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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Feed Your Family Healthy
Getting your family to eat right can be tricky. Here are the clever tactics – and expert wisdom – that can help you rise to the top 5 challenges.
By Helen Cordes |
September 2007 |
Challenge
1: When I make healthy food, my family won't eat it.
Challenge
2: We're way too busy to cook real food.
Challenge
3: I can't compete against Madison Avenue messaging.
Challenge
4: My kids crave junk food – and sometimes so do I!
Challenge
5: I can't control what my family eats away from home.
Begin at the Beginning
Resources
Any parent who's tried to sneak a little steamed spinach or sautéed zucchini
under the discriminating noses of their children understands that upgrading
the family diet from horrific to healthy can be challenging. Kids seem almost
preprogrammed by mass marketing to crave pizza and chicken strips, not broccoli
and Swiss chard. And, even if you could agree on a more wholesome menu, who
has the time to plan and prepare something new and exotic?
But researchers, therapists – and a good number of parents – suggest
that it's not as tough as you might think. With the right strategies, you can
help your family eat healthier without much struggle. You might even (gasp!)
have some fun along the way.
Here are some of the most common challenges parents face in the healthy diet
campaign and some helpful ideas to overcome them.
Challenge
1: When I make healthy food, my family won't eat it. (Back
to Top)
When I hear complaints from my two daughters about a healthy dish I prepare,
my gut response is to get bossy: Eat it because it's good for you,
because I cooked it ... and because I say so! That's normal, but
not necessarily effective, says therapist Donna Fish, MS, LCSW, author of Take
the Fight Out of Food: How to Prevent and Solve Your Child's Eating Problems
(Atria, 2005). A more valuable (and more satisfying)
approach involves helping our kids make healthy choices on their own.
By educating our kids to make informed food-selection decisions and by involving
them in the food-selection and food-prep process (more on that in a moment),
we can empower them to eat better now, and for a lifetime.
Start by making sure your kids know where various foods come from; why most
whole, natural foods help build strong bodies; and why most heavily processed
foods are best avoided. Bring your kids to the market or food co-op. Teach them
to read labels (see Nutrients, page 40). Help them understand which whole-food
ingredients (if any) form the basis of their favorite foods, and what those
ingredients look like in raw form. Point out that the top five ingredients in
many "kids' foods" (processed flours and sugars, cheap fats, added flavors and
colors) make it harder for kids to grow up strong and healthy.
Then brainstorm about some healthy dishes that incorporate the ingredients they
like best. Let them pick out some cookbooks at the library, involve them in
Web searching for recipes that use favorite whole-food ingredients. Teach them
about the origins and healing powers of various fruits and vegetables. Work
together on adapting favorite-food recipes to make them healthier.
Even young children can learn to understand the difference between healthy and
unhealthy foods. To help them grasp why a favorite junk food is discouraged,
suggests Fish (a mom of three), explain something like the following: "This
may make your tastebuds and tummy happy right now, but it won't provide good
fuel to help your body do your favorite things."
Or you can recall an experience they've had with an unhealthy food: "Remember
when you had only candy and cake at that party and came home so cranky and tired?"
You can add more specific nutrition information as a child gets older, explaining
how certain ingredients affect their bodies and minds, for better or for worse.
You can make everyone's food life easier by removing the most troublesome temptations
at their source. In fact, that's probably a good first line of defense in most
households, says David Ludwig, MD, PhD, author of Ending
the Food Fight (Houghton Mifflin, 2007). Ludwig suggests
doing a "clean sweep" of unhealthy foods in your household and replacing them
with vibrant, tasty (preferably organic) whole-food alternatives. This could
require an afternoon to accomplish, and it may take some time for your family
to get used to (so you may want to clean out the kitchen in phases), but it
will save you trouble, confusion and temptation down the road, and it will make
healthy cooking that much easier.
Plus, Ludwig adds, "Filling your home with real food creates a feeling of abundance."
A bountiful array of fresh, good-tasting, visually appealing foods can help
counteract distress over the loss of addictive snacks.
Challenge
2: We're way too busy to cook real food. (Back
to Top)
The busier you are, the more incentive you have to make sure your family doesn't
fall prey to the chronic health, mood and energy problems that result from poor
nutrition.
Besides, says Ludwig: "Serving up healthy foods can be a whole lot easier and
quicker than you think." He knows all about the pressures busy families face:
For 12 years, he's led the Optimal Weight for Life Program at Children's Hospital
Boston. Ludwig hears from thousands of parents worried that time pressures will
prevent them from preparing whole foods. And to most, he offers the same three
keys to success: 1) plan your menus, 2) invite your kids to help prepare food,
and 3) make healthy snacks as convenient as possible.
Menu planning makes shopping and cooking more efficient, and it makes integrating
whole foods much easier. "When I do a weekly menu plan, I only need to go to
the grocery store once a week," says Catharine Slover, a mom of three in Dripping
Springs, Texas. Stocking the shelves with the week's needs cuts down on convenience-food
impulse buys. Plus, when there's always a ready answer to "What's for dinner?"
it reduces juvenile lobbying for a different dish.
Smart menu planning can also shrink your prep time for cooking whole grains
and beans. "I'll cook a larger batch of brown rice, which will take about 40
minutes, but then I'll have it ready to use for a few other meals during the
rest of the week," says Ludwig.
Enlist your kids in the effort. Project EAT (Eating Among Teens), a University
of Minnesota survey of nearly 5,000 adolescents, found that middle school and
high school students who helped shop and cook were much more likely to eat fruits
and vegetables (and less likely to opt for soda and sugary snacks).
Enlist older kids to wash and cut up fruits and veggies that can be ready to
eat when the "I'm starving!" chorus begins. Plus, prechopped veggies make instant
additions to stir-fries and salads for lunch or dinner, and precut fruit becomes
a quick and easy fold-in with yogurt and nuts for dessert. Younger kids can
make snack-packs of toasted nuts, seeds, and dried or frozen fruit.
Cooking is an important life skill, and one that's easily learned. Simple, healthy
meals needn't be laborious. So pick out a few family-friendly cookbooks. With
a small investment of time and focus, you can create healthy meals quickly and
conveniently.
Challenge
3: I can't compete against Madison Avenue messaging. (Back
to Top)
No matter how thoroughly you educate your children about the value of a healthy
diet, that message is constantly being undermined by the thousands of junk-food
ads kids see on TV. Children between the ages of 2 and 7 view an average of
4,400 ads annually – one-third of them for foods such as candy, snacks,
cereal and fast food – while 8- to 12-year-olds see 7,600 food ads, according
to a March 2007 Kaiser Family Foundation study.
And those viewing patterns can be hazardous to kids' health: A 2006 University
of Michigan study published in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent
Medicine indicated that 3-year-olds who watched more than two hours
of television a day were three times as likely to be overweight than those who
watched less frequently.
But there are ways to counteract this media juggernaut. Amy Jussel – the
mother of an 11-year-old girl, and a marketer herself – founded Shaping
Youth, an organization aimed at taming harmful media messages. She also began
volunteering at her daughter's San Francisco Bay–area school to teach
kids how to resist junk food come-ons.
"The kids really love the 'gross-out' games," says Jussel of her "reality show"
approach. She has students dissect the contents of a Lunchables-type package
to identify nasty saturated fats and food dye, and spoon out the 10 teaspoons
of sugar in a typical can of soda. She also coaches them on reading nutrition
labels and analyzing deceptive product claims. Then she highlights the good
stuff using blindfold taste-tests and games that get kids to try new "mystery
foods" such as jicama and mango.
You don't have to be a marketing insider to make use of Jussel's tactics. Just
remember to keep things fun and to engage your children's natural curiosity.
Kids are generally quick to see through silly selling schemes once you explain
how the cartoon-character promos and "cool kids drink sugar syrup" messages
are designed to make them want things they wouldn't otherwise. Play "spot the
hook" with them when they're young and you'll help inoculate them against a
lifetime of unhealthy hype.
Challenge
4: My kids crave junk food – and sometimes so do I! (Back
to Top)
Contrary to popular belief, kids don't come into this world destined to eat
only mac 'n' cheese and chicken strips. "Children aren't born craving junk food,"
says Ludwig. "They're brainwashed to crave it by the marketers. They can learn
to love other foods just as well," he says, noting that children in many other
cultures eat the same food as the adults around them – diverse foods that
Americans would consider a hard sell for their kids.
The problem is, the more junk foods kids eat and are exposed to, the more they
want. And the same goes for adults. That's why creating an enjoyable healthy-food
experience is so essential.
A good way to start resetting kids' taste buds is to lead by example –
wherever you are on the healthy-eating spectrum. "Parents don't have to have
the best eating habits before beginning changes," says therapist Fish. "In fact,
your children will appreciate your honesty in acknowledging how hard it is to
cut back on certain unhealthy foods you've relied on, because they face that,
too. But what's more important is that they see you express your enjoyment of
at least some of the healthy foods you're trying."
Research confirms that taste preferences – for children and adults –
can and do change over time. Writing in Why
We Eat What We Eat: The Psychology of Eating (American
Psychological Association, 2001), food psychologist Elizabeth D. Capaldi, PhD,
describes three ways in which those preferences change: with repeat exposure
to a new taste; by pairing a new taste with an old, favorite taste; and by sneaking
a new nutrient in with a familiar, preferred food.
Younger children may need at least 10 exposures to a new food before they'll
accept it, according to some studies. When in doubt, be patient, persistent
and creative. Try pairing tactics: Make a sandwich with one whole-grain slice
of bread, for example, or sneak some grated veggies into a favorite soup or
sauce. Add almond slivers to a favorite salad, or surprise kids with kiwi in
their usual fruit mix of apples, bananas and strawberries.
You can also take a food your child purportedly hates (let's say, onion) and
mask it in a combination he or she will find nearly irresistible (try guacamole,
a healthy and quick-to-prepare dip for veggies that calls for only mashed avocados,
garlic, onion, tomato, cilantro and a dash of lime juice). Many times kids will
be won over by a delicious flavor combo and not even notice the presence of
that "much-hated" food.
Challenge
5: I can't control what my family eats away from home. (Back
to Top)
True enough. But you can equip your kids with food-choice skills and values
they will use all their lives. And if they experiment a little, it's not the
end of the world. What they eat and learn at home will always help set the stage
for their food choices elsewhere. "Keep the focus on the fact that they are
in charge of their bodies all the time, even when they're away from you," says
Fish.
Find ways to illustrate the fact that there's a direct link between healthy
food and fueling the body, she advises. "A child is going to be more motivated
to make good choices when he really gets that connection." Kids want to be the
best they can be at the activities they are passionate about – from soccer
and dance to playing hide-and-seek in the yard and reading a good book (healthy
food fuels brain cells, too!).
Also consider that kids receive positive health messages from many outside sources
– enlightened peers, teachers and other adults. Books and movies can have
a huge impact, particularly promoting food values. Reading Eric Schlosser's
Chew On
This (Houghton Mifflin, 2007) has changed many a child's
attitude about the appeal of junk foods. And seeing films like the documentary
Super Size Me can have a similarly enlightening effect.
I know this from personal experience. When our younger daughter was little,
she'd beg to go to McDonald's, despite our opposition. Then she watched Super
Size Me and vowed never to go to McDonald's again, whether we were around or
not.
Peer-to-peer organizations can also play a key role. The Austin, Texas–based
Sustainable Food Center, for instance, recruits kids to educate other kids at
schools and community events. When kids have the opportunity to learn from other
kids, it's more appealing – and more fun!
Whatever the first step in your family's food transformation, remember that
you're making a difference in your child's health. And by infusing each improvement
with fun and family togetherness, you'll also make the process quicker and easier.
Best of all, you'll know that your children are building healthy patterns that
will grow as they do.
Helen Cordes is a freelance writer and editor in Georgetown, Texas.
Begin
at The Beginning
Want to start making healthy changes in your family? Here are some guidelines
to get you off the ground:
- Be patient as you introduce changes.
Children – just like adults – are creatures of habit, and your
plan is doomed if you try too much too soon. Real, sustained change takes
time.
- Don't assume kids only like bland
foods. Serve kids the same foods you're savoring, not just "kid foods" they've
been brainwashed to want. Conversely, open your mind to some creative kid-think:
Catharine Slover finds that her three kids prefer to eat some veggies, like
peas and beans, frozen.
- Make healthy foods fun. Kids love
playing with food, so let them. A few examples: Set them loose with a cookie-cutter
and easy-to-cut produce such as melons or cucumbers. Or let them fashion veggie
faces on individual pizzas – zucchini buzz cut, mushroom eyes, red-pepper
lips and olive freckles. (See "Kitchen-Smart
Kids," available in the May 2006 archives.)
- Switch their snacks to easy-to-grab
cut veggies and fruit. Store them in clear containers in the refrigerator
so they're the first things kids see. Keep fruits that don't need refrigeration
in decorative bowls on the kitchen table or counter so they're easy to grab.
- Set a healthy example that goes
beyond teaching and preaching. Kids spot a double standard miles away, so
don't ask them to do what you won't. But you don't have to be perfect: As
therapist Donna Fish, MS, LCSW, notes (see Challenge 4), your flaws can actually
help strengthen your family's sense of shared mission.
- Serve up some extra TLC along with
the lentil loaf. Eating together as a family reaffirms connections and healthy
choices, so try to make it happen as often as possible, even when the schedule
is challenging. Regular family meals are linked with lower rates of substance
abuse, obesity, eating disorders and emotional instability in kids.
Resources (Back
to Top)
Books
Ending
the Food Fight: Guide Your Child to a Healthy Weight in a Fast Food/ Fake Food
World by David Ludwig, MD, PhD, with Suzanne Rostler,
MS, RD (Houghton Mifflin, 2007)
Take the
Fight Out of Food: How to Prevent and Solve Your Child's Eating Problems by
Donna Fish, MS, LCSW (Atria, 2005)
Chew On
This: Everything You Don't Want to Know About Fast Food by
Eric Schlosser and Charles Wilson (Houghton Mifflin, 2007)
Web
www.shapingyouth.org –
Find info on how this nonprofit organization is using the power of media for
positive change; check out "Positive Picks" and "Damaging Drek" for insight
into media and marketing's impact on kids.
www.foodstudies.org –
Offers ideas on how to get kids to grow, cook and eat healthy, diverse foods.
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Feed Your Family Healthy
Getting your family to eat right can be tricky. Here are the clever tactics – and expert wisdom – that can help you rise to the top 5 challenges.
By Helen Cordes | Features, September 2007 |
Challenge
1: When I make healthy food, my family won't eat it.
Challenge
2: We're way too busy to cook real food.
Challenge
3: I can't compete against Madison Avenue messaging.
Challenge
4: My kids crave junk food – and sometimes so do I!
Challenge
5: I can't control what my family eats away from home.
Begin at the Beginning
Resources
Any parent who's tried to sneak a little steamed spinach or sautéed zucchini
under the discriminating noses of their children understands that upgrading
the family diet from horrific to healthy can be challenging. Kids seem almost
preprogrammed by mass marketing to crave pizza and chicken strips, not broccoli
and Swiss chard. And, even if you could agree on a more wholesome menu, who
has the time to plan and prepare something new and exotic?
But researchers, therapists – and a good number of parents – suggest
that it's not as tough as you might think. With the right strategies, you can
help your family eat healthier without much struggle. You might even (gasp!)
have some fun along the way.
Here are some of the most common challenges parents face in the healthy diet
campaign and some helpful ideas to overcome them.
Challenge
1: When I make healthy food, my family won't eat it. (Back
to Top)
When I hear complaints from my two daughters about a healthy dish I prepare,
my gut response is to get bossy: Eat it because it's good for you,
because I cooked it ... and because I say so! That's normal, but
not necessarily effective, says therapist Donna Fish, MS, LCSW, author of Take
the Fight Out of Food: How to Prevent and Solve Your Child's Eating Problems
(Atria, 2005). A more valuable (and more satisfying)
approach involves helping our kids make healthy choices on their own.
By educating our kids to make informed food-selection decisions and by involving
them in the food-selection and food-prep process (more on that in a moment),
we can empower them to eat better now, and for a lifetime.
Start by making sure your kids know where various foods come from; why most
whole, natural foods help build strong bodies; and why most heavily processed
foods are best avoided. Bring your kids to the market or food co-op. Teach them
to read labels (see Nutrients, page 40). Help them understand which whole-food
ingredients (if any) form the basis of their favorite foods, and what those
ingredients look like in raw form. Point out that the top five ingredients in
many "kids' foods" (processed flours and sugars, cheap fats, added flavors and
colors) make it harder for kids to grow up strong and healthy.
Then brainstorm about some healthy dishes that incorporate the ingredients they
like best. Let them pick out some cookbooks at the library, involve them in
Web searching for recipes that use favorite whole-food ingredients. Teach them
about the origins and healing powers of various fruits and vegetables. Work
together on adapting favorite-food recipes to make them healthier.
Even young children can learn to understand the difference between healthy and
unhealthy foods. To help them grasp why a favorite junk food is discouraged,
suggests Fish (a mom of three), explain something like the following: "This
may make your tastebuds and tummy happy right now, but it won't provide good
fuel to help your body do your favorite things."
Or you can recall an experience they've had with an unhealthy food: "Remember
when you had only candy and cake at that party and came home so cranky and tired?"
You can add more specific nutrition information as a child gets older, explaining
how certain ingredients affect their bodies and minds, for better or for worse.
You can make everyone's food life easier by removing the most troublesome temptations
at their source. In fact, that's probably a good first line of defense in most
households, says David Ludwig, MD, PhD, author of Ending
the Food Fight (Houghton Mifflin, 2007). Ludwig suggests
doing a "clean sweep" of unhealthy foods in your household and replacing them
with vibrant, tasty (preferably organic) whole-food alternatives. This could
require an afternoon to accomplish, and it may take some time for your family
to get used to (so you may want to clean out the kitchen in phases), but it
will save you trouble, confusion and temptation down the road, and it will make
healthy cooking that much easier.
Plus, Ludwig adds, "Filling your home with real food creates a feeling of abundance."
A bountiful array of fresh, good-tasting, visually appealing foods can help
counteract distress over the loss of addictive snacks.
Challenge
2: We're way too busy to cook real food. (Back
to Top)
The busier you are, the more incentive you have to make sure your family doesn't
fall prey to the chronic health, mood and energy problems that result from poor
nutrition.
Besides, says Ludwig: "Serving up healthy foods can be a whole lot easier and
quicker than you think." He knows all about the pressures busy families face:
For 12 years, he's led the Optimal Weight for Life Program at Children's Hospital
Boston. Ludwig hears from thousands of parents worried that time pressures will
prevent them from preparing whole foods. And to most, he offers the same three
keys to success: 1) plan your menus, 2) invite your kids to help prepare food,
and 3) make healthy snacks as convenient as possible.
Menu planning makes shopping and cooking more efficient, and it makes integrating
whole foods much easier. "When I do a weekly menu plan, I only need to go to
the grocery store once a week," says Catharine Slover, a mom of three in Dripping
Springs, Texas. Stocking the shelves with the week's needs cuts down on convenience-food
impulse buys. Plus, when there's always a ready answer to "What's for dinner?"
it reduces juvenile lobbying for a different dish.
Smart menu planning can also shrink your prep time for cooking whole grains
and beans. "I'll cook a larger batch of brown rice, which will take about 40
minutes, but then I'll have it ready to use for a few other meals during the
rest of the week," says Ludwig.
Enlist your kids in the effort. Project EAT (Eating Among Teens), a University
of Minnesota survey of nearly 5,000 adolescents, found that middle school and
high school students who helped shop and cook were much more likely to eat fruits
and vegetables (and less likely to opt for soda and sugary snacks).
Enlist older kids to wash and cut up fruits and veggies that can be ready to
eat when the "I'm starving!" chorus begins. Plus, prechopped veggies make instant
additions to stir-fries and salads for lunch or dinner, and precut fruit becomes
a quick and easy fold-in with yogurt and nuts for dessert. Younger kids can
make snack-packs of toasted nuts, seeds, and dried or frozen fruit.
Cooking is an important life skill, and one that's easily learned. Simple, healthy
meals needn't be laborious. So pick out a few family-friendly cookbooks. With
a small investment of time and focus, you can create healthy meals quickly and
conveniently.
Challenge
3: I can't compete against Madison Avenue messaging. (Back
to Top)
No matter how thoroughly you educate your children about the value of a healthy
diet, that message is constantly being undermined by the thousands of junk-food
ads kids see on TV. Children between the ages of 2 and 7 view an average of
4,400 ads annually – one-third of them for foods such as candy, snacks,
cereal and fast food – while 8- to 12-year-olds see 7,600 food ads, according
to a March 2007 Kaiser Family Foundation study.
And those viewing patterns can be hazardous to kids' health: A 2006 University
of Michigan study published in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent
Medicine indicated that 3-year-olds who watched more than two hours
of television a day were three times as likely to be overweight than those who
watched less frequently.
But there are ways to counteract this media juggernaut. Amy Jussel – the
mother of an 11-year-old girl, and a marketer herself – founded Shaping
Youth, an organization aimed at taming harmful media messages. She also began
volunteering at her daughter's San Francisco Bay–area school to teach
kids how to resist junk food come-ons.
"The kids really love the 'gross-out' games," says Jussel of her "reality show"
approach. She has students dissect the contents of a Lunchables-type package
to identify nasty saturated fats and food dye, and spoon out the 10 teaspoons
of sugar in a typical can of soda. She also coaches them on reading nutrition
labels and analyzing deceptive product claims. Then she highlights the good
stuff using blindfold taste-tests and games that get kids to try new "mystery
foods" such as jicama and mango.
You don't have to be a marketing insider to make use of Jussel's tactics. Just
remember to keep things fun and to engage your children's natural curiosity.
Kids are generally quick to see through silly selling schemes once you explain
how the cartoon-character promos and "cool kids drink sugar syrup" messages
are designed to make them want things they wouldn't otherwise. Play "spot the
hook" with them when they're young and you'll help inoculate them against a
lifetime of unhealthy hype.
Challenge
4: My kids crave junk food – and sometimes so do I! (Back
to Top)
Contrary to popular belief, kids don't come into this world destined to eat
only mac 'n' cheese and chicken strips. "Children aren't born craving junk food,"
says Ludwig. "They're brainwashed to crave it by the marketers. They can learn
to love other foods just as well," he says, noting that children in many other
cultures eat the same food as the adults around them – diverse foods that
Americans would consider a hard sell for their kids.
The problem is, the more junk foods kids eat and are exposed to, the more they
want. And the same goes for adults. That's why creating an enjoyable healthy-food
experience is so essential.
A good way to start resetting kids' taste buds is to lead by example –
wherever you are on the healthy-eating spectrum. "Parents don't have to have
the best eating habits before beginning changes," says therapist Fish. "In fact,
your children will appreciate your honesty in acknowledging how hard it is to
cut back on certain unhealthy foods you've relied on, because they face that,
too. But what's more important is that they see you express your enjoyment of
at least some of the healthy foods you're trying."
Research confirms that taste preferences – for children and adults –
can and do change over time. Writing in Why
We Eat What We Eat: The Psychology of Eating (American
Psychological Association, 2001), food psychologist Elizabeth D. Capaldi, PhD,
describes three ways in which those preferences change: with repeat exposure
to a new taste; by pairing a new taste with an old, favorite taste; and by sneaking
a new nutrient in with a familiar, preferred food.
Younger children may need at least 10 exposures to a new food before they'll
accept it, according to some studies. When in doubt, be patient, persistent
and creative. Try pairing tactics: Make a sandwich with one whole-grain slice
of bread, for example, or sneak some grated veggies into a favorite soup or
sauce. Add almond slivers to a favorite salad, or surprise kids with kiwi in
their usual fruit mix of apples, bananas and strawberries.
You can also take a food your child purportedly hates (let's say, onion) and
mask it in a combination he or she will find nearly irresistible (try guacamole,
a healthy and quick-to-prepare dip for veggies that calls for only mashed avocados,
garlic, onion, tomato, cilantro and a dash of lime juice). Many times kids will
be won over by a delicious flavor combo and not even notice the presence of
that "much-hated" food.
Challenge
5: I can't control what my family eats away from home. (Back
to Top)
True enough. But you can equip your kids with food-choice skills and values
they will use all their lives. And if they experiment a little, it's not the
end of the world. What they eat and learn at home will always help set the stage
for their food choices elsewhere. "Keep the focus on the fact that they are
in charge of their bodies all the time, even when they're away from you," says
Fish.
Find ways to illustrate the fact that there's a direct link between healthy
food and fueling the body, she advises. "A child is going to be more motivated
to make good choices when he really gets that connection." Kids want to be the
best they can be at the activities they are passionate about – from soccer
and dance to playing hide-and-seek in the yard and reading a good book (healthy
food fuels brain cells, too!).
Also consider that kids receive positive health messages from many outside sources
– enlightened peers, teachers and other adults. Books and movies can have
a huge impact, particularly promoting food values. Reading Eric Schlosser's
Chew On
This (Houghton Mifflin, 2007) has changed many a child's
attitude about the appeal of junk foods. And seeing films like the documentary
Super Size Me can have a similarly enlightening effect.
I know this from personal experience. When our younger daughter was little,
she'd beg to go to McDonald's, despite our opposition. Then she watched Super
Size Me and vowed never to go to McDonald's again, whether we were around or
not.
Peer-to-peer organizations can also play a key role. The Austin, Texas–based
Sustainable Food Center, for instance, recruits kids to educate other kids at
schools and community events. When kids have the opportunity to learn from other
kids, it's more appealing – and more fun!
Whatever the first step in your family's food transformation, remember that
you're making a difference in your child's health. And by infusing each improvement
with fun and family togetherness, you'll also make the process quicker and easier.
Best of all, you'll know that your children are building healthy patterns that
will grow as they do.
Helen Cordes is a freelance writer and editor in Georgetown, Texas.
Begin
at The Beginning (Back to Top)
Want to start making healthy changes in your family? Here are some guidelines
to get you off the ground:
- Be patient as you introduce changes.
Children – just like adults – are creatures of habit, and your
plan is doomed if you try too much too soon. Real, sustained change takes
time.
- Don't assume kids only like bland
foods. Serve kids the same foods you're savoring, not just "kid foods" they've
been brainwashed to want. Conversely, open your mind to some creative kid-think:
Catharine Slover finds that her three kids prefer to eat some veggies, like
peas and beans, frozen.
- Make healthy foods fun. Kids love
playing with food, so let them. A few examples: Set them loose with a cookie-cutter
and easy-to-cut produce such as melons or cucumbers. Or let them fashion veggie
faces on individual pizzas – zucchini buzz cut, mushroom eyes, red-pepper
lips and olive freckles. (See "Kitchen-Smart
Kids," available in the May 2006 archives.)
- Switch their snacks to easy-to-grab
cut veggies and fruit. Store them in clear containers in the refrigerator
so they're the first things kids see. Keep fruits that don't need refrigeration
in decorative bowls on the kitchen table or counter so they're easy to grab.
- Set a healthy example that goes
beyond teaching and preaching. Kids spot a double standard miles away, so
don't ask them to do what you won't. But you don't have to be perfect: As
therapist Donna Fish, MS, LCSW, notes (see Challenge 4), your flaws can actually
help strengthen your family's sense of shared mission.
- Serve up some extra TLC along with
the lentil loaf. Eating together as a family reaffirms connections and healthy
choices, so try to make it happen as often as possible, even when the schedule
is challenging. Regular family meals are linked with lower rates of substance
abuse, obesity, eating disorders and emotional instability in kids.
Resources (Back
to Top)
Books
Ending
the Food Fight: Guide Your Child to a Healthy Weight in a Fast Food/ Fake Food
World by David Ludwig, MD, PhD, with Suzanne Rostler,
MS, RD (Houghton Mifflin, 2007)
Take the
Fight Out of Food: How to Prevent and Solve Your Child's Eating Problems by
Donna Fish, MS, LCSW (Atria, 2005)
Chew On
This: Everything You Don't Want to Know About Fast Food by
Eric Schlosser and Charles Wilson (Houghton Mifflin, 2007)
Web
www.shapingyouth.org –
Find info on how this nonprofit organization is using the power of media for
positive change; check out "Positive Picks" and "Damaging Drek" for insight
into media and marketing's impact on kids.
www.foodstudies.org –
Offers ideas on how to get kids to grow, cook and eat healthy, diverse foods.
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