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Guest post: Mothering and food - "I had no idea how all-consuming feeding my kids would be"

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MumsnetGuestPosts · 12/03/2015 16:14

I had no idea that I would spend most of my life as a mother feeding my children. When I think about it now, it's obvious. Of course that's what you do. That's all it is really, being a mother – feeding your children and giving them somewhere soft and safe to sleep. Everything else is cosmetic.

It was a horrible shock, the intensity of it. I'm a quitter, I like to give things up if they are hard or boring. The demands of breastfeeding were impossible for me: overwhelming, disastrous. Frightening. As soon as my eldest child, Kitty, cried from hunger following an insufficient breastfeed I smashed open the lid of a box of Aptamil and gratefully put away the uncertainty of supplying her growling, insatiable belly with my own body.

Even the formula feeds stunned me, both with their regularity and their paucity. Can she survive on that? The clockwork nature of the feeds drove me slightly insane with the Groundhog Day-ness of it all - the having to be somewhere, with the bottle, sitting down, concentrating. But there was no other way that I could see to do it. If she eats this much during the day at the right times, she will sleep all night. And she has to sleep all night.

And then weaning. Oh God! Weaning! I feel sad for myself and for Kitty when I think about how clumsily I approached it. I was still so overwrought, confused, tired and strung out by the time Kitty reached weaning age that the thought of fussing about during Kitty's precious nap-times with an assortment of vegetable purées, which she may or may not eat, made me feel quite ill.

So I fed her rusks mashed up with milk and mixed with those fruity Ella's pouches. That is what she ate for weeks and weeks.

I compared her, endlessly, with other children – often with my sisters’ ravenous boys, who would suck down plates of pasta like they were soup, crunching through apples and sandwiches and pints of milk like waste disposal units. I would sit for an hour, coaxing Kitty to eat just one more spoonful of this or that. Please, I would think, please, please just eat this.

What on earth did I feed her? Risotto – I seem to remember a lot of that. Mashed up stews. When she could chew and swallow and stopped gagging on everything the madness subsided a bit. She ate egg fried rice, pasta, sausages, little cottage pies and then later, for lunch, tiny rectangles of cheese, raw vegetables, pitta bread, hummus. But didn't other children wolf down all manner of fishy horrors, and kale pasta sauces and broccoli? Sometimes Kitty would take a single bite of broccoli and then leave it.

I always felt tense at mealtimes. I despaired silently over thrown food, refused green things. I was probably cold and uncommunicative when she didn't gobble everything down in a starving rage.

With my second child, Sam, born two years and three months after Kitty, I might as well have been a different person. My expectations of my life were so different. I did not – I do not – require several hours to myself to sit on the sofa and stare at the wall in blank horror at what my life has become. Even if I have slept badly the night before, there is too much to do. And I don't mind doing it now. When I had Kitty I couldn't believe how often I was expected to cook. Now I am just so grateful that I've got all the correct stuff. When there is a quiet moment in the house I do not sit and stare, I put on my apron, I start chopping, cooking, blending.

I chopped, cooked and blended, chopped, cooked and blended, chopped, cooked and blended. I bought more storage pots and a special pen to write on the pots what was inside. Then I chopped and cooked and blended. Again, again. Repeat. Again.

And Sam responded, opening his gob for food. More, more, more! He was like a sideshow at a circus. Watch the enormous monster baby eat! Down went another spoonful, and another, and another! It's nothing I've done to make him such a dustbin, he's just a big boy and hungry all the time. But I do sometimes wonder if I did Kitty a disservice by not approaching her weaning in the same way.

And what of Kitty now, who is three? ‘Is she a good eater?’ they all ask, poised to devour the answer. ‘She is when she's hungry,’ I reply. But that really is the very prosaic truth. It is the truth for most children, I suppose. She eats what I would consider to be a totally normal diet for a three-year-old. She has pesto pasta once a week, she eats a variety of raw veg, fruit, fish fingers, roast chicken, chips, sausages, pitta bread, hummus, cheese, pizza. Every other day she'll take a bite out of some broccoli. You get the idea. Given free reign she would probably snack all day and for her main meals eat cake. On one or two bad days, she has done just this.

Sometimes I still forget, though, that my main function in life now is to feed my children. I was recently roundly shamed at Kitty's nursery for sending her in having not eaten any breakfast. I just wasn't concentrating one morning. ‘I really want a biscuit!’ she had howled on the walk up the hill. ‘No biscuits!’ I had screeched. She didn't want a biscuit, she just wanted her breakfast.

But there is always the next meal to reset the balance. And the next and the next and the next. Because that is the magical thing about children: they will always give you another chance to be the parent they truly deserve.

This is an adapted extract from Things I Wish I'd Known: Women Tell The Truth About Motherhood, published by Icon Books.

OP posts:
icklekid · 12/03/2015 16:58

"Sometimes I still forget, though, that my main function in life now is to feed my children"

Wow that's depressing!

RudyMentary · 12/03/2015 17:01

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CultureSucksDownWords · 12/03/2015 17:02

There is basic personal care of your children (providing food, cleaning them, clothing them and giving them somewhere to sleep), and then there is the actual job of parenting. Which is to help them grow, learn and develop into their own people. I disagree that this is just cosmetic!

RolandRatRocks · 12/03/2015 17:19

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LosingNemo · 12/03/2015 17:31

I think everyone has a 'thing'. For me it was sleep, for some it's health for others: food. I was relaxed about feeding aand was ever so smug about what a good eater DS was, so it came as one hell of a shock when he hit two and started refusing all food except CAKEY! Then I got it. I got why people stressed about it - oh boy, did I get it!

BathshebaDarkstone · 12/03/2015 17:38

I think I'm lucky that I love cooking for the people I love. I see it as a way of showing affection. Smile

Deckmyballs · 12/03/2015 18:11

I love this.

Feeding in general controls our life. The effects of food choices, the sheer responsibility of making sure we're choosing the right ones for most of the time when really convenience foods would be so much more, well, convenient!

meglet · 12/03/2015 18:24

I'm quite bored with endless shopping, meal preparation and cleaning up. It's getting worse as they get older.

maybe I should feed them crap and make my life easier Grin .

TheAuthoress · 12/03/2015 18:25

I was just thinking earlier how much time I spend planning, preparing, coaxing, feeding and cleaning up food for DS 4 and DD 19 mo.

I was totally crazy when weaning DS, had spreadsheets and everything and found it very stressful when he wouldn't eat my offerings. DD was more baby led weaned but still makes quite a mess and doesn't really eat with cutlery yet. She's a great eater though and tries everything. I was very smug with DS at this age as he was the same, but he's much fussier now.

Long gone are the days when DH and I would eat a few bowls of cereal throughout the day on a lazy Saturday and then get a takeaway for dinner! Now I'm always thinking about the nutritional benefits and balance of their meals. We can't even really enjoy a takeaway as DS only likes pizza or Burger King and DD is too young for regular takeaways so if we're having one we have to make them food first.

scarletforya · 12/03/2015 18:32

I agree with her 100%.

I only ate to remain alive before dd. The meals a day was a complete shock to me. I hated it.

Beingfrank · 12/03/2015 19:05

If you think its relentless when they are small, wait till they are older and all coming and going at different times as well!

ipswichwitch · 12/03/2015 19:09

I do agree with the "everyone has a thing" comment by LosingNemo

For us it is sleep. We are fortunate our DC are good eaters now. DS1 wasn't always, and we did spend a good number of mealtimes despairing at how little he ate. Now (2 years and treatment for underlying health issue later) he is fine. DS2 will eat anything you give him and half of yours too. If only they slept as well as they eat I wouldn't look so bloody haggard!

I also agree I do spend a lot more time thinking about meals, what to cook, planning when to start cooking so I don't have two hungry toddlers screeching away.

CarlaVeloso · 12/03/2015 19:18

I enjoyed this, although I'm not sure how you got into the rusks and fruit thing - was it because that's all she'd eat?

But just wanted to say I completely agree with how overwhelming it is to be responsible for other people's nutrition all the bloody time. I also long for a break from it. Every flipping day? Come on! As for sitting down to family meals - sometimes I can't be bothered and really just want to eat chocolate and go to bed.

Jackieharris · 12/03/2015 19:46

I can't really relate to this.

I loved the weaning stage. You could blend up anything and they'd eat it. Much easier than when they're older!

I have DCs all sorts of foods I didn't eat myself. I grew up thinking of veg as a punishment. Didn't want them to be the same. They get food made and put out for them. There is no nagging or cajoling. I don't get in a flap if they don't eat it but they don't get made anything else. We don't do desserts and don't keep crisps/sweets etc in the house. They can snack on fruit whenever they want- we go through loads of it.

We hardly ever eat together. I wouldn't want then to pick up on my bad habits. They eat far healthier and have far more veg than I do.

CarlaVeloso · 12/03/2015 19:58

I think I'm lucky that I love cooking for the people I love. I see it as a way of showing affection.

Funny old world. I literally cannot compute this.

wearing · 12/03/2015 20:12

I don't feel like this. Is it a thing if you have more, or older kids?

Meal times give structure to our day. I don't put much thought into it at all, although this is partly because ds has his main meal at lunchtime in daycare.

BathshebaDarkstone · 12/03/2015 20:33

CarlaVeloso I don't know why, it's like buying presents, I feel the same way about it. I just wish that the 2 I still cook for on a regular basis liked the same foods! Grin

RolandRatRocks · 12/03/2015 20:44

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Crunchybadger · 12/03/2015 21:09

I remember being overwhelmed at weaning until my friend revealed the secret: just give them your leftovers from the night before.

What gets me now are the slightly arbitrary but incredibly strict rules, which may change at any point without warning, about what DD4 might eat.

Mushrooms? Bring them on! Unless of course they are cooked, in which case cry. Carrots ditto. Onions perfectly acceptable. Unless visible, in which case panic. Mild curry fine. Unless any visible chilli, in which case grab mouth, demand water. Meat, on the other hand, which makes me boak, acceptable in all formats, possibly also waved in torment at me.

DP also meat fan (), but fearful of aubergine, banana, tofu.

Some nights I end up doing 3 variations on a theme: DD meat, mild, hidden veg; DP meat, spicy, mostly obvious veg; me veg, spicy large glass wine.

Fortunately we all agree about the acceptability of fish fingers & fake aldi butterscotch Angel delight.

Stillwishihadabs · 12/03/2015 21:12

It's funny isn't it. I had a very good friend who I spent much of my time with when our dcs were 1-3. My ds was a bit of a terror at that age, he bit and needed at least 90 mins of exercise each day (still does age 11). Her Dd was a sweet little thing who would contentedly play seemingly endlessly at her mother's feet. Her mum would sit drinking coffee whilst I shadowed ds round playgroup.

BUT at the end of the day when they were strapped in their high chairs with a plate of homecooked food in front of them, then I would relax and sip my tea knowing this bit at least was easy and required very little of my mental or physical energy. My friend OTOH would visibley tense as she tried to cajole her Dd to consume close to a reasonable amount of food.

ceeveebee · 12/03/2015 21:42

I can relate to this although as I am now back at work pt I don't have the pleasure of cooking every day. What I find grinding is the unpredictabity - DS will wolf down a roast dinner, the next time I serve it he will not touch anything on his plate. Also DD and DS despite being weaned together and always offered the same foods (twins) are totally opposite in their likes and dislikes - DD is basically a dream, will eat all meat, fish, veg, fruit won't touch beige food or chocolate or cake - DS would live on chips and ice cream if I let him. But I do love cooking and finding more inventive ways of getting nutrition into them (him)!

albertcampionscat · 12/03/2015 21:42

Meh. Food isn't all that complicated and it's normally a very small part of life, unless you choose to make it more.

BatonRouge · 12/03/2015 21:58

Agree with Albertcat - cant really see what all the fuss is about.

Ragwort · 12/03/2015 22:19

cant really see what all the fuss is about - but, as others have said, we all have aspects of parenting that we find more 'challenging' - I never had any problems with getting my DS to sleep - put him to bed, shut the door - end of Grin. Yet you read on here about parents who have years of angst getting their children to sleep.

I do find the endless cooking and providing of food tedious - I now have a teenager and was just thinking tonight it would be so much simpler if it was just me coming home late from work, having a plate of cheese and biscuits and a large glass of wine. Instead I prepare (a previously cooked from scratch) meal of casserole, veg and shop bought mash - plus something slightly different for DS who has new braces. It's not difficult - just boring Grin.

Mutley77 · 13/03/2015 05:41

I feel similarly in many ways. All three of my children graze a lot and don't eat big meals which feels totally exhausting as I am forever chopping fruit, preparing enticing little snacks - often baked by me and wishing that one day the older ones woudl have something in their packed lunch that didn't involve a ham or marmite sandwich, an apple and a home baked "treat".

Having been both a WOHM and a SAHM, being a SAHM if FAR FAR worse in this regard as with a child who is not yet at school you literally are pretty much dealing with food all day.

Up early - a round of drinks or dry cereal for everyone, then breakfast, school run - having packed lunches beforehand (plus snacks for morning and afternoon) and healthy snacks for the toddler, get home from morning out with toddler, lunch for toddler and I, think about dinner prep and usually bake something for after school snack. Pick up from school, serve after school snack and do all the manic rushing around with friend,s activities etc, then make sure there is something healthy on the table for dinner. After bedtime get dinner for DH & I (usually what the DC have had heated up but often requires some extra prep eg a stir fry I would start again to cook it fresh rather than heat up what I cooked for the DC 2 hours prior).

Working days were easy, obviously the before and after were the same but I genuinely then had at least 8 hours of a working day where I didn't have to think about or touch any food except to eat my own packed lunch, pop out and buy a packet of sushi or make myself a cup of coffee and drink it hot!!!!

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