Food and eating what's put in front of you

When I was a child you ate what was put in front of you, if you were lucky there wouldn't be to much that you didn't like or you found ways to get around it, like, I'd eat my brussels sprouts first so as I'd have the rest of the dinner to take the taste away. This was a common experience for my age group growing up, there wasn't much in the way of convienience food, fish finger and sausages, but pretty much everything else had to be cooked from scratch.

Jump forward 20 years and there was loads more convienence foods and people not only didn't cook much, but allowed children to choose what food they'd eat and the parents would get in a terrible flap when the children wouldn't eat. I tried this for a bit with my kids and then got fed up and allowed them to each choose 5 things they really didn't like and I wouldn't serve them, but everything else they had to eat and new things were up for disucssion.

Jump forward another 20 years and I was often told that I was cruel for not allowing my children to eat what they wanted when they wanted and for making them sit at the table. But they really enjoyed sitting at the table, they enjoued real vegetables and real food. After my son came home of rxmas after his first uni term, he was disgusted that there were people older than him who would only eat pizza and breakfast cereal and drink coke.

I know htat for many ND food is difficult, things taste and feel different to us and many of us want a beige diet. But do you feel that you would of been better off if youd' been made to eat what was in front of you or be hungry until you were served something you did like. Hwo do your childhood experiences of food and eating effect you now? DO you eat a wide range of foods or are youn very selective?

Parents
  • This is a sensitive subject for me because of my mother. 

    As children we had it drilled into us to eat up everything and leave nothing behind.  She constantly went on how millions of people in the world were going hungry and we should be grateful for every scrap of food.

    WHAT A HYPOCRITE!

    when grew up i discovered how she wasted food for the most trivial reason.

    1. A sack of 5kg potatoes which I bought went straight in the bin because the potatoes were washed, she believed that everything had to be done from scratch.  Potatoes had to be covered in mud.  So she could wash them, if someone else had washed them she refused to eat them.
    2. A pack of 80 tea bags went in the bin because they were circular,  she insisted that they had to be rectangular. 
    3. A cup if coffee i made for her went down the sink because I hadn't boiled the milk.
    4. A 2 litre bottle of supermarket own brand milk that my sister bought her went straight down the sink because she insisted on 1 litre bottles of channel island gold tops. 

    Anything which was not to her liking, in the bin.

Reply
  • This is a sensitive subject for me because of my mother. 

    As children we had it drilled into us to eat up everything and leave nothing behind.  She constantly went on how millions of people in the world were going hungry and we should be grateful for every scrap of food.

    WHAT A HYPOCRITE!

    when grew up i discovered how she wasted food for the most trivial reason.

    1. A sack of 5kg potatoes which I bought went straight in the bin because the potatoes were washed, she believed that everything had to be done from scratch.  Potatoes had to be covered in mud.  So she could wash them, if someone else had washed them she refused to eat them.
    2. A pack of 80 tea bags went in the bin because they were circular,  she insisted that they had to be rectangular. 
    3. A cup if coffee i made for her went down the sink because I hadn't boiled the milk.
    4. A 2 litre bottle of supermarket own brand milk that my sister bought her went straight down the sink because she insisted on 1 litre bottles of channel island gold tops. 

    Anything which was not to her liking, in the bin.

Children
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