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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Aibu to have told dh that he needs to stop feeding our children

68 replies

Notsurewhatsgoingon · 06/08/2020 09:07

Hi all,

Dh is feeling upset and I feel guilty.
So he does all the shopping and most of the cooking (apart from when he's at work, he cooks most evening meals, I do daytime) . He is good at it. This is what he wants to do. I have asked a few times that I take over the shopping and most of the cooking and he swaps to 'my' chores which is pretty much everything else. Partly because I feel the devision of chores is unfair but mostly because his choice of food is rubbish.

Don't get me wrong he does cook tasty meals from scratch but everything is cooked with oil, butter etc and lots of it. The ingredients are often high salt and high sugar. Instead of veg making up the bulk of the meal it's things like pie with piles of mash and a tiny spoonful of veg.
I have let it slide because quite frankly I'm exhausted and it's one less job for me. However, it's got worse and worse and I'm not prepared to sit by and watch now. By worse I mean that he is feeding the children so much sugar. When I was in charge of meals and before I met dh the children ate a very low sugar diet and lots of veg and they were not fussy at all.
My eldest has become a very fussy eater (which may be part of her asd) so for an easy life dh just let's her eat what she likes. He refuses to give her sweets as he says its not good for her yet he will feed her endless sugary food. She complains she is hungry all day despite having eaten which annoys dh so I sat him down this morning and explained that yes she is hungry because she is eating food that is high in sugar and not much else and it's not filling. As an example she had yesterday, coco pops for breakfast, a jam sandwich and crisps for lunch, sausages, chips and beans for tea, as well as some treat snacks. So while he is not sat there feeding them piles of sweets and ice-cream it is all high sugar stuff. This is where he falls down, he thinks it's proper food so it's OK. I am concerned about my childrens health.
When I did the food shopping and cooking, sugary cereals, jam, chips etc were occasional and reserved for holidays for example. But they are becoming an everyday thing.
I never use oil to cook with and I told dh this.
I am struggling to lose weight. When I'm in charge of my food (such as through the day at work) I eat lots of veg and some fruit and it's all healthy low cal stuff but then I go home to a heavy, high cal dinner. I often feel I can't then refuse to eat it, so I eat a small amount but then I'm left hungry and will snack. I'm have stated eating less during the day to compensate for my dinner.
Its the same with the children I explained to dh that when they are with me and he's at work they do not have crisps or lots of sugar. They even drink water but dh does not believe they will.

I think this stems from how he was fed because his parents will make what looks like a hearty good meal but actually broken apart it's full of sugar, high in carbs and fried in oil. They do tend to cook pizza and nuggets for our children 'because that's what kids like'. Dh and his parents call it kid food and that's what kids eat. But it's not how I was brought up and it's not my experience.

Dh is now hurt because I basically told him I'm taking back over the food and I know this is something he likes to do for our family.
So aibu and perhaps I should have let it go? How do I teach dh what is actually healthy and make him see that children will eat these foods.

OP posts:
MadameMeursault · 06/08/2020 11:18

That would drive me mad! Plus, feeding kids that amount of crap is definitely neglect. You need to at the very least sit down with him and plan the meals for the week. Why is he cooking stuff for you that you don’t like? He needs to consider your wishes more, or you need to take back control.

youwereagoodcakeclyde · 06/08/2020 11:34

YABU
Surely some tweaks and the whole family can be on same page and having a balanced tasty diet? More sustainable than only you decide what everyone eats.
PS I think kids should have carbs in every meal and I use oil for cooking.

Eg instead of chips, beans, sausages
change the sausages to something else and add another veg or 2. If you are doing low carb, you just miss the chips?

Agree they should drink water!

AnneOfQueenSables · 06/08/2020 11:57

Hmm, I think it depends how you told him. You're coming across as very sanctimonious.
You're also rolling in too many issues which is probably caused by your anxiety eg you want him to do different chores; you don't want to eat what he cooks because you want to lose weight; your DD has ASD and possibly has developed food issues related to it; you're concerned about your DCs' diet. Can you recognise that's a lot of issues around food and meal preparation?
Actually, you need to tease out the different issues: division of labour - not because your DH isn't cooking to your standard but because you don't think the current division of labour is fair.
Your DD developing food issues - discuss how best to handle this with your GP or ASD support group if you have one. What your DH cooks for the DCs - balance his meals with ones that you make - adapt the schedule of cooking. You don't want to eat heavy meals - then don't - throw together a salad when you get in.

Notsurewhatsgoingon · 06/08/2020 13:09

@AnneOfQueenSables yep I do need to a focus on the issues as separate things and yes perhaps I have come across on here in a certain way but I'm just trying to explain myself well. I wouldn't think I was sanctimonious but sorry if I came across that way.
I approached dh in a let's work together to help us all eat better and take the burden off you way.

I am really anxious right now so small issues seem larger than they are perhaps. I also have a lot on my plate right now literally and figuratively.

OP posts:
AnneOfQueenSables · 06/08/2020 13:17

I am really anxious right now
I can tell and I sympathise because I can spiral and catastrophise when I'm feeling anxious. Just remember to take time to breathe. You don't need to solve all this at the same time and you'll get further with changing the habits of the entire family if you can bring them with you rather than confronting them and making them feel not as smart or not as capable.

Angelina82 · 06/08/2020 13:19

Your kids health is more important than your husband’s hurt feelings. But perhaps you could compromise by you doing the shopping and letting him continue to cook using the healthier foods you have bought. A meal plan might be a good idea too.

MamaDane · 06/08/2020 13:25

YANBU at all. It's fine for short term but long term it's just not healthy at all, for the two of you but especially for your children.

JulesCobb · 06/08/2020 13:25

Op, you're of course totally right.

Meal planning is most definitely the way forward.
HOWEVER, so is sharing the household tasks more equally. Make a list if all the household tasks, include the emotional load, write it all down in black and white and present that at the same time. Maybe dven create a pie Grin chart to show the time each tasks takes. Although that might be seen as a step too far.

cooliebrown · 06/08/2020 13:48

Even when I took over all cooking to try and ensure that my children ate healthily and developed a good relationship with food exOH was unable to resist undermining, by stuffing the children with chocolate and sweets between school and dinnertime. I remember collecting overweight DS14 from exOH place, to find him eating a fried egg, fried bacon and fried sausage sandwich made with fried bread.

exOH had a problematic relationship with food; an advantage of separate households was the opportunity to model a more healthy approach.

roarfeckingroarr · 06/08/2020 13:52

YANBU at all.

He's feeding the kids utter crap. I don't agree with the "kids" food either. I always ate what my parents ate, sometimes with moderations if very spicy. Why set kids up for a lifetime of poor food choices by getting them used to a narrow, beige, high sugar diet?

1forAll74 · 06/08/2020 14:24

I think that you should just get together on this food matter. As in sitting down with your Husband,and to try and plan a better way of eating etc. As in what is bought food wise, and better ways to cook things. Things don't have to be expensive or exotic, just not to have an overload of fatty things.

Your Husbands cooking styles,might be a hard habit to break, but it's annoying , and worrying you, so things have to change.

QuestionMarkNow · 06/08/2020 14:37

Sit down together and out a menu for the week. This should include breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks.
Then he can do the shopping according to that.

I’ll approach it as a good way to save money and not waste food. Plus easier as no need to wonder what you will eat for lunch/dinner.
And of course, much more balanced meals.

Having said that, I would also push him to be more engaged on the HW front too. Shopping plus cooking one meal isn’t a lot (I know, that’s about what I can do due to health issues and I’m very aware it’s leav8ng DH with the bulk of things to do)

shas19 · 06/08/2020 14:46

Kid food, ughhh. My house they get a choice on Friday, which yes probably end up being pizza or something out of the freezer. My 5yr old eats anything, like for instance right now ham salad sandwich (loves lettuce and cucumber atm), some crisps, strawberries, cheesy triangle and an orange. Maybe have him have a look at recipes that replaces fats and sugars with other things. I made a katsu curry last week but the sauce had courgette, apple, carrots, onions and garlic with all the spices and kids would never of noticed the veg as didnt dp. Saying that if I could cook e everything in butter I probs would, love it. But our bodies balance!

Whatwouldnanado · 19/08/2020 00:39

Sounds as though he's not really cooking but doing little more than heating stuff up and slinging things in the fryer. You are right to be concerned about the habits he's forming. Why don't you both have fun shopping with the kids, get them to chose some fruit and veg, etc try new stuff and get them interested in really cooking? Lots in the telly/interwebs to help engage them. Meal plan and a family. Cereal once a week, find more interesting breakfasts and alternatives for lunch and dinner.

MustShowDH · 19/08/2020 01:00

Feeling like a really shit Mum right now.

bluebluezoo · 24/08/2020 18:11

Plus, feeding kids that amount of crap is definitely neglect

It is definitely NOT neglect. The kids are fed, clean and healthy. Social services would laugh if you tried to report these kids as neglected.

O/p you sound like you’ve bough into the fat/sugar/carbs is bad thing.

Children need roughly balanced diets. A couple of swaps, like pp have said weetabix or toast on occasion instead of cocopops every day, a bit more fruit and veg, and they won’t be far off.

It sounds more like it’s variety they need.

ScrapThatThen · 24/08/2020 18:50

I see your point, but I think there's more benefit on working together rather than all or nothing you or him. Why not get him and the kids to look at the Change4life meal mixer as a starting point? Or agree to fill a quarter of the plate with veg. Or do a project on hidden sugar. Or cut oil use on half. He's clearly interested and enjoys this task.

TooLittleTooLate80 · 24/08/2020 19:08

I'm not voting as I don't think you've shown enough evidence of his range being unhealthy and how much healthier your menu would be - we seen many disagreements on here as to what is healthy or not. That said, its easier to achieve a balance over the course of a week or so than focussing on each meal individually so maybe a better approach would be to alternate meals or join thinking in a weekly meal plan.

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