The Parenting Post Blog

Feeding: A Timeline of Annoyances

By Mighty Maggie on Thursday, May 15, 6:00 am EDT

There's sleep deprivation, healing from birth and a lot of wandering around the house in a daze not knowing which end was up, but I think the most complicated, most difficult and certainly most frustrating thing about a new baby is feeding him.

I wasn't expecting breastfeeding to be a piece of cake, but even I didn't anticipate two weeks of breastfeeding, then tube feeding, then pumping to store more milk for the next round of tube feeding while we waited for the baby to get bigger and learn to suck better. Which meant I had, what? Fifteen minutes to myself every day? Thank goodness a lactation consultant graduated me from tube feeding the day before my husband had to go back to work because I never figured out how to do it without him. And while breastfeeding got more familiar and I learned how to manage it other places than my couch, it was never really easy. Not for me, anyway. My son wasn't even that interested and weaned his own little self at exactly six months. Fine by me! I thought. Yay! I had my body back!

We switched to formula and rice cereal. Who decided rice cereal should be baby's first food? Mine didn't particularly enjoy his first bowl of tasteless mush, or the hundreds of others after that. We quickly moved on to pureed fruits and vegetables in addition to the cereal, trying to stick to the Holy Food Introduction Schedule, but you know, it was hard to keep those rules floating around in my less than functional mommybrain. Besides, Jack liked and ate EVERYTHING, so the new hard thing became 1) what do I feed him today? and 2) how do I take it with me? For another six months I dutifully prepared a dozen kinds of baby food and froze them in ice cube trays. I kept a running list in that less-than-functional brain of what he'd eaten the day before so I wouldn't give him avocado an entire week in a row (although, let's face it, sometimes I totally did.) I had a hard time coming up with new things for him to try and new ways to prepare them. And oh, how I hated packing his lunch or dinner in the diaper bag and feeding him on the go. Fill the tiny containers, pack them precariously in the bag, hope there's a way to heat them up, pack all the empty dirty containers precariously in the bag.

Then there was the day I ordered a grilled cheese sandwich for him at a restaurant and HE ATE IT. He didn't just store the chunks of sandwich in his cheek for me to dig out before naptime, he ATE HIS SANDWICH. A whole new world opened before me, a world in which my son could eat People Food. A world in which I was free of the food processor, the freezer, the ice cube trays, the incessant conjuring of dinner from a small assortment of frozen food cubes. Hallelujah!

But now... NOW dinnertime has a new struggle and I shall call it The Battle Of The Wills. While I am beyond thrilled (no really, you have NO IDEA) that my kid eats macaroni and cheese (only the real cheese and wheat pasta kind of course) and chicken nuggets (free range) and peas in their actual pea form, feeding it to him as become a royal pain in the neck. He wants ALL his food on the tray so he can stuff ALL his bites of sandwich in his mouth AT ONCE. No, he doesn't WANT a spoonful of peas, he wants the MACARONI and he wants it NOW. Wait, HE wants the spoon, GIVE HIM THE SPOON. And if I give him the spoon and his bite of pasta goes flying across the kitchen and I snatch the spoon away: WAAAAAAHHHHH. The howling is especially attractive when accompanied by an open mouth full of half-chewed food. It's hard not to be affected by the giant tears rolling down his fat little cheeks, but COME ON. I don't care if he wants to throw the rest of his dinner on the floor - IT'S NOT ALLOWED.

So what's the next stage, you experienced moms? When he suddenly decides his entire diet should consist of Doritos?

_____

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Member Comments
Um,
5/15/2008 at 9:05 am
Yes, that would be the next stage. My oldest ate cheese, grapes and club crackers for lunch everyday for two years. My twins refused to eat the same thing two days in a row.


Lisa's picture
Lisa
Rice cereal...yuck!
5/15/2008 at 12:42 pm
Olivia HATED rice cereal. After two weeks of futility in trying to get her to eat it, we tried some pureed sweet potatoes. She couldn't get enough of them. Food with ACTUAL FLAVOR! Granted, grown up people wouldn't tolerate this mushy mess, but the child had consumed nothing but formula and gritty formula-flavored rice cereal, so you can imagine how sweet potatoes would be like dessert to her. So I think the rice cereal thing is overrated.


Lauren's picture
Lauren
My toddler did the same thing
5/15/2008 at 12:57 pm
She went through a phase for a while where she would only eat mac and cheese, but slowly she would start to try new things. She still hardly ever touches meats, or vegetables for that matter, but she is starting to branch out...slowly. Good luck!


Crystal's picture
Crystal
Oh, to be a toddler
5/15/2008 at 1:38 pm
It sounds like Jackson is a lot my son. He had milk/soy intolerance and acid reflux as a baby. Once we started "real food", we had battle after battle much like the one you described above. Our Dr. started warning us around 18 months that he would eventually become a "picky" eater. He never really did. He's 30 months now, and he still eats 3 pancakes, a full serving of fruit, and drinks all his milk in one sitting. He does have days when he eats less than usual, but those are usually followed by days of eating more than usual. Some charming teacher at daycare did introduce him to cupcakes with frosting on them, bless her heart. Now we are fighting the "no you cannot have cupcakes/candy/pop/cookies for dinner" battle. So far I've been firm and haven't allowed this to happen, and he eventually quits begging and eats his green beans. We'll see. Best of luck with the upcoming year of eating!


Why don't they warn us?
5/15/2008 at 6:41 pm
I have a 13 month old, this all sounds too familiar! I was recently telling a friend of mine who is due any second that birth classes should be focused solely on feeding the child for the first year - not on the actual birth! I mean when you are giving birth you have tons of experienced people there to help you... But then they send you home all alone, and the feeding begins. I'm hoping things get easier as my son gets older - but from the sound of it... Maybe it doesn't?


MimiPhilly's picture
MimiPhilly
What about breakfast?
5/15/2008 at 8:21 pm
I can't get my 7 month old to take anything but a bottle for breakfast, and then he HAS to have it before we leave for daycare. I struggled for a while, even daycare wanted to know why he wasn't having cereal for breakfast, finally I said the heck with it and tried lunch. Now he eats veggies and fruits with oatmeal for lunch and dinner, and as far as I'm concerned, he can suck that bottle for breakfast until he's one! The beauty of rules is they're meant to be broken.


auntjone's picture
auntjone
doritos
5/16/2008 at 2:05 pm
I'd look for that phase to begin around 8 years old, or whenever darling Jack starts sleeping over at friends' homes and is introduced to the stuff you don't have at home. :) I am quite lucky in that my son was, and still is, a great eater. In fact, he has already graduated to super-eater. He is now 14 and consumes more in one meal than I'm physically capable of eating in an entire day. Of course having a baby push my stomach up between my lungs may have something to do with my reduced capacity...


Anonymous's picture
Anonymous
oh my gosh. i had no idea it
5/16/2008 at 4:15 pm
oh my gosh. i had no idea it was this bad... thanks for the warning!!


2nd Time Mom - 20 yrs. later's picture
2nd Time Mom - 20 yrs. later
LOL
5/18/2008 at 10:58 pm
My little guy is only 2 1/2 mos. old - but at least I'm forewarned. My 22 yr. old is not too picky but is allergic to nearly everything food-wise! You'll learn to deal with it eventually!


Anonymous's picture
Anonymous
I can just see it
5/19/2008 at 9:22 am
I can so perfectly picture that little wailing face, mouth full of food, demanding whatever he wants NOW. My guy is 6 months old and we're just starting the road to solids. So far, he has no interest in rice cereal.


Feeding
5/19/2008 at 5:28 pm
Perhaps he's just looking for a little time to explore doing it himself. Which gets extremely messy, but it's a learning experience for them. It helps if you have dogs, as they help keep the floor clean. As for the rice cereal, the only way my daughter would really take it was if I made it with formula and then mixed about half of one of those Gerber tubs of fruit into it. That was her breakfast most mornings: a bottle of formula and some rice cereal with fruit in it. I don't have a picky eater, but I have a very sophisticated eater. She always has been. My toddler does not like mac & cheese, nor hot dogs. Give her a brat or some italian sausage, or perhaps something spicy and she is in heaven. I about flipped a lid when my little darling climbed on the counter and helped herself to the crushed red peppers in the shaker. She liked it. Of course, round two will be different to be sure.


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