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Old 10-08-2008, 06:20 PM   #1
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Feed the kid

Brody just turned 3 and he does not like to eat. He is skinny as can be but prefers to just get by. We have brought him to the docs and they came back with all these possible ideas but really were no help. I say he is just skinny and does not like to eat. Any tips? Help?!
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Old 10-08-2008, 06:33 PM   #2
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Sounds just like our 5 year old- it's amazing how little he gets by on. The 2 year old eats more than me
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Old 10-08-2008, 08:46 PM   #3
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Little IBD used to be the same way. My mama told me that when she is hungry she will eat. Will he eat vitamins or drink a vitamin shake??
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Old 10-08-2008, 08:51 PM   #4
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I've always heard that a child will not starve himself (provided he has access to food.)

My youngest nephew, age 4, challenges the basic definition of "picky"--he will only eat things that are orange (Cheetos, Cheez Its, candy corn, etc.) and Texas Toast. (Bleh!!!) He's the size of a standard 7 year old (the same size as Hop's Cowboy, but 3 months younger.)

Hang in there. Give him Flintstones vitamins, and he won't starve. He'll hit a growth spurt eventually and eat you out of house and home.

Good luck!
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Old 10-08-2008, 08:55 PM   #5
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If you don't want to make him eat, I suggest still having regular meals and snack times, where he has to "taste" some of his food, but isn't forced to eat it all. And he has to sit there w/ the food in front of him until everyone else is done - might eat some more.

Maybe fun cooking activities too - we used to "help" and graze at the same time.
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Old 10-08-2008, 08:57 PM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoHall View Post
I've always heard that a child will not starve himself (provided he has access to food.)

My youngest nephew, age 4, challenges the basic definition of "picky"--he will only eat things that are orange (Cheetos, Cheez Its, candy corn, etc.) and Texas Toast. (Bleh!!!) He's the size of a standard 7 year old (the same size as Hop's Cowboy, but 3 months younger.)

Hang in there. Give him Flintstones vitamins, and he won't starve. He'll hit a growth spurt eventually and eat you out of house and home.

Good luck!
Flinstone vitamins Have you had one of those lately. They are disgusting. Actually I have a whole bottle I can mail you...You know they make vitamins in gummy form now.
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Old 10-08-2008, 08:59 PM   #7
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Flinstone vitamins Have you had one of those lately. They are disgusting. Actually I have a whole bottle I can mail you...You know they make vitamins in gummy form now.
I haven't had one in a long time--I used to LOVE them. I think my nephew actually takes the gummy vitamins.

They also have gummy bear type things that have a full serving of fruits and/or veggies. One of my BFFs gets them from one of those health food companies. The brown veggie ones are pretty nasty, but some of the rest are okay.
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Old 10-08-2008, 10:28 PM   #8
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BobbyJ, he sounds like my neice, MiniChick....although she is very healthy and loves fruit and carrots. I would suggest not forcing him, he already knows what his little body needs. Vitamins are a good idea...forget the Flintstones stuff...go to the "Health of It" and get their suggestions for vitamins that don't have dye, etc......

If he wants chicken fingers, give him chicken fingers and try to make other foods look like chicken fingers. Good luck! I obviously didn't have this problem with my baby boy!
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Old 10-08-2008, 10:31 PM   #9
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i don't have any children, so i can't really suggest, i do have nephews though, one never eats and the other would eat you out of house and home.

i have seen this before and it seems interesting enough.
http://www.deceptivelydelicious.com/site/
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Old 10-08-2008, 10:48 PM   #10
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My 5 year old is very picky -- he's gotten better in recent years but it's still sometimes a struggle to get him to eat.

From age 1 to about 3.5 he subsisted on fruit and waffles with peanut butter. The doctor told me that if he ate that every day for the rest of his life, he would be just fine. I stopped worrying after that.

He still doesn't eat much meat other than hot dogs and some chicken, but he loves fruit, cheese, broccoli, carrots, milk, cereals, yogurt etc, and eats a PB&J sandwich every day for lunch. Spaghettios are the default dinner. Tonight he ate his quesadilla and he has recently discovered fish sticks. It's been small incremental victories ... your little guy will get there!
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Old 10-08-2008, 11:16 PM   #11
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Been there...still there...with a 12 yr old that even grew 5 inches last year. Ever since I put his first real food in front of him at 8 months old he has pushed it away. When he was younger I tried to wait him out and not cater to him but he would not eat! He doesn't eat fruits or vegetables. I have always had to buy what he likes and basically make him something different for meals. BUT he is content with very simple things. And then one week he likes some things and the next week he doesn't. He will eat the same thing for weeks on end and then all the sudden he's done. He has a super amazing sense of smell so I'm guessing he is a super taster too. He does take a multi-vitamin every day. He's basically a big pain in the butt but he is by far the healthiest of my two kids and rarely gets sick.
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Old 10-09-2008, 12:41 AM   #12
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I just had my nephews for 5 days, full time. One is almost Brody's age. He ate everything vigorously just until recently. Now he is starting to get a little picky and not eating as much. His older brother (7) eats quicker and there was only so long he would sit before begging to be excused from the table. Then the little one wants to leave too. Most of the time he sits and eats, but when he gets distracted and doesn't eat what I think he should have consumed, I let him do something else while he ate. Worked like a charm. He almost ate a whole pork loin and 10 green beans while watching his brother play Club Penguin. I'm all for family time at the table, but a little game to distract him while eating and encourage more bites seems to help.

At lunchtime, we played a little game at the table as well. I would beg him not to bite the head off the hot dog and of course he had to. "Noooo don't eat me", like the gingerbread man in Shrek. I also let him help, like press the buttons on the microwave and spread peanut butter.

If it's any consolation, his older brother was lean like Brody at that age, still lean and tall now, and ate almost 4 slices of pizza last week. Yes, in one sitting. and I made him a belly buster of pancakes, eggs, toast, and sausage --at his request- before school.

So, save your money, he'll be eating you out of house and home soon enough.
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Old 10-09-2008, 02:27 AM   #13
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How much physical activity does he get during the day?

Does he have friends and access to playground equipment or run around the beach? Or does he like to sit quietly and play with toys and watch TV. Is he more apt to eat during days with lots of physical activity?...like going to the beach and jumping in the gulf for hours on end?

As long as you can get his required vitamins in him and have some healthy snacks (fruit, veg, cheese, etc) around when he does want to munch on something, he should be OK. "Forcing and badgering" him to eat at this very young age (even though you do it out of love and concern) could give the process of eating meals with the family a negative spin later on. To get him in the habit of proper dining habits, you may let him help prepare the family meals and sit down to eat with you at the proper times you establish. Of course "desserts and treats" are totally off limits unless he does "eat properly" quid pro quo-style.

Young children are more in tune with their bodies and what their body needs to sustain itself and grow--as long as you cleared him of physical and mental problems, I don't think nature will let him starve himself to death. He's just a skinny kid. He's probably saving up his appetite till he's 13...at which time he'll start eating you out of house and home.
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Old 10-09-2008, 07:00 AM   #14
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bobbyj - we know the type. same kid lives here. all the above is great advice. this is what we've learned:

provide a lot of opportunity in a variety of foods for him to try.
never force or threaten - it just does not work and can make eating time very unpleasant.
little bribes are okay. why not.
cook together in the kitchen.
take him out to eat all kinds of foods, not just kid stuff.
try consistently having sit down meals together with family - not just the kid sitting down to eat which can become a habit if he is not on your eating schedule.

our kid lives on Pad Thai noodles from a Thai restaurant, eggrolls, some fruit, honey nut cheerios and peanut butter waffles (nutri-grain w/blueberries), some seafood. he has gradually added cheesedip with tortillas, crab legs, shrimp, bbq ribs, an occasional carrot or celery stick with pnut butter. oh, and chocolate = but no dessert until the meal is done (and let him eat what he can even if its just a little). orange juice, milk, chocolate milk, water. and an occasional softdrink when eating out - as long as he's eating.

he has actually added a few foods, and subtracted even more along the way. pasta is off the list now, as well as oatmeal. I guess they go through food phases.

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Old 10-09-2008, 07:13 AM   #15
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Bobby-has your pediatrician gone over your child's growth chart with you? I find this is one of the most reassuring tools for parents who are convinced their youngsters are going to shrivel up. If you want I have a book entitled 'Food Fights' I will be happy to lend you-it is a roadmap to making peace at the dinner table.
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Old 10-09-2008, 07:19 AM   #16
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I have lots of advice on this one. First, don't panic. Second, don't get sucked in to giving him the sweet, vitamin packed meal substitutes.

My kids were all in the 25% for height and weight and didn't eat much at all when they were little. My goal became to always have healthy food offered to them and then not sweat it too much. Just like dieters, offer 6 small meals a day. If he likes something that is healthy, have a lot of that on hand and build on it. Grapes, raisins, nuts, peanut butter, cheerios, mac and cheese (as healthy as you can afford).
One of my kids hated bread. She ate a flour tortilla with peanut butter and applesauce rolled up every day for a year. I would put ground up spinach and carrots and zucchini in their spaghetti. One of them liked turkey rolled up in a piece of cheese so we went with that. Veggies with salad dressing are good finger food.
Try not to change your diet to accomodate him completely, just incorporate a little of what you know he will eat with a little of the "big people food." So if dinner is meatloaf and green beans and he will only eat mac and cheese, give him a little of each. Even if he doesn't touch the meatloaf, it is there and you can encourage him to give it a try.

Another trick we used was to let them help shop and pick out fruits and veggies and help plan the menu, we also let them grow their own. Amazing how a kid will eat a green bean or pepper if he planted the seed himself. He isn't too young to do that! He is also old enough to make his own food. Give him a butter knife and his favorite ingredients and watch him go to town. He can cut and spread things. Give him a plate with some cheese slices, crackers and a butter knife and let him cut the cheese to go on the crackers. Spencer was making his own PBJ's when he was 2. Bagel or english muffin pizzas that he puts together and watches them cook. Let him pour the measured water into instant oatmeal and put it in the microwave. I found that the more involved they were in making the food, the more inclined they were to eat it.

If it helps....the kids are now 18, 16, and 14 and very healthy. The younger two are taller than me. My son (14) is wearing a size 12 shoe and going through a gallon of milk a day He loves to eat lamb and duck and limas and just about everything else. The 18 yo is a sous chef at the Ritz Carlton and the 16 yo's favorite food is sushi. They really do catch up and if you don't totally cave and have them try other things, eventually, they will like more and more variety.
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Old 10-09-2008, 07:40 AM   #17
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My mom told me that kids only eat as much as they need. Sometimes Jackie won't eat her own sandwich but as soon as I make one for myself...she's all over it. I usually end up eating hers and she eats mine...

Just wait til he's 11 or 12...you'll wonder where he puts it all.

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Old 10-09-2008, 10:39 AM   #18
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When my 5 yr old was younger he was very picky. No not just picky, disinterested in food. It started at birth and we fought to keep him in the same weight percentage. At about 3, he was veggie-free, which worried me. But my pediatrician told me that fruits and veggies are in the same category -- so as long as he is getting fruit, no worries. He ate lots of fruits so It made me feel much better!! The last year has made a huge amount of difference. I no longer consider him a picky eater although he still can be disinterested at times. (He didn't get that from me!)

Now my 2 yr old is going through the same thing, but with less fruits. . . . However, he's maintaining his own on the weight charts. So, I'm not going to worry about it and hope he eventually snaps out of it as well.
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Old 10-09-2008, 12:56 PM   #19
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Wow! Thank you all sooooooo much for all the great advice! Momma has been worried sick. My older daughters were a lot like Brody. Kelsey ate nothing but cold hot dogs and apple juice for 6 months. They both are taller then me now!

I appreciate everyone and this thread reminds me what a great community SoWal is!

BTW, today for breakfast Brody had one piece of toast with lite butter and honey. He loves honey (small doses) and likes to act like he is Winnie the Pooh. He also ate a bunch of frozen grapes. The only way he will eat a grape is frozen.

Last night he gorged on edamine(sp). I told him it was what Popeye eats. Strong to finish because he eats his spinach! He then wanted to wrestle me and his punch to my nose tells me he is in good shape!

Thanks again to everyone that posted.

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Old 10-09-2008, 01:26 PM   #20
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BJ - I know you guys will notice phases when he eats almost nothing, and then phases when he eats way more than usual. we've always noticed this with spidey (btw, brody needs a sowal name - let's not use his real name - that's no funn).

guess they are having growing spells, or not feeling well, or using more energy, etc. when the kid is in a no eating stage, then I've found its best to let him stick with the foods he likes without trying to push other stuff. be sensitive to the phase... they are very distinct phases.

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Old 10-09-2008, 03:10 PM   #21
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My mother used reverse phsycology on me, she'd say if I wouldn't eat it, "GOOD, MORE FOR ME!!!" Then she'd sit there completely enjoying the food! With my kids, I used similar tactics, their father also let them taste stuff like Ranch dressing when they were still in the high chair. They loved it. You have to SELL the food, and it really has to taste good when they finally try it, otherwise they won't believe you the next time. Dad used to give me raw oysters when I was little, I loved them. They had lots of flavor! Don't be afraid to use seasoning and butter.
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Old 10-09-2008, 03:20 PM   #22
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: 2282 Scenic 30A West
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Jennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura aboutJennifer Steele Saunders has a spectacular aura about
Let him eat cake!

Isn't there someone in your house that is a bada$$ baker?

At first I meant it as a joke, but now that I really think about it maybe you could hide some pureed fruit in it. You've probably already tried that, though.

I think he'll be JUST fine...thinness runs in your family...on both sides, and you all are freakin' gorgeous.
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