oral Feeding
Children with Life-Threatening Diseases
General Thoughts on Childhood Handicaps
APPENDIX TOOLS AND STRATEGIES
Recommended Daily Pattern of Food Selection
Milk Group Portion Sizes
Meat Group Portion Sizes
Breads and Cereals
Fruits and Vegetables
Vitamin A in Fruits and Vegetables
Vitamin C in Fruits and Vegetables
Fun Foods that Make Nutritional Sense
Choosing Nutritious Snacks
Calorie Requirements Compared with Basic Needs
Growth Charts
FIGURES
3-1 Todd’s growth chart
4-1 Formula intake of Baby J
4-2 Growth of Baby J
4-3 Variation in food intake
4-4 Range of recommended calorie intakes for boys and men
4-5 Range of recommended calorie intakes for girls and women
7-1 Division of responsibility in nipple-feeding
8-1 Division of responsibility in early spoon-feeding
8-2 Introducing solid foods
9-1 Division of responsibility in feeding the toddler
9-2 Making foods easy to eat for toddlers
9-3 Preventing choking
10-1 Range of parenting styles
13-1 Richie’s growth chart
13-2 Bethany’s growth chart
13-3 Brian’s growth chart
14-1 A girl who slimmed down
14-2 Melissa’s growth chart
15-1 Eating behavior continuum
15-2 Starve-binge pattern
15-3 Types of eating disorders
1
All About Eating
Eating well is one of life’s great pleasures. If a child is to be healthy and strong, and fit well into the world, she has to be able to eat the food. At the same time, if she is to keep eating in its proper place as only one of life’s issues, she has to be able to take care of it in a matter-of-fact way.
Too many people today are unsuccessful with eating, and unsuccessful with feeding their children. The incidence of significant childhood eating problems is estimated at 25 to 30%—and those are only situations that parents consider problematic and are brought to professional attention. Problem eating behaviors include poor food acceptance, eating too much
or too little,
delay or difficulty in learning the mechanics of eating or progressing to appropriately mature eating styles, objectionable mealtime behaviors and bizarre food habits.
Parents worry about their children’s eating habits, their growth and weight, their nutrition and their manners. Adults are anxious and ambivalent about their own eating, and those feelings rub off on their parenting with food. They get into struggles with feeding their children, struggles that seemingly have no satisfactory resolution:
Jason hardly eats anything—at least compared with the other babies I know. He only takes three or four ounces at a time. He’s growing all right, but it worries me. I try to get him to take more, but it just makes him mad—he cries and yells and arches his back and throws his body around.
Eric won’t eat his vegetables. In fact, there are just a lot of foods he won’t eat. I put peas on his plate and he has a fit until I take them back off again. I have tried serving vegetables cooked and raw and dressed up in a sauce and even let him help prepare them. But he still won’t eat. If I try making him stay at the table until he eats some, he sits there for an hour, until I finally break down and let him go.
Mary eats so much I am afraid she will get fat. I give her as much as I think she should have, but she just wolfs it down and cries for more. She can never wait four hours until the next feeding and sometimes she cries an hour before it is time to feed her.
I am so sick of cooking for my children, I could just scream. I end up making two or three meals. They say, ‘what’s that’ and I tell them and then they say ‘ack, I won’t eat that.’ And so I say, ‘all right, what will you eat?’ I feel like a short-order cook. Sometimes I feel like saying, ‘that’s your dinner, like it or lump it, and better luck next time.’
It’s gotten to the point where I positively dread dinner time. My husband is on the kids all the time about their eating. ‘Eat this, eat that, use your fork, don’t use your fingers. You can’t leave until you eat all of that.’ One of the kids will do it, but the other one won’t eat a thing. I think he would sit there for the rest of his life before he gave into his father.
I don’t eat until the kids are in bed. The way they behave at the table really gets on my nerves. They hurry up and eat some, and make a mess, or whine about what’s there. Then they get down and run off and then come back and eat a little more. And they hound me for things when I am trying to eat.
We are talking about the feeding relationship: an interactive process in which both parent and child participate. Parents offer food, the child eats it—or fails to eat it. The child gives information about what she wants or doesn’t want, and demonstrates her ability to eat, or lack of it. And parents give information about what’s available and in what setting and what kind of eating is acceptable to them.
Eating times can be happy times, when children and parents feel they are getting along well enough with each other, and getting the job done in a satisfactory way. Or they can be painful times, when both are anxious and frustrated.
Early problems with feeding can persist, and can get even worse, and can distort lifelong eating and weight management attitudes and behaviors. Most, if not all, adolescent and adult eating disorders, obsessive (and often failed) weight management efforts, and neurotic attitudes and behaviors about eating have their roots in early childhood feeding interactions.
What It’s Like for the Child
Painful as feeding problems are for parents, think what they must be like for children.
Learning about eating starts at birth. The way a child eats and accepts food and feels about eating is determined to a large extent by her early experiences with eating. But it goes farther than that. The way eating is managed can have an enormous impact on the way a child feels about herself and about the world.
Especially for the very young child, eating and feeding is central to her relationship with the world. If she is hungry, she is miserable and feels alone. Hunger is, after all, a very powerful and potentially painful drive. Whether a child learns to fear or accommodate hunger depends on her early experience with eating.
If she cries to be fed, and someone shows up promptly and feeds with some sensitivity to her abilities and preferences, she associates hunger with pleasure and it makes her look forward to what happens next. And she thinks, on whatever level babies think, that she must be a very important and fine person and that people must like her to go to such trouble on her behalf.
But feeding can be handled in other ways, ways that make her feel anxious and desperate when she gets hungry. Her caretakers can be slow or inconsistent about responding to her hunger signals. They can force her to eat more than she wants or insist that she eat food that revolts her. They can let her just get started eating well and then take it away.
Very few adults would be willing to deliberately do something that would hurt a child’s feelings or lower her self-esteem. But that happens all the time in feeding. It happens because adults have their own hang-ups about eating and play them out in the way they feed their children.
Why This Book?
Most struggles over feeding grow out of genuine concern for the child, and bad advice. Parents are regularly encouraged to overrule information coming from their children, and impose certain foods, or amounts of food, or feeding schedules. Whenever you impose rigid expectations, feeding will be distorted.
In How to Get Your Kid to Eat, I’m going to give you some good advice. The advice is about the feeding relationship. I’ll tell you how to work it out with your child with eating. I’ll talk about parenting in general, and parenting as it applies to eating. I’ll emphasize doing your part, but also depending on your child to share responsibility with you for her eating. I’ll emphasize what you should do so your child can eat and regulate her food intake to the best of her abilities. And, most of all, I’ll detail how to make feeding a cooperative process, not just one of outsmarting or controlling your child.
How to Get Your Kid to Eat grows out of my concern about children and their eating. It also grows out of my concern for their parents, and their eating.
I have worked with eating for most of my professional life, first as a clinical dietitian in a medical group practice, doing outpatient nutrition counseling for adults and children. I am now a clinical social worker/dietitian in a private mental health clinic, doing family therapy and individual counseling with people who are immobilized by their concerns about eating.
In the over twenty years I have spent working with people of all ages (I will describe many of my patients, but to protect their privacy, I have changed the nonessential details), I have seen a lot of misery. People can feel upset and immobilized and absolutely terrible about themselves because of their inability to manage their eating. Many times they have carried these struggles with them from childhood.
I have worked with families of young children, and have observed what happens in childhood feeding interactions that distort the way children eat—and the way they feel about eating. My adult patients remember experiencing these distortions as children, and they tell how painful it was to be overmanaged or ignored with eating. Eventually, they have grown up to overmanage and ignore themselves—and they continue to experience the same conflict and anxiety about their eating.
And the cycle repeats. Unless adults are able to correct their own distorted eating attitudes and behaviors, they are likely to parent their children with feeding the way they were parented.
It doesn’t have to be that way. There is a healthy and positive way to manage feeding, and I’ll tell you about it.
It’s a way that grows out of trust: trust in your child to eat in a way that’s right for her and to find the body that’s right for her. It’s the opposite of being managing and controlling. It’s a process that depends on the child’s internal cues of hunger, appetite and satiety to guide the feeding process.
You’ll be amazed at how being positive and trusting about feeding frees you. It makes an enormous difference in feeding if you don’t have to worry about getting your child to eat. You can pay attention, instead, to doing a good job with parenting, to sharing her delight in learning to eat, and to watching her growth unfold.
A New Look at Feeding
Maintaining a positive feeding relationship demands a division of responsibility. The parent is responsible for what the child is offered to eat, the child is responsible for how much, and even whether, she eats.
That basic principle both charges you with what you must do, and lets you off the hook when you have done it. You must get good food into the house, you must get a meal on the table and provide satisfying snacks, and you must do it all in a pleasant and supportive fashion.
But once you have done all that, you simply have to let go of it, turn the rest over to your child, and trust her to do her part.
She will. Based on research and experience, here are the facts about children’s eating:
Children will eat. They are capable of regulating their food intake. They generally react negatively to new foods but will usually accept them with time and experience. Parents can either support or disrupt children’s food acceptance and food regulation.
Children are interested in eating and capable of doing it. Research, and the survival of the species have shown this to be true. Children, like other people, are endowed with an insistent hunger and appetite. They are invested in their own survival. But they can’t get food for themselves—they can only appeal to their adults.
Even as newborns, children know how much they need to eat and are capable of taking the lead with feeding. To function effectively, however, they need a supportive parent who is willing and able to be sensitive and responsive to their messages about feeding. Parents who, for whatever reason, are unable to be attentive to infant eating cues make their children feel afraid that they won’t be provided for, and that distorts the feeding process.
If children seemingly have no interest in eating and in food, the problem is NOT that they lack a basic desire to eat. There is something else going on. A child’s negative experiences with eating can make her behave in contradictory ways. If parents are remote, a child might give up. If parents force, a child might lose interest.
In most cases, when you try to overrule a child’s natural eating cues, her eating ends up getting worse, not better. Children who are forced, cajoled, enticed or even tricked to eat, end up revolted by food and prone to avoid eating if they get a chance. Children who are deprived of food in an attempt to keep them thin become preoccupied with food, afraid they won’t get enough to eat, and prone to overeat when they get a chance.
Problems with Feeding
The feeding interaction should always be examined when a child’s growth is puzzling or when she is doing poorly with eating. If parents and children get into struggles about eating, it can interfere with the child’s ability to accept a variety of food or eat the right amount of food. Too often, health workers trying to resolve feeding problems look only at the foods that are being offered and at the child’s medical history. While those issues are important, they deal with only part of the story.
If a child is too fat or too thin, if she eats too much or too little, the problem could be the feeding interaction. Prevention of obesity can be started at birth by establishing a positive and supportive feeding relationship, one that allows the infant to accurately regulate her own food intake. It can be continued throughout the growing-up years by maintaining a division of responsibility in feeding.
If a distorted feeding relationship is not the cause of poor growth, it is almost certain to be the effect. People try too hard to feed children who grow poorly, and children end up eating less, not more, when feeders are over active.
If children are picky about eating, the problem is either too much pressure or too little support. Children eat best when parents follow their lead, set appropriate limits, and feed in a smooth, comfortable, and emotionally satisfying fashion. Children eat worst when parents are either domineering or neglectful in feeding.
Adolescent and adult eating disorders can have their antecedents in early childhood feeding interactions. Parents may be insensitive about feeding, and children can grow up feeling confused and anxious about their eating. The best way to prevent eating disorders is to have a positive feeding relationship throughout the growing-up years.
If a child is sick, it is especially difficult, and especially important, to maintain a positive feeding relationship. Illness often requires special feeding regimens that, in turn, put pressure on parents to take over with feeding. It doesn’t work any better to be overmanaging with a sick child than with a well child.
Advances in modern medicine are presenting a whole set of feeding problems that no one has had to deal with before. Babies survive who haven’t previously, and the methods used to insure their survival deprive them of the opportunity to learn to eat. (They are fed through the veins, or by tubes, for the first year, or even first several years, of life.) They can learn, but they—and their parents—need special help to do it—and special sensitivity to the feeding relationship.
Summary of the Book
In the early chapters, in the Basic Principles of Feeding
section, I have laid out what works and what doesn’t with feeding. Much is known. I have based my recommendations on my own experience, on extensive reading (I’ll share references with you as I go along) and on much consultation with parents and professionals
In the middle section of the book, Feeding as Your Child Grows,
I talk in concrete detail about how to feed children from infancy through adolescence. This middle section is about parenting—and parenting-through-feeding.
I think you will find, as I have, that applying parenting principles to feeding will allow you to understand some things about raising children that you’ve not understood before. I also think you will find it helpful to follow child—and feeding—development in an orderly fashion from one stage to the next. Each stage builds on and reflects the achievements of the one before—or exposes limitations resulting from earlier failure to achieve.
The final section of the book, Special Feeding Problems,
deals with children and their specific needs. I have referred to the problems earlier. Here, I will simply underscore what it takes to work with special-needs children—or, if at all possible, to prevent their becoming special needs children in the first place. The key is normal feeding.
To prevent feeding problems, or to confine them to the lowest possible level, you have to maintain a healthy feeding relationship throughout the growing-up years. Preventing obesity, eating disorders, aversion to food and objectionable eating behaviors starts at birth—with sympathetic and supportive nipple-feeding. It continues throughout childhood, with appropriate management of feeding based on the child’s emotional and developmental needs.
Throughout, the emphasis is on parenting. The best parenting provides both love and limits. These themes play themselves out in feeding, the same that they do in every other aspect of a child’s life. Feeding is a metaphor for the parent/child relationship overall. Appropriate feeding and healthy feeding relationships are part and parcel of appropriate parenting and healthy family relationships.
The best parenting grows out of a healthy marriage. Parents who get along well with each other, and support each other, do the best job with parenting—and feeding. Many times distortions in the feeding relationship can be traced back to distorted
interactions between the adults in the family.
Feeding doesn’t just happen. What you do with feeding can make a difference. I’ll give you lots of information that is helpful, and methods that WORK. Children will eat, and they can be positive and joyful about it. And you can help them eat, and, with any luck, discover some of those positive and joyful feelings yourself.
Some day I will write a book about adults’ eating and tell you how you can learn to eat in a way that is fun and intelligent. For now, you will have to let your children lead you. And you will. If you go through the motions (that I will tell you about) and keep your mouth shut and fingers crossed and the look of incredulity off your face, they will show you what healthy and normal eating is all about. They will, that is, unless your eating is too distorted.
I’ll be talking in the following pages about approaches and tactics that enhance feeding and the feeding relationship. This book is about real life feeding situations and the things that go wrong. And what it takes to fix them. And the things that go right. And how they got that way. Maybe you’ll find your situation here. If you do, I hope you can fix it. If you can’t fix it, I hope you will get help. It’s that important.
There is only so much that a book on feeding, or a book on parenting, can do to help. You can improve basically good parenting with a book like this. You can correct a lot of the conflict and misgivings that you feel about managing eating. But you
can’t fix poor parenting by reading, and you can’t correct seriously distorted eating attitudes and behaviors. You need more help than that. If you find this book does more to expose your limitations than to enable you to improve, you would benefit from getting professional help.
The issue at hand is how to work it out with your child with feeding. So, if you have ever had a toddler who came to the table and crossed his arms and said, I won’t eat,
read on.
2
Quit When the Job Is Done
Helping your child to eat as well as possible requires that you do your own job with feeding but not your child’s job, and that you know the difference. Parenting well with food demands that you find that gray area somewhere between the extremes of being neglectful (and not trying to help at all) and being domineering (and helping so much that it’s harmful rather than helpful). It’s very tricky business,
You find out what works by starting out with your intuition and some observations of your child, then using trial and error until you come up with something that is effective. It doesn’t pay to be rigid and opinionated, because you could be wrong. But it also doesn’t pay to do nothing at all because kids do need some help.
It’s much worse to be rigid and wrong (or even right) than to be flexible and wrong. Families that get into trouble are not the ones who try and fail. They are the ones who try and fail and try the same thing again and again even though it is not working. Families that get into trouble are also the ones who don’t even try at all.1
The Division of Responsibility in Feeding
To find the middle ground in feeding between rigidity and uninvolvement, I have found it enormously helpful to think in terms of a division of responsibility. Here, suitable for framing, is the golden rule for parenting with food:
Parents are responsible for what is presented to eat and the manner in which it is presented.
Children are responsible for how much and even whether they eat.
Blow it up, and post it on a placard in the middle of your table. Mail it to your Aunt Fanny, the one who is always bugging your kids to eat one more bite,
and telling them they have to eat . . . I made it especially for you.
You know, she’s the one who takes you to one side and tells you that in her day, kids weren’t allowed to leave food on their plates. Kids in her day also were undoubtedly not as picky as kids are nowadays. (It’s apparent, she will go on to tell you, that the problem is mothers working outside the home, or all those fast food franchises, or whatever happens to be your particular tender spot.)
Other than twitting Aunt Fanny, however, what does that golden rule really mean?
How the Division
Applies
In the first place, the division of responsibility in feeding means that parents have a very real responsibility for choosing food for the family. They are the ones who have to know enough about nutrition and about children’s abilities to ingest and digest food to select healthful food that is appropriate for them. They have to see to it that food gets bought and cooked, and that meals are on the table.
It all begins with choosing the milk feeding for a baby. Then moves up through choosing the right solid foods and knowing when to offer them, the transition to table food, eating for little children, helping school-age children be successful with their eating, giving teenagers enough (but not too much) help—all these ages and topics demand that parents know enough about food and nutrition, and about their child’s characteristics and abilities, to present appropriate food in a helpful way.
The division of responsibility assumes that parents will present food to children in a positive and supportive fashion. I will be using a lot of print in this book talking about the intricacies of that, so I will pretty much let it go for now. I will point out to you here, however, that to present food well to a child you have to feel good about it yourself. If you are really anxious about eating or finicky or have some real negative feelings, you had better get them resolved. Those feelings can permeate everything about your child’s eating.
The division of responsibility in feeding also means that parents have to agree on food. I know a couple (in fact, several couples) who are both so opinionated about food that neither will accept what the other cooks. In those situations I can absolutely guarantee you finicky children who will use their own likes and dislikes to manipulate their parents at mealtime. There are ways of working these situations out, but you have to want to, and have to like each other well enough to make the effort. Kids don’t do well with eating (or with anything else) when their parents don’t reach agreements with each other.
You can cause just as much havoc by doing too much as you can by doing too little. Maybe more. Once you have chosen food and presented it in a positive fashion, your job is done. You don’t have to get food into your child. That’s his job. The great majority of babies have the ability to suck and swallow, know how much they need to eat in order to grow properly, and can communicate that to you. The older children get, the more autonomy they have in managing their food intake. But the basic division of responsibility still holds—Parent: what/Child: how much.
How the Division
Helps
Parents of sick children and children who are growing poorly feel very relieved when they begin to share responsibility for feeding with their child. All parents, but these parents in particular, need to know when they have done enough. Knowing they have done all they can frees them to respect their child and to maintain their relationship, rather than getting caught up in struggles and anxiety overeating. And it saves their child, with his poor appetite, from becoming even more repulsed by food that is not only unappealing but is being forced on him. It also prevents the child from figuring out that he can blackmail his parents into almost anything by holding out the promise that he will eat. Even sick children don’t feel any happier when they are allowed to be tyrants.
There’s a lot of power in eating or not eating. If parents are over concerned about food acceptance, they are likely to let children get by with unacceptable behavior just to keep them around their food, hoping they will eat it. It follows from a child’s reasoning that if he has to be indulged to keep him at the table, it must not be such a special place to be. It is so much better to expect and enforce good behavior at mealtimes. THAT gives the message that the table is a special place to be, and if the child is going to be there, he needs to be pleasant.
Limiting Your Efforts
Not every problem feeding situation involves power struggles and manipulation. In most cases, in fact, children are simply communicating what they want and parents can hear it and respect it or not. Sometimes it takes real courage for parents to limit their efforts.
I’m remembering Alice Black. She was referred to me several years ago by a pediatrician asking me what I would recommend to increase the growth rate in little Alice. She was six months old, a beautiful, alert little child. However, she had gained only three pounds and five inches since birth. Alice’s parents had taken her for a chromosomal examination and for endocrine tests but no one could find anything wrong with her. Actually, other than her size, nothing WAS wrong with Alice. She was just tiny.
Her parents, of course, were concerned. They wanted to be sure that they were doing everything they could to encourage Alice to grow. But they said that she was very emphatic about how much she wanted to eat, and cried and fussed when they
tried to encourage her to take more food. We decided we would try concentrating her formula.
We knew we would have to be careful in doing this, because if we concentrated it too much we might dehydrate her. So we carefully figured it all out, and added enough sugar to her formula so it was about 7% higher in calories than it had been before. But Alice was a good little regulator, and rather than overeating a bit on the more-concentrated formula, she simply cut back the volume of her intake by 7%. No more, no less.
Undaunted, we decided that, rather than adding extra sugar to the formula we would add extra fat. Maybe, we reasoned, it was too sweet for her. So again we figured it all out and added enough fat to increase the calories by 7% from the regular formula. But, again, Alice was ahead of us and again she cut back her intake by 7%.
Again, we put her back on regular formula while we reconnoitered (whereupon she again increased the volume of her intake to the usual amount). Finally, we simply decreased the water to concentrate the formula, and down went her intake. At that point, we gave up. Our only other option would have been to tube feed her, and none of us wanted to do that. Tube feeding is an appropriate option for some kids who have real problems with the mechanics of eating or who simply don’t have the strength to eat enough. We’ll talk more about this in The Child Who Grows Poorly
(Chapter 13).
The parents decided they simply had to support the growth pattern that was normal for Alice. They moved away, and I did not see them until Alice was nine months old and weighed nine pounds. She was feeding herself tiny amounts of food from the table. She was pulling herself up and walking around things and startling everyone because she looked like a newborn.
Hard as it was, Alice’s parents did what they could and then let go of it. The outcome wasn’t ideal, but at least the parents weren’t making it harder for themselves and for her by struggling with her about her food intake.
It could have turned out like the little Louisiana boy I heard about when I was there doing a workshop. His parents were feeding him in the bathtub because they forced so hard and he fought back so hard, that together they made a terrible mess. He, too, was growing really poorly and his parents and doctor were pretty desperate to do something about it. So they tried to force the food in, and life became one long sequence of trying to feed him, dreading meals or recovering from them, and feeling terrible about the situation.
If you try too hard to help, you can destroy the very thing you are trying to save. You can get so fixated about a certain outcome you lose all perspective on the people involved.
Dividing Responsibility as Children Grow Up
The basic division of responsibility holds true throughout the growing-up years. It is based on respect for your child as an individual and on your taking appropriate responsibility to help out with the child’s growing up. The way the division of responsibility is applied, however, shifts as children grow.
Babies
With babies, it is relatively easy. You give them their milk feeding and they let you know when they are full or hungry. You try to please them and make them comfortable, because during the early months they are learning trust. You can’t spoil them, except by not giving them what they need. Babies whose needs are met become easier babies to take care of, not harder, because they