http://spoonfedblog.net/resources/#.UhYyxXrn_IU
Spend even a
few minutes online and you’ll find blogs devoted to sneaky vegetables, artful
bento boxes and countless other tricks to make kids eat spinach. Turn on the
news, pick up a paper, check Facebook, and you can’t escape talk of school
food, Happy Meal toys and the travesty of chocolate milk.
Everyone is
working double-time to fix years of government-subsidized and heavily
advertised junk food, in school and out. The effort to combat childhood obesity
has become urgent and epic. But for all the good work, all the good intentions,
nothing will change unless, along with the food and the system, we also change
our expectations of what children will and won’t eat. Unless we recognize that
there’s an insidious undercurrent sabotaging kids with two little words: “picky
eater.”It goes like this: Kids are picky eaters. They won’t eat food that’s green, brown or good for them. They are strong-willed little creatures who cannot be swayed. We must give up, give in, and feed them nothing but juice, crackers and neon mac and cheese.
Other things in a child’s life take time — learning to read, tie a shoe, ride a bike — and to that, parents say OK. But when it comes to food? When a child refuses something new? When a drive-thru or children’s menu is the quickest path to appeasement? That’s when parents throw up their hands and cry picky. Or, worse yet, tell a child she won’t like something before she even tastes it.
“Picky
eater” has become a crutch and an excuse to fall back on easy, so-called “kid
foods,” the notorious standards that everyone laments but too few seem willing
to forgo. And there you have the setup for a head-banging self-fulfilling
prophecy.
Young
children go on strikes (refusing certain foods) and jags (eating only certain foods).
Older kids have the added influence of marketing and friends. And all kids —
and adults — have foods they just don’t like (whether at all or just right
now). And, yes, sometimes it takes finessing to get children to embrace good
food. But that starts with educating kids, not labeling them.Language is important. Labels are dangerous. And when we label our kids, we diminish our expectations of them and make obstacles seem insurmountable. We also minimize the very real challenges faced by children who do have serious food allergies or sensory issues. Those kids aren’t “picky eaters,” either. They have legitimate underlying causes for their food aversions, and labeling just adds to the stress.
Think about
this: The reason we even have Happy Meals and Lunchables and bland,
non-nutritive school lunches is not because that’s all kids will eat. It’s
because that’s the kind of food adults think kids will eat. And it’s the kind
of food that manufacturers and marketers can produce and sell at a huge mark-up.
In the race to homogenize food and maximize profit, we lost respect for kids’
palates. And for kids.
So now we
can’t just fix the food. We also have to nix the labels.Soon after starting Spoonfed last March, I wrote a post called “Let’s ban the phrase ‘picky eater.’” I’ve been on a mission ever since to encourage folks to rethink the labeling habit. This latest piece was published last week as a guest post for Mrs. Q’s Fed Up With Lunch.
Teaching your kids about food will
not cause eating disorders
by Christina, author of www.spoonfedblog.net - on May 17, 2013There’s a dangerous thread running through the national conversation about kids and food, and it is this: If you talk to your kids about food, if you teach them to understand ingredients and to actually think about what they eat — and, heaven forbid, you actually limit junk food — you are setting them up for, at best, rebellion-fueled binges, or, at worst, an eating disorder.
The truth is we are doing our kids far more good than harm by teaching them to think critically about food. Food isn’t food anymore. Check the ingredients, take a bite. Even everyday staples contain troubling additives. Foods are now “fortified” because vitamins have been stripped in processing. Flavors have been manipulated to be addictive. And the food supply is increasingly adulterated by pesticides, GMOS and the taint of factory farming. And it’s never “just one” anything anymore.
Special treats used to be just that — special. But the combination of relentless food marketing and a harried, mobile society has created a 24/7 food culture that feeds kids any time they gather, a culture that uses food for everything from reward to distraction.
That’s what we really need to worry about. Not correlations based on fear instead of fact.
Education, not deprivation
I get it. Eating disorders are scary. If you haven’t experienced one yourself, you likely know someone who has. For me, it was close friends in both high school and college, and then covering the issue as a health care reporter. And now there’s an especially frightening movement called “pro-ana,” which, among other things, glorifies the physical attributes of anorexia. So yes, this is disturbing stuff. But eating disorders are not about food — they are complicated psychological conditions that manifest in food.
So what about people who say they had food-restricted childhoods and then developed eating disorders? Look closely and you’ll likely see one or more of these themes: adult role models who were obsessed with dieting, weight and calorie-counting; food used as reward, punishment or other emotional manipulative; and, in some cases, extreme outright bans of entire food categories (e.g., no sweets ever, no matter the ingredients or frequency).
Then look closely at what’s not there: rational, thoughtful food choices; awareness of how those food choices affect our bodies; and children brought into the conversation in a way that encourages learning and critical thinking.
Done right, teaching children about food empowers them. It doesn’t scare them or make them anxious or cause them to binge. And it does not cause eating disorders. As I often say when people ask whether I give my own daughter sweets or other treats: Food literacy is about education, not deprivation.
So hell yes we have sweets. And potato chips. And boxed mac and cheese. Even soda. But the sweets are homemade or, if store-bought, made with recognizable ingredients. The chips are the real deal (potatoes, oil, salt). The mac and cheese is Annie’s, not Kraft. The soda is seltzer and fruit juice, not high-fructose corn syrup and caramel color. And, importantly, Tess knows why we make the decisions we do. We don’t ban or demonize whole categories of food. We choose based on ingredients and sourcing, and how foods taste and make us feel. Even treats can (and should) be high-quality. Kids can indulge in childhood pleasures like lemonade and popsicles, cupcakes, candy and the rest without also indulging in petroleum-derived food dyes, dangerous trans fats and chemical preservatives, and the countless other synthetic additives that make a mess of even simple foods.
Junk food doesn’t have to be junk food.
Bad foods, bad mantras
Does that mean I think some foods are “bad”? It sure does. Though it’s really about the ingredients, not the food itself. Is cake bad? No. Is a neon-frosted, 50-ingredient, processed-to-within-an-inch-of-palatability grocery-store cake bad? Yes.
Food manufacturers and marketers, and even many dietitians and nutritionists, adopt a mantra of “there are no bad foods” or “everything in moderation” or “there’s a place in our diet for all foods.” In a different time, with a different food supply and a different food culture, those mantras might have meant something. Not anymore.
Just because a company makes something and calls it “food,” just because stores stock it or restaurants sell it or your TV advertises it, that doesn’t mean we have to buy it, eat it or feed it to our kids.
Here’s Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, an epidemiologist with the Harvard School of Public Health, quoted in a New York Times article about a 2011 study finding that not all calories are equal: “There are good foods and bad foods, and the advice should be to eat the good foods more and the bad foods less. The notion that it’s O.K. to eat everything in moderation is just an excuse to eat whatever you want.”
Some parents worry that having only healthy foods at home will lead kids to overdo it with junk food when they head off to college. But Brownell says there’s no evidence to support this worry. And, in fact, the reverse is probably true.
Even if the young adults indulge in unhealthy foods at first, they’re far more likely to return to the healthy foods they grew up with. “Having only good foods around the house makes all the sense in the world, and research supports this,” he says.
This mother keeps her son and family on a strict diet of extremely low (or no) sugar and fat — it doesn’t matter the source, doesn’t matter whether it’s homemade or not — so it wasn’t a surprise to me what she said next: “I wish (son’s name) would do that. But he gets candy in front of him and he eats it all.”
Seriously, though, do you know why else I think people react like this? Because they’re scared. And stressed. And overwhelmed by the sheer vastness of food information out there. Every day, there’s a new study or article that contradicts some other study or article. There’s debate about this diet, that diet, the best diet, the only diet. Agendas are epidemic. And staying on top of it all is exhausting. (I know!) So people shut down. They throw up their hands. They eagerly embrace claims that moderation trumps ingredients, and that talking to kids about this stuff creates eating disorders. Because to believe otherwise is to face, once again, that torrent of information.
My husband and I decided long ago that we’d abide one “food rule”: Eat food as close to its natural source as possible, as often as possible. We don’t count calories or worry about nutrient grams or percentages, or obsess over making sure every bite is nutritionally optimized. We try to select whole foods or else packaged foods that are minimally processed and have recognizable ingredients, foods that generally can be categorized as SOLE: sustainable, organic, local and ethical. When you view food through that lens, things look a lot simpler. Truly.
Though if you want a more guided approach to eating real food, check out the terrific blog 100 Days of Real Food. Blogger Lisa Leake breaks it down and makes real food seem accessible in a way no one else does. And while you’re there, read this heartfelt post Lisa wrote after being told by some readers that she was setting her daughters up for eating disorders.
Education. Not deprivation. Big difference.
Christina Le Beau is a longtime journalist who worked for newspapers for 10 years before going solo as a freelance writer. She has covered business and health care, honing a research obsession, geekworthy interest in details and low tolerance for bull. As a freelancer, she still covers business, especially if there’s an environmental angle. But mostly she writes about topics like those on this blog, namely food literacy and sustainability, with a good dose of food politics.
Some of the places her work has appeared: American Gardener, BusinessWeek, Crain’s Chicago Business, Edible Finger Lakes, Entrepreneur, Kiwi, Metropolis, New York Organic News (NOFA-NY), New York Times, Preservation, Rochester Magazine, Salon, the Smart Set, Upstate Gardeners’ Journal, Vegetarian Times, Wall Street Journal and Working Mother.
She lives in Rochester, in the Finger Lakes region of New York, where she’s active in the sustainable-food community, including serving on the advisory board of the South Wedge Farmers Market.
For more insight into who she is and why she blogs, check out this Q & A with her regional parenting magazine:
http://www.gvparent.com/articles/k/11-05-her-words.html
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