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AIBU?

AIBU to stop giving my toddler proper lunch?

33 replies

lola88 · 18/06/2013 13:01

He doesn't eat it anyway no matter what I give him it ends up in the bin, he eats his breakfast and dinner fine but has no interest in lunch.

Today I've given him a bit of my sandwich a yogurt and some bits of chicken tikka ( because it can go back in the fridge) and some dunkers which he's ate a good bit off. Is it ok to just give him bits of mine and a snack instead of proper lunch? I've been told he will never eat lunch if I don't make him I'm making the famous rod for my own back by pandering to it but I can't afford to be throwing food away every day.

Just to give you an idea usually get would get sandwich or soup or an egg, but I've tried everything from breakfast food to dinner food and he's just not bothered. It also doesn't matter if we are at home our out or any other things like tv being on or off he still doesn't bother

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lola88 · 18/06/2013 13:02

he's 16mo btw

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Sunny20 · 18/06/2013 13:05

Have you tried giving him a picnic lunch? My daughter much prefers little bits of everything for example she may have a quarter of a sandwich with chopped up fruit a small yoghurt, cheese cubes, carrot sticks, sometimes a few crisps something along them lines. I find she eats this a lot more than if I gave her a big meal at lunch time.

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wigglesrock · 18/06/2013 13:08

Mine is 2 but from about 17 months or so she's had a bit of cheese, chicken or tuna, some fruit, tomatoes.

She's never been keen on hot lunches so she's just always had a bit of this, a bit of that.

I used to be really stressed about it, but it's just what she likes. I couldn't eat a hot/proper meal for lunch.

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ThisReallyIsNotSPNopeNotAtAll · 18/06/2013 13:09

My son is 3 and lives off picnic lunches.

Cold pasta, coleslaw, cheese chunks, cucumber slices, slice of ham and some carrot sticks.

He will eat this. He isn't one for warm dinners.

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GhoulWithADragonTattoo · 18/06/2013 13:09

A bit of sandwich, some chicken, a yogurt and some dunkers? That is a lunch. If the sandwich had some tomato or you substituted a banana in for the dunkers I'd even say it sounds well balanced. If you prefer to give your DS a bit of your lunch at this age I think that's fine. I used to give my two a single slice of bread with a small amount of the filling and then offer more if they ate it all. Then they'd have fruit or yogurt afterwards. There's no point in wasting food.

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nextphase · 18/06/2013 13:09

Yep - what abut having a "shared platter" which you can both dig into, rather than him getting yours - same idea, different pyscology!

My 2 also adore picnics and snack plates as a quick meal.

Sounds like your doing great, and hes just not hungry at lunch time.

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Ray81 · 18/06/2013 13:11

Perhaps it's the age, my DS1 will not eat lunch either he's also 16months, I've also found that he prefers proper 'meals' ifkwim. So I just give him snacks of fruit and yogurt in the afternoon and sometimes a biscuit.
Although he also a pain because he likes to nap between 12-2 so difficult to get lunch into him at lunch time.

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LST · 18/06/2013 13:11

That's all we have ever given our ds at lunch. He's 19mo. I think he's having an omelette now (I'm faffing upstairs dp is feeding him) but I only ever give him sarnies or toast and pasta shapes etc at lunch. He always has a big tea.

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B52s · 18/06/2013 13:11

Sometimes they're just not hungry. I have a grazer and I provide 'lunch food' over a period, in packets, small bowls, just hand bits to him when I can. It's not so much about getting a 'meal' into them, more of getting something into them. Sometimes he doesn't eat any lunch at all, but will eat more at dinnertime. HTH

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squeakytoy · 18/06/2013 13:12

sounds like he is just not that hungry.. once he is running around more, then he is going to eat more

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UC · 18/06/2013 13:21

YANBU. You are being sensible.

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1Veryhungrycaterpillar · 18/06/2013 13:23

I bought a segmented plate so we always use that for a picky lunch

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lola88 · 18/06/2013 13:24

He's full of energy always running around and big for his age so I do think he's just not hungry, I've been thinking of just doing snacky bits and bobs lunches for a while things that can go back in the fridge/cupboard if not eaten but have been put off by the rod for your own back mob.

My experience with toddlers is limited to my niece who always ate 'proper' lunches and friends kids who always seem to sit up and eat a full meal while I struggle with DS to get him to eat a little bit.

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ReindeerBollocks · 18/06/2013 13:26

DD used to have proper lunches quite late in the afternoon normally around 2 ish. Nursery really messed this up and she isn't keen on lunch anymore. She grazes though and I just provide fruit and small snacks throughout the morning to keep her going.

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1Veryhungrycaterpillar · 18/06/2013 13:35

My Lo had a lunch of pitta strips, avocado, hummus, cucumber and strawberries, if tats not 'proper food' I don't know what is, why does it have to be hot? Ignore them YANB

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JudithOfThePiece · 18/06/2013 13:36

I don't see why soup or an egg is a good and 'proper' lunch, but some sandwich and piece of chicken is not. It all seems fine to me. My DD (2yo) has a sandwich most days, yesterday we both had beans on toast. Often, she has two smaller snacky te lunches either side of her nap.

Once your DC is at school, they will eat lunch at lunch time. It will either be a packed lunch or a hot meal. If they don't eat that, they will go hungry but chances are, with everyone eating around them, they will eat something. DS (5yo) will eat either option reasonably well and he's never been a very enthusiastic eater.

I think you sound like you are doing a grand job and I see no evidence of any rods. Smile

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MiaowTheCat · 18/06/2013 13:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

JudithOfThePiece · 18/06/2013 13:54

Miaow - that must be the same theoretical position that proves chips taken from someone else's plate have no calories Grin

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ConfusedPixie · 18/06/2013 16:02

As somebody else said, some toddlers are just grazers. My 2.7yo charge still is. I give her a lunchbox with a sandwich, different fruit/nuts/seeds/dried fruit, cucumber, biscuit, hummus etc at 11:30ish, she eats a decent amount of everything then and for the next hour will graze on the rest of it and eat a banana too. They get into the routine of set meals later.

I have noticed that those who go to nursery seem to be more used to set meal times though, probably because they don't really get to graze at nursery dread to think of how manic a room of toddlers grazing would be Grin

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Emsmaman · 18/06/2013 16:17

I only go for finger foods for DD, apart from the odd scrambled egg or pasta. Her fave food one day will be ignored the next, so I find best to give an assortment of foods covering most food groups, then see what she finishes off and asks for more of. No point wasting time/energy/food cooking a hot meal that is going to go to waste. (BTW she eats magnificently at nursery but that's another matter.)

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MrsTerryPratchett · 18/06/2013 16:53

My theory, and I have a fantastic eater at 2.6, is that they eat what they need in terms of volume. DD will sometimes eat like a horse, sometimes pick. She is active, happy and the food she eats is balanced so the amounts don't matter. Just make sure that what they eat is good food and they will regulate themselves. DD snacks on fruit and veg so the proper meals at breakfast and lunch tend to be more protein/starch.

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wonderingsoul · 18/06/2013 17:02

ds2 used to be really bad at eating, essp at that age. id be lucky to get one meal into him.

random question does he have a nap before lunch when he has milk.. or does he drink alot of milk during the day?

ds2 was filling up on milk..so wouldnt eat..which meant id give give him milk.. it was a horid circle with out me even realizing how much milk he had had.

even if thats not the case, doing what you do is perfectly fine, your not spoiling him or making a rod fo ryour own back by letting him have some of yours or just putting little bits out for him.

ds1 and 2 are good eaters now, but they prefer to eat little but offten, some days they will eat and eat and eat and eat others.. they barely have a proper meal.

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Flobbadobs · 18/06/2013 17:02

Another one here, breakfast, cold lunch Dinner and light supper. She's 16 months Smile
An egg with soldiers is an excellent luch btw (and one which may be served tomorrow)

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spiderlight · 18/06/2013 17:05

When mine was a toddler, I discovered, by a long long long process of elimination, that the only lunch worth offering him was 'crackers and cheese and tomatoes and olives'. And it had to be given its full title, in the correct order: offer him 'crackers and cheese and olives and tomatoes' and the world would end!

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chezchaos · 18/06/2013 17:12

My toddler has days when he has little interest in lunch. I tend to make him a smoothie with banana, yoghurt, oats, juice, and frozen berries, which he will always devour. Incidentally he has seconds and thirds of every nursery lunch

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