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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:
thecatfromjapan · 13/03/2015 23:11

I'm bored of being in charge of food. And everything else. Almost twenty years, now. I think I must have the stoicism and mental strength of Yoda to have not gone mad and rampaged through Sainsbury's committing random acts of mayhem, violence, and murder.
How the hell do the 'meh!' camp manage not to be ravaged by the terrible, awful soul-eating tedium of it?

Artfooldodger · 14/03/2015 06:43

Reading this just made me immeasurably sad.

Our only child, conceived after 6 years of infertility followed by ICSI, is just wonderful. But he was very very sick and had to have a life saving operation on his tummy before he was even 24 hours old. He was breast fed until 10 months & we started weaning at 6 months. Nothing - and I honestly mean nothing - would stay down. He vomited & vomited & vomited. He survived on breast milk, then formula when I had to go back to work at 10 months. He finally kept a couple of mouthfuls down at 15 months. It was hell.

Be grateful if your baby is able to eat.

Ps after 4 years he finally began to eat more normally, but other children with his condition have the same issues with feeding. It's heartrending to deal with.

holmessweetholmes · 14/03/2015 09:52

Thecatfromjapan - because it's an essential, central part of life. Like breathing , walking, getting dressed, keeping oneself and one's surroundings clean etc. I mean ok - sometimes you might not feel like cooking or cleaning etc, but it's pretty terrible if the basic activities of everyday life are soul-eatingly awful! And cooking at least provides more scope for creativity and pleasure than, say, cleaning. And there are always easier food options when you're not in the mood for proper cooking.

I do kind of get it though - I used to feel that way about tidying and cleaning, but I sort of made peace with the idea that I'm always going to have to do it. So I try to be a bit Zen about it and enjoy it. You know, get absorbed in the motions of drying a bowl, folding clothes etc. I know that sounds twatty, but it helps me not to get get grrr about the housework! I just figure that if you're going to be doing something every day for the rest of your life, it's better to find a way of enjoying it rather than make yourself miserable about it.

DragonsDoHiccup · 14/03/2015 10:18

I prefer cleaning to cooking. I'm better at it for a start! Grin love a nice clean room while the meals I produce ok hold body and soul together but....

But then I have a history of eating disorders and contamination OCD...

leticiaB9 · 14/03/2015 19:57

I would like to share with you an amazing program for mums, done in Massachusetts, here is the website www.touchingheartstouchingminds.com/index.php

and here is a video vzaar.com/videos/1297982

I hope you like it; I find it fascinating

leticiaB9 · 14/03/2015 20:25

Sorry, I should have said hello to everybody, I am new here. Have any of you heard about "mindful eating" movement?

BatonRouge · 14/03/2015 20:39

Cant be bovvered on clicking those links but what the manz Leticia?!

BatonRouge · 14/03/2015 20:47

Sorry rather rude of me to start off with but come on the other half does cook round ere!

leticiaB9 · 14/03/2015 21:07

Dear BatonRouge, so sorry you are not able to access the links, I can do it from this page also, but you can just google this: touching hearts, touching minds, it is really very interesting website about feeding children issues

I hope you find this helpful

all the best

CultureSucksDownWords · 14/03/2015 21:19

As BatonRouge says, do no men do the cooking in Massachusetts?

DaisyRaine90 · 14/03/2015 22:04

There does seem to be a lot of cooking and/or snack making involved. Either that or it's cleaning up. I think I did imagine more time spent doing art projects and coffee drinking, and less wiping Weetabix off the walls... Wink Lol x

Mutley77 · 15/03/2015 00:37

Albertscampion you do make a good point Grin and funnily something I have thought of and tried...

Unfortunately where we live this way of eating is encouraged so they must be given a morning and afternoon snack for school then there is a big expectation on eating a decent snack after school as the dc are generally very active and hungry by then! So given they are regularly with other children after school for sports activities or playing I can't withhold the snacks (and would rather they eat home made cheese straws and strawberries over a bag of crisps for example).

I think their tummies will never grow enough to eat a big meal, however in adulthood I think that's a fairly healthy way to live so I will just suck it up for now!

clearsommespace · 15/03/2015 10:51

Nellagain, I write the menu on kitchen whiteboard to avoid the endless 'what's for dinner?' conversations.

leticiaB9 · 15/03/2015 12:35

The program in Massachusetts is for mums and dads, sorry, I had a mistake. Indeed, in the video, you can see mums and dads speaking about the issues and enablers about feeding their children.

Sorry but I am not from here and I am not sure what CultureSucksDownWords means exactly.

I just really think there are other ways that help parents to feel happier during the feeding times with little children. Massachusetts is just a nice and realiable example of that. I found really very helpful and I just wanted to share with other mums in case you can find there something helpful also.

Thanks.

CultureSucksDownWords · 15/03/2015 17:18

Leticia, I thought I was being relatively clear... You described a program for mums, and I simply asked if no men did any cooking (in Massachusetts, where the program originated).

malefridgeblindness · 15/03/2015 21:27

I felt this with DC1. Did the whole Annabel Karmel steam-puree-freeze thing until my freezer was full of little blocks of beetroot, carrot, parsnip and broccoli. Spoon fed, took ages, child didn't like it, felt like a failure. So tried the more complicated and time consuming recipes, making rissoles with 16 ingredients, would slave all morning, and child still didn't like it.

By the time I'd got to DC2, I'd adopted a different approach. DC1 was given whatever the adults were eating. If DC1 wanted to reject what was on offer, that was fine, but at least I wouldn't have slaved for hours to produce it specially. DC2 ate adult food from the start (well, after a few months of breastmilk). With DC2 and DC3 I have never put food in their mouths using a spoon. The only spoonfeeding they've had is calpol. From weaning onwards they've been given a plate of what the adults had, in manageable chunks, and I've taken out the bits they could choke on (e.g. no peas until 9m when they had pincer grip, and no nuts.) Clearly this didn't work for breakfast when adults were having black coffee and a fag, but the dc had porridge or toast then.

We still have this approach: the choice is take it or leave it, and I don't feel I spend all my time in the kitchen. They're healthy kids who eat normal food (not just chicken dippers and potato smileys) and although the no spoonfeeding thing was messy early on, it has made feeding a whole lot less of a faff. If you give a hungry baby a bowl of yoghurt and a spoon, they figure it out quickly enough through imitation (or just stick their face in it, but the food goes in, either way).

Nellagain · 15/03/2015 21:33

clearsomespace -i'm going to try that suggestion. Possibly tacked to the kitchen door!

cu169995 · 15/03/2015 23:16

Don't waste so much time on having children and looking after them. You don't know if they will even bother with you later.

mamato3luvleys · 16/03/2015 12:58

I agree that it's not difficult just boring but also I dissagree with ppl saying they prepare different meals for each of their children. All of my children eat the same as each other and tbh my 2yr old is the easiest to make food for he just eats anything as does my 11 yr old son, my dd only has a problem with curry or spaghetti bolognese but if the others want this she's quite happy with some soup and a sandwich which is easy done for me.

BathshebaDarkstone · 16/03/2015 13:56

I don't make different meals for each of the DC, but it's hard to think of something they'll both eat every night. They take it in turns to choose breakfast and have school lunches, so I only have to worry about lunch at weekends. Smile

DragonsDoHiccup · 16/03/2015 16:49

Cu. - I don't have children so they will look after me later! I'm not bringing up slaves Confused

boloriabullet · 16/03/2015 17:21

I quite frankly haven't the time or the inclination to do all that menu planning crap. I love a good casserole, pasta is great and I pretty much give those things whizzed/chopped up to the baby and my kids have to eat it or go hungry. Yes it does feel time consuming. But even if your girl isn't a big eater, she'll be 'good' at other things. Sounds to me like you're beating yourself up about it when you really shouldn't x

Saltedcaramel2014 · 16/03/2015 18:30

Thank you for writing this and for those beautiful and encouraging final lines.

I find making food really boring and difficult (in general) and suddenly it's an enormous part of my life and other people's expectations of me as a good mother. I read endlessly with DS go out to play in the rain, get play doh out at 5am if need be... But food is everything, and I don't think I'll ever enjoy it.

Saltedcaramel2014 · 16/03/2015 18:31

My DH, on the other hand, loves doing meals... But I still feel that as a mother I should

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