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I Have an Easier Time Talking with My Kids about Sex than Food

By Donna Fish, Huffington Post. Posted March 19, 2008.


There is a way to educate kids on how to take better care of their bodies.
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Yeah, yeah, I know, it is a cheap shot, riding the news wave of sex talk this week following Spitzer's resignation. But really, I am referring to what one woman said to me during a consultation, after she had heard from her 7 year old's pediatrician, that he was 'obese'. (Now this is also understanding that the technical term obese refers to someone who can be as little as 10-15 lbs. overweight at this point, it is not the older use of the term which conjures up images of true 'largesse'.)

This mom reported to me that her oldest son who was 10, had her husband's body type; long and lean, and her second son had her body type. "I swore I would never do to my kids what my mother did to me; she put me on a diet when I was so young, and she was always telling what, when and how to eat. But I am so worried about Devon and I know that he is starting to get teased at school. I have no idea what to do!"

This mom typifies so many parents whose food legacy includes a parent who was overly involved and critical of their own food. As a result, they have been what I call: 'under-involved'. Paralyzed by fear that they will create an eating disorder, they don't have any tools to help their kids who might have a body type or food style that lends itself to eating more than their body can metabolize. Although this is a sensitive subject, and while you don't want to get too overly involved or critical here, sometimes kids whose body doesn't register fullness as quickly as their lanky, non-'foodie' sibs, can end up eating more portions than they need.

I try to stay away from depriving kids of their favorite foods, but rather try to educate them on how to take better care of their bodies. Here are some tips:

1) Tell your kids that they are the EXPERT on their body, they are the only ones who truly know how they feel from the inside, but they also have a job to do.

2) Their job is to be the best BODY DETECTIVE possible, to take good care of their bodies. Let them know that some bodies' signals from the belly that tells the brain it is 'DONE', FULL, can be a whisper, it is softer than others, and takes longer to hear.

3) Teach them to WAIT, the half hour while you keep the food on the table so they see it is there. If they are still hungry after that time, they can eat. They need to eat food that does something to help them kick the soccer ball, grow taller, etc., as oppose to the dessert that makes their tongue happy. Don't criticize dessert, it has its place, but they need to fill up on food that helps their body do the thing they are most passionate about. (Sports, playtime, even computer time their body is helped by certain nutrients that give them longer concentration.)

4) If they say they are hungry after that time period, they eat the food. AT first they may not trust that you aren't secretly wanting them to stop, and will try to exert control. Stick with this; in time, they will see that you are allowing them space to listen to their bodies and not depriving them of food. But it can take a few weeks.

5) Again, remind them that 'eating healthy' is not just about what you eat, it is eating HOW MUCH your body can use. If they see that they can still have their favorite foods, reminding them of their job to take good care and feed their body the other food groups it needs, they are less likely to struggle. More likely to take this on as their responsibility and to experience it as critical. Have a matter of fact attitude. Don't overlay your own anxiety or legacy of criticism.

Some kids need more involvement and connection and structuring than others. Hang out during that half hour with your kid, let them help you clear the table, do the dishes. Connect with them. This helps feelings of fullness in the belly believe it or not! Don't expect change right away. Still remember though that our hunger levels shift around; some days you are hungrier than others. We are not machines.

Lastly, teach your kids that some foods, like dessert, chips, salty things, don't flip the 'OFF SWITCH'. It is only WAITING that flips it. Then they can truly check in with their body and see what it wants. Don't be scared of the 'F-Word'. (We are so scared to use the word 'fat' now.) This is not about changing their body type, If you adopt a 'matter of fact attitude about their needing some ways to shift their 'eating style', you will teach them some tools and tricks for their lifetime that they can be in charge of.

Visit my site for more information.

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See more stories tagged with: genetics, overweight, childhood obesity, body type, childhood nutrition, eating habits

Donna Fish is a licensed clinical social worker with a private practice in Manhattan.

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Wrong
Posted by: g50 on Mar 19, 2008 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to eat right, and know how to do that, so your kids can mirror your habits. And you have to tell your kids what is good and what is bad. Potato chips are bad and if you eat them, you're in trouble. No soda for you - and if you do it when I'm not around, you're going to get punished. Tell them why its bad, and disgusting. Explain why they should find it revolting. Don't tell them "anything goes, its your body" - that is awful advice. The salt and sugar loaded things that you don't want your kids eating are designed around your biological systems - a seven year old will trust taste buds and pick chips over a carrot. You must enforce the mindset of carrot.

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Take him to the park or playground...
Posted by: Cooltruth on Mar 19, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of taking him to a pediatrician to be told her son is 'obese' she should spend some quality time with him at the playground. You don't lose weight sitting around a doctor's office! Stop bringing home 'junk food' which includes anything with 'high fructose corn syrup' in it & what passes for 'bread' (puffed up buns, white bread & wheat bread that is too soft like white bread) More fresh vegetables, fruits & lean meats will improve his health while helping him get leaner. Trying to lose weight by eating miniature portions of food is going to backfire on a lot of people. They get hungrier before the next meal & overeat first opportunity they get when they become hungry due to being fed too small a portion of greasy fattening types of food. What is on the plate matters if you're trying to lose weight. Being called 'obese' isn't going to help anybody get any leaner. It also doesn't help matters when doctors expect everybody to have similar body types. It is easier for some people being tall & lean than it is for somebody naturally short & plump to measure up to the same charts which the doctors use. I haven't been to a doctor in so long, I have no idea what they'd say about my weight or anything else. I take care of my own health instead of letting them worry me to death over where I fit on their charts...

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Well Meaning, But Not the Best Advice
Posted by: Liberty G on Mar 19, 2008 7:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a great admirer of Ms. Huffington, but I'm afraid she is speaking as someone who doesn't really experience the problem many of us have with food. Forcing a child to look longingly at the food while not being allowed to eat it is both cruel and counterproductive. It just reinforces the powerful desire to eat it. Also, the discussion Ms. Huffington proposes is just preaching, doesn't address what's really going on here.

There are several points to be made about overeating. One is that for many, it is compulsive and not associated with genuine hunger. By that I mean that, for example, I can go half a day, to noon, 1 p.m., even 2 p.m., without feeling hungry. But as soon as I start eating, the food triggers a compulsive desire to continue - and for sweets.

I have found several practical ways to manage my appetite. Having breakfast, so often advised, is not one of them, for two reasons. Eating triggers my food urges, and since they are not linked to hunger, adding a meal does not reduce my eating at others. Second, breakfast is NOT A HEALTHY MEAL! It consists primarily of refined flour and sugar (both of which act similarly in the body), sometimes meat/fat, and juice, which is very sugary compared to fruit itself.

What has worked for me, when I can get into the rhythm of it is:

1. Distract myself after eating the reasonable portion I have chosen. GET UP FROM THE TABLE AND DO SOMETHING ABSORBING OR ENTERTAINING. THIS IS WHERE THE "WAITING" IS USEFUL. IF YOU GET AWAY FROM THE EATING FOR A WHILE, THE CRAVING FOR FOOD WILL SUBSIDE.

2. Eat lots of vegetables - by which I mean greens such as spinach, collards, Swiss chard, carrots, peas, etc. - not potatoes or corn or baked beans. Eat only whole grain bread, rice, etc. This is such a cliche - but it is advice that is largely ignored. It is not just a matter of nutrition - veggies and unrefined grains do not trigger a hypoglycemic effect as do refined flour and sugar - hence, don't spur cravings.

3. Getting exercise is another cliche that works. But this is something that most kids do get - if they are not allowed to live in front of the TV or computer.

4. Training one's body to expect small portions helps - including a tiny bit of dessert to signal the end of the meal.

One other important point: Much of the food we eat is suffused with growth hormones and antibiotics. I have no doubt that this pollution of our food is a significant causal factor in the rise of obesity in our kids. Avoiding processed foods of all kinds should be - though it isn't - common sense. And, by the way, there have been studies that diet soda may actually increase tendencies to be obese!

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getting kids to accept a quality diet
Posted by: mwinmag300 on Mar 19, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What we are doing with our 4-yr old is establishing a pattern of eating healthy food. We have "sometimes" foods that may have sugar in them or be high in refined carbs. He really wants these "sometimes" foods, but since we have established a pattern of presenting good food to grow on (organic vegetables, grass-fed and wild meats, etc...), he fully accepts the quality foods and we get little to no flack on what is served to him. Also, we all eat the same quality foods together and this does enforce his satisfaction with them.

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Why don't you talk to your kids about the history of the RIGGED market?
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 19, 2008 7:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tell your kids the history of the uber-corrupt FDA and DEA banning natural herbs such as hemp and stevia all the while "legalizing" and keeping artificially low prices on artificial BULLSHIT such as aspartame, MSG, High Fructose Corn Syrup, etc ... Despite hundreds and thousands of cases of aspartame, msg, hfcs, the FDA and DEA still keep them "legal" and yet they outlaw or severely restrict hemp and stevia despite the fact that they're not only harmless and free of side effects, they actually cure lots of diseases especially OBESITY !

Here's something to consider the next time your kids are about to poison themselves with "happy meals":

Rather than allowing them to be POISONED by High Fructose Corn Syrup and Aspartame, put some natural Stevia in its place. And instead of POISONING yourselves and your kids with MSG with junk food and fast food, give yourself some time to cook and let your children get into the act. They'll be encouraged and can indeed make a big difference.

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My perspective...
Posted by: dave16 on Mar 19, 2008 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please see www.discussrace.com

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I have an easier method
Posted by: Ayla87 on Mar 19, 2008 8:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find this method much easier and more effective.

Step #1: Don't buy junk food. That means no ice cream, no potato chips, cookies or anything else. If you want, you can save those things for special occasions like holidays or the weekends. If you do buy any sort buy of snack foods, make them fruit snacks. And for frozen deserts, buy sorbet or frozen yogurt instead.

Step #2: Cook high quality meals for your family. None of that pre-packaged box meal crap. Serve only real food. Serve only milk, or water with thier meals. No soda, and only high quality juices if they really want it. Put thier meal in front of them and tell to'shut up and eat' if they give you lip. If they still refuse, send them to bed with no dinner and no desert. There are kids in Africa who would do anything to have a meal like what you just made.

Step #3: If you send your child to a public school, brown bag thier lunch. And remind them that they're not aloud to eat junk food in school, unless its a treat from the teacher.

And finally step #4: No TV, video games, or internet until two hours just before bed. Once they've finished with thier homework for the day, make them do something constructive, like playing outside, reading or practicing an instrument. If they don't want to do any of that, take away thier tv time, and make them go to bed early.

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» I agree -- and it's working. Posted by: wheresarah
Teach You Kids Fat Can Be HEALTHY and Normal!
Posted by: Gravitas on Mar 19, 2008 8:28 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the first place, much of the hysteria over childhood obesity comes straight from BARFMA (big diet/pharma) who wants more customers. Plain and simple. I am amazed that the author ONLY emphasizes the role of overeating in fatness. While some kids may get fat due to the traditional stereotypes of too much food, and not enough activity:
*there are several studies that have shown heavier kids eat LESS
*mom's dieting even before pregnancy causes fatter kids in the long run
*growth hormones everywhere, as well as environmental estrogen and pollution can cause weight gain (Poor kids exposed to the same diet/exercise get fatter than middle class kids. Google this, I don't have time to give a link, but they are out there.)
*ever since agriculture, some kids have been fat. It is mother nature's plan. The more diverse a species, the better its chance of survival! John Adams (2nd U.S. president) was husky as a child and lived to be 91. Sophie Tucker, also a heavy child, ignored her doctor's advice and live to her 80's, (Ignoring her dr was probably why!)

I am not a parent, but if I had chubby kids, I would teach them there is an evil industry who does not see them as human beings, just walking dollar signs to be exploited. That is the way the world works anyway, so it is better they learn it sooner than later. And that there may be well meaning, but dangerous people who have no clue about either their bodies or what it is like to walk in their shoes and will only make matters worse for them. These people should mind their own business. Another lesson that is best learned sooner than later.

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Childhood obesity?
Posted by: rickiey on Mar 19, 2008 11:32 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not the diet. I repeat, it's not the diet.

It's what the kids aren't doing.

If you are worried about your kid's weight, kick them outside (without the gameboy!) until the street lights come on.

Don't worry if you don't have a playground in your backyard, they'll find something to do. They're kids, they are the experts in turning absolutely nothing (a rock and a stick) into a full blown game that will bring them in huffing and puffing when you call them in.

By the way, the same tactic works on adults as well.

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» But it IS the diet. Posted by: wheresarah
it is right
Posted by: john110 on Mar 19, 2008 6:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the other day, i got to know a charming lady with a boy on a site,SUGARMOMMYMEET.COM.the site caters to rich women seeking handsome and charming soul mate. we exchanged our ideas each other how to talk to children about sex and food. she told me you have to tell your kids what is good and what is bad.....

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Good article but
Posted by: talkville on Mar 24, 2008 6:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
why is our language so troublesome (I'm thinking here of such things as bi-polarism, schizophrenia and other such conditions)

Why 'educating our kids to take care of their bodies' and not 'educating our kids to take care of themselves'? Admitted, a slight difference, but a telling one.

Is 'the kid' some kind of tiny forming Monad floating inside a Body? What is a kid (or even an adult) to think when conceiving of themselves as not one but two inter-related components? Some kind of Gyro-Command center issuing instructions and commands to the Body? And what happens should this Model somehow mal-function? Might it not be a bit more helpful to refer to the whole-ness of the child, body and processes (including 'self', 'ego', 'soul', 'consciousness', etc) together?

Or is it our Fate or our Destiny to remain Dual, bi- or multi-polar, schizo-phrenic, and all those other similar conditions emerging in larger and larger numbers these days? Descartes was for sure a pretty influential mathematician and philosopher. Was he the Last Word?

Our language is replete with these things. I know it's picky, perhaps, but just a thought.

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