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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Stepdaughter eating too much fruit

639 replies

Katey83 · 04/05/2023 22:47

My dsd, 7, moved in with us full
time back in January. Our situation is that I am higher earner and breadwinner on Mat leave with 5 month old baby, husband does some part time work that doesn’t bring in much (he runs our family vehicle and contributes towards household costs such as shopping etc). Dsd’s mother does not contribute towards her expenses while she is living here (indefinitely for now).

At the moment, we are on a tight budget due to my mat leave - and one thing driving me crazy is dsd eating all our fruit. We will buy a weekly shop with 2 bunches bananas, few punnets of berries, peaches, melon, grapes, tangerines etc and she will eat her way through the lot in two days. For example, yesterday she ate a punnet and a half of raspberries, three peaches, four tangerines, some grapes, a slice of melon and two bananas. This is on a school day (so she eats this at breakfast and in the evening). She is then obviously reluctant to finish a proper evening meal or try anything she dislikes. She also has had a couple of accidents with loose stools (imo this is from bingeing on fruit). She takes from the fridge without asking and leaves nothing for DH and I.

I’ve spoken to my dh about this and he says she is a growing child and at least fruit is good for her - fair enough I buy fruit partly for her to eat, but the amount seems greedy to me, and beyond what is necessary for a healthy child. I think reasonable is a small
bowl of berries and grapes along with a tangerine and banana after school as a snack and then one piece for dessert. She can also have melon and banana for breakfast along with cereal and a yoghurt. I want her to learn that food costs money, we don’t have a bottomless pit of it and you don’t just gorge on whatever you want because you are bored/tired/didn’t eat your dinner, you ration portions in a family so everyone gets a fair share, and sometimes eat less tasty things to maintain a healthy diet.

We provide substantial breakfast, lunch and dinner portions, and I try to accommodate her tastes (though she can’t just have fish fingers and strawberries as a diet, which would be her preference).When she first came to us she was also gorging like this on sweets - that’s been easier to nip in bud as dh can see how unhealthy it is. I want to handle this in a compassionate way, would I be unreasonable to stop buying fruit until dh agrees to a sensible ration for dsd?

OP posts:
Squidlydoo · 04/05/2023 22:49

Maybe she’s thirsty or vitamin deficient? Try getting her to increase her water and offer a vitamin- then ration

Starlitestarbright · 04/05/2023 22:49

Comfort eating, she gone with living with dm to step mum and and her df.

Blort · 04/05/2023 22:50

Unpleasant to call a 7 year old eating fruit "greedy". But it's reasonable to expect her to eat her evening meal before snacking her way through fruit.

Tacocatgoatcheesepizza · 04/05/2023 22:51

Not unreasonable at all. That’s a ridiculous amount of fruit to be eating in one day, and like you say, never mind the cost, she is going to end up making herself ill. You can have too much of anything, no matter how healthy it might be!

The cost would be annoying me too - that’s easily £5+ worth of fruit in a day.

Thelondonone · 04/05/2023 22:52

My kids would do this if I let them but they don’t, as I wouldn’t. They have to put berries in a small ikea plastic bowl (I did it for them when they were little). We can’t afford it and it is a lot of sugar. Offer carrot sticks instead. my kids aren’t allowed to help themselves to anything though I’d rarely say no (Mumsnet version of crueelka) I’d be bankrupt.

WhoHidTheCoffee · 04/05/2023 22:53

That is a lot of fruit! Two practical suggestions: is breaking down the frequency of shopping an option so it isn’t all there to be eaten straight away? And is your DH aware that fruit is also bad for teeth in huge quantities, eaten frequently, between meals? Get him to have a look at acid attacks and so on. This might help your point land a bit.

Are there alternative snacks she will eat, like cheese and crackers, or yogurt, or baked goods?

AllIwantforChristmas22 · 04/05/2023 22:54

Poor girl- so many changes in the last few months, new home, new sibling. Is anyone supporting her emotionally?

as for the rest of course YANBU but your DH needs to step up and parent properly and she is comfort eating. 2-3 portions of fruit is plenty a day. You can also buy frozen fruit to make it cheaper.

PrimrosesandPears · 04/05/2023 22:54

I’d just encourage her to eat more of the cheaper fruit (maybe sub some apples and pears for some of the berries which really add up) and yes work on dinner but I wouldn’t restrict it and definitely not stop buying it. She’s 7. Fruit is good for her.

Inthesamesinkingboat · 04/05/2023 22:54

I disagree that that amount of fruit is healthy. It is incredibly high in sugar and one of the reasons why the tried to reform the 5 a day guidelines to 3 veg and 2 fruit to stop people doing 5 fruits.

Id want to go to the GP to find out if there is an underlying issue.

the cost would annoy me as well, along with not having stuff in the fridge later in the week for everyone else.

can you look at 2 smaller food shops each week perhaps

ohxmastreeohxmastree · 04/05/2023 22:55

Agree with the carrot stick idea - a big bag of carrots is so so so much cheaper than fruit. She is eating way too much fruit. I eat probably 10+ portions of fruit and veg a day and if I ate what she had yesterday I would have an awful tummy!

stardust40 · 04/05/2023 22:55

Way to much! Assuming she eats well at school. One banana as an after school
Snack and another piece for desert after tea. If it's berries I would separate into pots of food bags so there is a clear portion for her. Maybe she didn't have access to fresh fruit at mums and this is a novelty?

LivingDeadGirlUK · 04/05/2023 22:56

I assume she was allowed to help herself at her mums so maybe have a snack box made up for her she can help herself from and then anything else she has to ask.

dementedpixie · 04/05/2023 22:57

Fruit isn't always filling so I'd look at giving alternative snacks alongside fruit. Yoghurt, crackers, cheese, etc

motleymop · 04/05/2023 22:57

This makes me feel quite sad. It sounds like she's having some issues, bless her. And it also makes me sad that you resent her for it. But perhaps I have read it all wrong.

Geppili · 04/05/2023 22:57

Comfort eating. Missing Mum and how things were. If the change is indefinite to you an adult, imagine how it feels when you are 7. At least she isn't binging on crap. Why does your DH work part time and earn so little?

Luredbyapomegranate · 04/05/2023 22:58

She sounds like she’s had quite a traumatic time, so maybe don’t call her greedy eh? It’s comfort eating - she’s just moved from sweets to fruit.

That amount of sugar isn’t good for her so talk about it to DH in those terms. Explain to her it isn’t healthy to eat fruit (or anything) to excess, and portion it out. Put it where she can’t get to it.

Violetcrush · 04/05/2023 22:59

Just put out what she can have and leave the rest in the fridge? If she asks for it say it’s for later/another day/sharing. She’s only 7, don’t make it an issue of no fruit/rations…

Gunpowder · 04/05/2023 22:59

I’ve got four children who are all fruit bats. They are allowed to help themselves to unlimited apples (I buy cheap ones) and carrots. Anything else is off limits unless I give it to them as part of a meal or an organised snack.

It’s great she likes fruit but it’s for everyone!

Luredbyapomegranate · 04/05/2023 23:00

PrimrosesandPears · 04/05/2023 22:54

I’d just encourage her to eat more of the cheaper fruit (maybe sub some apples and pears for some of the berries which really add up) and yes work on dinner but I wouldn’t restrict it and definitely not stop buying it. She’s 7. Fruit is good for her.

That amount of sugar is not good for anyone.

TomatoSandwiches · 04/05/2023 23:00

Teach her portion control, look up thegovernment food guidelines, tell her it will help the baby learn healthy food habits if the while family eat this way.
That amount is actually not very good BTW, fructose can cause problems with the liver and will spike her blood sugar which is probably half the reason she's going back for more and more fruit.

I think your husband needs to up his working status as well unless you are happy with how it is.

TheMarzipanDildo · 04/05/2023 23:04

She probably just likes fruit, but I know that I had a mortality/health obsession at the age of 7. Eating a ton of fruit was the kind of thing I did because I was planning to live for ever (I grew out of it!)

I would get some cheap veg in and encourage snacking on that instead.

Feckthelotofthem · 04/05/2023 23:04

She sounds like the hungry caterpillar!

Katey83 · 04/05/2023 23:05

He lost his job during covid and could only find PT, and I earn enough for the family so never seemed an issue until now, when I have started to feel a little resentful since dad came to live here.

OP posts:
HowDoYouDoWhatYouDoToMeIWishIKnew · 04/05/2023 23:05

Bless her, she's obviously had a whole lot of changes recently and is finding her feet in her new circumstances.

Could you make a snack box for her, then cut up some fruit daily and she can eat whatever is in the box.

Maybe make up some fruity ice lollies with orange juice and stick a few berries in there too, this will take longer for her to eat and should help if she's just eating out of boredom.

TomatoSandwiches · 04/05/2023 23:06

Katey83 · 04/05/2023 23:05

He lost his job during covid and could only find PT, and I earn enough for the family so never seemed an issue until now, when I have started to feel a little resentful since dad came to live here.

I'm not surprised, he needs to earn enough for the two children he has, especially now DD is living with you full time.
Essentially you are subbing his share of your own child's costs, not a long term way to live imo.