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

74 replies

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:
confusedandemployed · 13/03/2015 06:50

I can't really relate to this - at least not yet. DD is 2. She's living being and she needs to eat. Like me, big deal.

If you've ever had pets you're not going to understand how someone can feel like this. Sometimes having a baby is the first time someone has full responsibility over another living thing. For pet owners... Not so much.

TheBookofRuth · 13/03/2015 07:42

I'm also with Albertscat, can't see what all the fuss is about. But then I don't see why people make such a song and dance about food at any stage.

DurhamDurham · 13/03/2015 07:51

Having at eating disorders while growing up and I to my early 20's I have tried very hard to make meal times as relaxed and happy as possible.

My children either ate their dinner or they left some, I rarely commented. They both eat most foods, neither are fussy. The less fuss made at meal times the better it is for everyone. However to my knowledge I haven't ever forgotten to feed them, I find that a bit odd. It never had to 'concentrate' in order to remember that I should give my children breakfast before they left the house.

My girls are grown up now, 21 and 17..... They will happily eat the contents of the fridge while their friends are here. It costs a fortune but it gives me a small sense of satisfaction that I must have done something right. They are gorgeous girls with bags of confidence, none of the hang ups I grew up with.

Sometimes they make dinner for me now. Strange concoctions some of the time but always gratefully appreciated Grin

Pensionerpeep · 13/03/2015 08:47

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

BatonRouge · 13/03/2015 09:59

By surely making a deal out of a basic human function as eating - you're passing on angst to your children? Therefore I refuse to make a fuss.

DragonsDoHiccup · 13/03/2015 10:19

Yes ok I get totally bored at preparing and clearing up 3 meals and 2 snacks a day (I hate cooking), but i really don't get all the angst!

I just put healthy food in front of them whether they like it or not - up to them whether they eat it! If they get hungry they will eat more later, or just top up on breastfeeds. But then I have never spoon fed - just BLW -
So I never "fed" them, so didn't get into that mindset. And I'm still breastfeeding them at 3.8 years and 16 months and as it's a complete food, I don't worry if they have a non eating day.

But sleep. Lack of sleep is destroying me! But again - why the angst? They just don't sleep. They will when they are ready... If a child doesn't eat, they will when they are ready, (other conditions allowing obviously)

DragonsDoHiccup · 13/03/2015 10:20

And I think forgetting to feed your child pretty shocking. They tell you when they are hungry from birth! No excuse

BathshebaDarkstone · 13/03/2015 10:33

I did once forget to give DD breakfast, but she'd go the whole day without telling me she was hungry even now, and I had severe baby brain from DS which I still have 3.5 years on.

SirChenjin · 13/03/2015 11:38

I'm in the 'what's the big deal' camp. Menu planning is a complete bore, but thanks to the wonders of Google and an insistence that they all give me one meal suggestion each week (not pizza or macaroni cheese...) it's not too bad. Cooking is just another chore, like hoovering - but I think cooking a special meal.

I don't really get the angst - cook healthy stuff when you've got the time, get something out of the freezer when you've had a shit day at work. Pasta, garlic bread and salad when inspiration fails. Oh - and remember how bloody lucky I am to be in a position to write on this thread about safe, plentiful food and the fact that I can afford to feed my family.

BatonRouge · 13/03/2015 11:49

This -

oh and remember how bloody lucky I am to be in a position to write on this thread about safe, plentiful food and the fact that I can afford to feed my family.

For many here and in other countries there is no luxury of complaining about the task of serving plentiful food rather than sheer difficulty of actually obtaining it.

BathshebaDarkstone · 13/03/2015 12:08

BatonRouge I'm there every week. Our income doesn't quite stretch to 21 meals a week. If it wasn't for our families we'd be living on Marmite on toast.

holmessweetholmes · 13/03/2015 12:11

Having a child who won't eat is a bloody pain, but otherwise I don't understand how providing 3 meals a day can be so draining! Most adults surely eat 3 meals a day, which means cooking them or buying them. So why would that be different when you have a child? Buying and preparing food is easier and more convenient than it has ever been. Lucky you didn't live at a time when people had to catch or grow their own food!

JustDanceAddict · 13/03/2015 12:12

A bit of a self-indulgent whinge methinks. I had trouble getting my 2nd child to eat much between the age of 1 and 3ish. Yes, we had some terrible battles, and I wish I hadn't fought them, but I never 'forgot' to feed him, and now at age nearly 11 it's all distant memory. He even ate (homemade) curry the other night!!
I do find the endless cooking gets on my wick, but as they get older and more adventerous it is less soul-destroying. I try a new recipe once a week or so depending on what else is going on. If it gets the thumbs up, it goes in the repetoire, if not, I never make it again. Feeding children should not be 'that's all it is as a mother' - it's basically boring, but then so is laundry and I don't define myself as a washer-woman!! Ragwort - agree with you, basically.

Cherrypi · 13/03/2015 12:24

She really needed to read "my child won't eat" and try baby led weaning. I think both her and her husband jobs related to food probably added to the pressure.

albertcampionscat · 13/03/2015 13:53

Mutley77, I do admire your dedication, but mightn't your children be less into grazing if they weren't provided with chopped up fruit and enticing home-baked snacks?

CallieG · 13/03/2015 13:57

I am grateful that I was able to be a stay at home parent for all my children through their baby & toddler years, I spent so much of my time preparing meals, cooking meals and cleaning up after meals, I used to spend 6 to 8 hours a day on housework, people used to think I was weird or obsessive, but I had 4 kids to feed, & boys, they suck the life out of you right from the start, my son was and still is a bottomless pit. I lucked out with my First child, a daughter. My then husband dealt with a new baby in the house by working 16 hours a day, he was gone in the morning before we got up & often not home before we went to bed. So my DD & I ate alone most nights, I would sit her on my lap with her bowl of healthy slop & my plate of food on the table side by side i would alternate spooning her food & eating my own, she would snatch things off my plate, Broccoli, Cauliflower, peas, carrots, mashed potato, she especially loved pasta. spaghetti bolognase in particular, I made it with large spirals or shells rather than actual spaghetti, less mess. She was & is the least fussy eater of all 4 of my kids. When daughter #2 came along He had a 9 - 5 job so he was home for dinner at night, now most mums know that if dad don't like it, it doesn't get served, my ex husband was childish in his eating habits, so damn fussy It drove me nuts. So my 2nd Daughter did not get any where near the variety of food that the 1st one did, If I made something that he would not eat I made him get his own dinner, so he would go out & get KFC/ Pizza or McDonald's, as if the kids would eat what I had cooked if he was sitting there scoffing that shit. My 2nd DD ended up as fussy and silly about food as her Father except they all loved every sort of take away crap. If I was having takeaway it would be Chinese, Thai or Malaysian, it took me over 10 years to get them to try Asian food, now they both love it. Allowing my first daughter to pick off my plate was the best thing I ever did.

jemjabella · 13/03/2015 14:41

It's funny, the parts we find difficult! I honestly thought feeding was the easiest bit:

Pre 6 months: stick on tit
Post 6 months: stick on tit, offer a bit of my food every now and again
Post 12 months: stick on tit, 3 meals a day

Bob's your uncle, etc.

gigismummy · 13/03/2015 14:42

The modern obsession with force feeding our children is just ridiculous. When they get older most of the kids (including mine) are just too fat. No normal child (unless they have health issues) is going to starve themselves to death. And most children will self regulate after a time. It's just one of the basic facts of evolution that they will be fine. Never in the history of humanity has it been like this. Not until the end of the 20th.

TheAuthoress · 13/03/2015 16:48

Exactly ragwort, it's bloody boring and sometimes I CBA making dinner and just want a bag of crisps and a bowl of cereal! I had a good diet before DC so it isn't difficult to cook nutritious, balanced meals, it's just so relentless and trying to accommodate 4 peoples likes and dislikes is more difficult than 2. I do try to think about how it keeps me healthier hasn't got the baby weight fully off though

RudyMentary · 13/03/2015 17:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Enormouse · 13/03/2015 17:27

I'm in the relentlessly boring category. Though I love cooking I just find the shopping, meal planning, cooking, clearing up cycle boring beyond belief. And my DSes are bottomless pits. If they don't eat much at one meal, they'll make up for it at the next.

I did worry with DS1 as I have an egg allergy and was concerned about it being passed on so I probably worried more than I should. Annabel bloody karmel has a lot to answer for. Eventually, I relaxed and let DS1 do his own thing and eat healthy family meals. I never bothered with the pureeing faff with DS2.

Both DSes are good varied eaters, DS2 slightly better than DS1. So far no allergies have presented in the DSes but I took sensible precautions with introducing allergens.

raynman · 13/03/2015 18:01

We had the same problem with our youngest Emily.
We were worried enough to take her to the doctors who after extensive testing told us that she was a bad eater!

At that point and thoroughly disillusioned with the help available we started to learn about what Emily needed and what these things were contained in and as she was still drinking the answer seemed obvious and we purchased our first juicer.

We also included other health strategies into everyday life for example adding dried ground seaweed to all our cooking.
The seaweed, due to having an abundance of glutamic acid actually enhances the flavour of our meals naturally and provides a welcome nutritional punch for virtually no extra effort which makes it perfect for not just fussy eaters at the young end of the spectrum but older people who have lost their appetite.

Back onto juicers again though, there is an abundance of information on the best juicer to get in terms of the quality of juice they produce.
My advice on this is simple:
Buy one that you’re going to be comfortable using and that does it in the time that you have.
I’m sure there are nutritional differences between juices coming out of a masticating juicer or a centrifugal one but a juicer you’re not using for whatever reason supplies no juice at all and the fact is that whatever juice you produce will be far superior to any of those dead juices you’ll buy from the Supermarket.

Emily flourished on these juices and the little she ate and is now thankfully eating at a level we'd consider normal.
I've simplified a lot of this story as to be fair there was a fair amount of trail and error involved as we wanted our older boys to benefit from our newly found knowledge and they really weren't going to be drinking the 'very healthy' juices any time soon.
The seaweed wasn't an issue as the only effect it had on the taste of our cooking was a good one.

What this experience did is instil in me a passion for the subject of health through nutrition a passion which is still with me today.
We all have amazing bodies and if looked after properly they will last you a lifetime...

Good luck with it all and remember that just because you've eaten doesn't mean you've fed yourself :-)

tiggyhop · 13/03/2015 18:59

I am so depressed by this post. "My main function in life is to feed my children". Words fail me.

Nellagain · 13/03/2015 20:23

What is overwhelming is when 3 ds's insist on asking what is for dinner 5 times each. On a loop.

actually i dont find cooking for them overwhelming, its the endless when are we eating conversations.

HaveYouTriedARewardChart · 13/03/2015 20:51

It really shouldn't be that all-consuming. And I say that as mum of 3 dc, two very fussy eaters and just weaning dd. Make home cooked stuff in bulk, give them what they like and don't be shy with toast / fish fingers / beans option. There's really many more important aspects of parenting than providing food....