wenrob
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2008
- Messages
- 10,566
I have been following along on this thread but have avoided posting as people get highly defensive when it comes to honest discussion about obesity but this is also one of my most distinct mom memories.Mom of 4 now adults. One of my kids was a chicken nugget Mac and cheese picky eater. All 4 kids were breast fed and raised the same with home cooked meals each night.
My biggest mom guilt memory is (one time)him crying at the table because he didn't like what was served and couldn't leave the table until he tried his food.
He's now my tallest, thinnest, most adventurous and most world traveled.
So please don't pat yourself too much on the back for 'doing it right' and judge other parenting styles.
I was one of those moms who thought ‘picky’ eaters were made not born. That is until my DS came along. My twins were born five weeks early and were teeny, tiny and have been underweight their entire lives. (and still are at the age of 18 even though they are now eating me out of house and home

In that time I figured out two things- definitely texture issues and two his mouth was so small and his teeth so crowded that is was very difficult for him to chew meat. (I should have realized the second sooner as I have the same problem) I never made separate meals but I started making softer cuts of meat and would not force the issue on things that would make him gag like mashed potatoes and rice. In their place he could have a double serving of veggies. Once his teeth were fixed he’s become a human eating machine. By far my most adventurous eater now and will try anything. He also still keeps trying things he doesn’t like. We still tease him about all the chicken nugget orders at fancy restaurants and Ranch (which he rarely uses now) running through his veins but I feel like fighting him at that time would have kept him in that space of only eating those things.
After this experience I’m convinced that if a kid is “picky” there’s most likely an underlying reason behind it and HUGE apologies to any parent I might have side eyed in the past. And you know what? Sometimes you just don’t like things. It’s okay for kids to have preferences too.