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WWYD? Grandparents and Sugar

178 replies

Sleepysaurus2 · 27/07/2023 20:04

My in-laws sometimes look after my 3 year old DD. It isn’t very frequent and it’s usually when they want to look after her, not from a childcare standpoint. I suppose on average it would be 2 or 3 times a month.

Every time DD goes to their house, she is only fed sugar. I honestly wouldn’t mind the odd treat or two but the whole day is just sugar. They have a cupboard full of ‘toddler’ snacks e.g things like mini gingerbread men, crispy tiddlers, those yo yo things and other similar items. Given the frequency that she goes to their house, I do find it unnecessary for them to have a whole cupboard full of these snacks. DD just asks for constant snacks when she’s there. She is a pretty good eater for a toddler but understandably she finds these items a big temptation when she is there. My DH has previously asked them to only offer her one of these items when she is there and to otherwise offer fruit or similar. They agreed to this but I am not confident they’re following this. There always seems to be a new snack in the cupboard. I find it unnecessary and a bit strange that they keep buying these expensive and nutritionally poor items.

DD was with my MIL today. When I picked her up MIL said she’d eaten all her lunch. I asked what she had and she told me DD had a jam sandwich on white bread (she’ll happily have cheese, ham or peanut butter), a yoghurt ‘and some other bits’. Then when we went to get her things I saw an open pack of French fancies and DD later told me she’d had a chocolate cake (presumably one of the French fancies). She does have bits of fruit when she’s there but every single thing she has is sweet. MIL was very happy to tell me that DD had really enjoyed a yoghurt mixed with jam…DD simply doesn’t need all of this. She isn’t a fussy eater! I used to send her there with a lunchbox similar to one she has at nursery but MIL has told me she prefers to make her lunch herself. This doesn’t make any sense!

It's stressing me out a bit and making me not want to send her there. I let her go there as it’s nice for our in-laws to be included and DD does have a nice time playing there. However, when she goes to my parents she’ll have homemade vegetable soup, veg lasagne or whatever with the odd biscuit which I’m fine with. I really don’t mind the odd treat but this feels a bit extreme.

I'm not sure if I (or maybe DH) should speak with them about it or whether I should accept that the occasional day there with lots of sugar isn’t the end of the world or worth potentially making things a bit awkward. I suppose I’m worried about the future incase she does end up going more frequently and it’s become habit to just eat these snacks. We also have DS 6 months and I don’t want this to be his experience there in the future either. WWYD?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:54

Genevie82 · 27/07/2023 20:52

.. am feeling sorry for your in-laws OP! Bring over controlling about food and sweet stuff isn’t going to help your DC learn how to regulate their choices in the long run. Just be happy you are lucky enough to have in laws that actually want to spoil your child and respect that in their home it’s up to them what they want to feed them as a few treats, you make it sound like they are sitting around smoking or something. If you’re not picking up a hyper child afterwards chill out. Its not really an issue if they generally have a healthy diet… let them enjoy a fun time with grandparents.

It is not just a few treats. The stupid grandparents are filling the child up with sugar all day.

FatAgainItsLettuceTime · 27/07/2023 20:54

I say, thanks so much for having her and making sure she's had lots of fun.

Then I give her a normal varied diet at home and don't worry about the fact that she had a very occasional treat day with her grandparents.

Skinnermarink · 27/07/2023 20:55

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:54

It is not just a few treats. The stupid grandparents are filling the child up with sugar all day.

How do you actually function with this level of hysteria?

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about these subjects:

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:57

Emmamoo89 · 27/07/2023 20:29

Wouldn't bother me

Really? Don't you care about your kids at all?

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:59

Skinnermarink · 27/07/2023 20:55

How do you actually function with this level of hysteria?

Hysteria?

Do you even read the news about obesity, diabetes high blood pressure?

It's not hysteria. It's fact.

All of these things and many others are caused by sugar.

LocalHobo · 27/07/2023 20:59

Sugar is a killer The grandparents seem to have survived.

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:00

FatAgainItsLettuceTime · 27/07/2023 20:54

I say, thanks so much for having her and making sure she's had lots of fun.

Then I give her a normal varied diet at home and don't worry about the fact that she had a very occasional treat day with her grandparents.

But it isn't one treat.

It is 2 or 3 days a month being fed sugar all day.

That is not a treat.

Skinnermarink · 27/07/2023 21:00

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:59

Hysteria?

Do you even read the news about obesity, diabetes high blood pressure?

It's not hysteria. It's fact.

All of these things and many others are caused by sugar.

There are many facts but the way you present it and carry on with it is hysteria, and I wonder what your life is like on a daily basis. It doesn’t sound very fun.

Whinge · 27/07/2023 21:00

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:57

Really? Don't you care about your kids at all?

Of course they care about their children. Hmm They just don't get hysterical about a bit of sugar. Because having a relationship with relatives and happy memories the child can look back on is more important than monitoring every gram of sugar their child consumes.

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:01

LocalHobo · 27/07/2023 20:59

Sugar is a killer The grandparents seem to have survived.

I bet that they didn't have that tomato sugar when they were that young.

Very few people had any treats at all when the grandparents were growing up because I am the age of the grandparents so I know.

Skinnermarink · 27/07/2023 21:02

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:01

I bet that they didn't have that tomato sugar when they were that young.

Very few people had any treats at all when the grandparents were growing up because I am the age of the grandparents so I know.

Well maybe you should treat yourself. What is a treat in your book? A bit of chard? A lick of honey on Christmas Day?

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:02

Whinge · 27/07/2023 21:00

Of course they care about their children. Hmm They just don't get hysterical about a bit of sugar. Because having a relationship with relatives and happy memories the child can look back on is more important than monitoring every gram of sugar their child consumes.

Did you even read the OP.

It is not a bit of sugar it is two or three days a month being fed nothing but sugar

CoachBeardsJane · 27/07/2023 21:03

What would I do? Unclench

mumonthehill · 27/07/2023 21:03

My own grandmother used to give ice cream with neat ribena on it, my parents used to take dc on chocolate picnics, everything was chocolate. As long as it is not all the time and healthy eating is the norm then she will be fine. I say this as someone who never gave sweets or biscuits when dc were young.

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:03

Skinnermarink · 27/07/2023 21:02

Well maybe you should treat yourself. What is a treat in your book? A bit of chard? A lick of honey on Christmas Day?

A treat is a bit of chocolate once or twice a week after a meal.

It is not 2 or 3 days a month stuffed full of nothing but sugar

Flowers90 · 27/07/2023 21:03

I cam completely agree. My mother-in-law does the same. It's constant junk. DD will eat a balanced diet at home the minute she goes there the sweets come out, endless multipacks and share bags of haribo ect. Wouldn't mind a few but shes allowed to open endless things have a few bites and waste the rest to have something else. We definitely don't allow this at home. I'm always called bad and naughty if I comment. We also get frustrated with the impact it has on DD at home as she will demand here after a visit to nan! We don't mind a few treats but agree there's a limit to how much sugar they need in one day.

continentallentil · 27/07/2023 21:04

You don’t want to end up like the PP who doesn’t let her in laws see the kids. A relationship with GPS is more important than jam sandwiches.

However I think you and your DP need to go over, sit them down while DD is playing next door (it’s important to make a slightly theatrical deal of it) and say that nursery say / you have noticed DD is starting to really ask for sugar constantly at home and you need to reduce how much she is having with them.

Then give them 3 simple rules
Protein at meal times (so a cheese or ham sandwich not jam)
Some veg meal times (eg carrot sticks - you may need to send them)
Protein included if she has a snack eg a babybel or some plain yogurt or humous pot (send that too)

I’d focus more on her eating the proper food than limiting the sugar - as that will be less controlling for them and will also allow her to manage eating sugar around normal meals.

And give her a solid savoury breakfast before she goes!

mummyoffourminimes · 27/07/2023 21:05

Gosh this thread is an eye opener. Sugar is highly addictive and a global priority for public health initiatives.

I'm with you OP my MIL is the same drives DH mad :(;

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 21:06

Flowers90 · 27/07/2023 21:03

I cam completely agree. My mother-in-law does the same. It's constant junk. DD will eat a balanced diet at home the minute she goes there the sweets come out, endless multipacks and share bags of haribo ect. Wouldn't mind a few but shes allowed to open endless things have a few bites and waste the rest to have something else. We definitely don't allow this at home. I'm always called bad and naughty if I comment. We also get frustrated with the impact it has on DD at home as she will demand here after a visit to nan! We don't mind a few treats but agree there's a limit to how much sugar they need in one day.

Your poor child.

Dombasle · 27/07/2023 21:06

You can have a polite chat about dental decay and say that whilst a treat at grandparents house is lovely, can they keep it to a minimum.

Tactfully throw in a comment about the other grandparents being mindful of tooth decay and they they will most likely not want to be seen as the 'tooth rotters' of the family.

Possibly. Or they will look at you blankly and hand the kid some candy floss.

continentallentil · 27/07/2023 21:08

IMustDoMoreExercise · 27/07/2023 20:59

Hysteria?

Do you even read the news about obesity, diabetes high blood pressure?

It's not hysteria. It's fact.

All of these things and many others are caused by sugar.

Sure but this isn’t going to happen to the OP’s child because she had two sugar filled days a month for a couple of days a month before she starts school.

I’d be trying to reduce it too, but you are over the line into hysteria. In an overall balanced life this isn’t going to lead to obesity.

Seasideanticscanleadtosandybuckets · 27/07/2023 21:10

Ask mil why she feels the need to try and buy dd's affections with crap when she loves her anyway. As toddlers my dd's loved nothing better than bowls of salad ingredients! Yes they had crap sometimes but why so often? At 16 and 17 they are fab eaters and a healthy weight..

And still love salad!

wheretoyougonow · 27/07/2023 21:10

There was a thread on here recently that asked what you remember about your grandparents house. The majority of answers were about feeling loved and food treats received.
As long as the majority of their diet is fine I think I would relax a little. It's occassional and knowing that your child is safe and loved when you are not with them is far more important.
Trust me. When your kids are 15 and desperate to buy Prime and Mcdonalds this will seem like the good ole days 😁

Sleepysaurus2 · 27/07/2023 21:11

@continentallentil some good ideas there, thank you. This sounds like a good approach.

OP posts:
FatAgainItsLettuceTime · 27/07/2023 21:12

@IMustDoMoreExercise it's 2 or 3 days a month, less than 10 percent of the month, it one meal on that less than 10% of days, and it's not just sugar, yes some of the items listed are high sugar but no one is sitting the kid down with a bag of granulated and telling her to help herself.

She's having a jam sandwich, a very small cake, a yoghurt and some fruit. Alongside the breakfast her parents will have fed her, presumably impeccably healthy and the dinner her parents gave her, which will of course be varied, nutrient rich and sugar free.

What will you do when DD is invited to a birthday party every weekend? Because I guarantee that the food given by MIL is the tip of the iceberg compared to a standard kids party with trays of white bread sandwiches, chocolate finger, jammy dodgers, cold chicken nuggets, cold pizza, chocolate mini rolls, slices of birthday cakes, sweet cones, jelly and ice cream...............