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experiencelifemag.com
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Resetting the Family Table
Our family mealtimes have become frenzied and stressful. Here’s how to make them
nourishing once again - for body and soul.
By Marc David |
September 2009 |
The biggest complaint nutritional psychologist Marc David, MA,
hears from parents is that their kids won’t eat vegetables. David, however, is
more concerned about what they are eating: poor-quality fats and excess amounts
of sugar and white flour. “If your family eats a low-quality diet, you’ll have a
hard time getting your kids accustomed to foods like whole veggies and whole
grains, and your entire family’s energy and immunity will suffer,” says David,
author of The Slow Down Diet: Eating for Pleasure, Energy and Weight Loss
(Healing Arts Press, 2005). The even bigger problem, says David, is how today’s
families are eating: rushed, solo or in front of the TV. Here, he shares
insights and advice:
What are ways families can eat better together? The most important
thing
is to schedule meals together. Often, everybody is
moving in
different
directions, so it’s good to find at least
one day a week when
you can all have
dinner as a family. Once
you schedule it in, it
becomes a commitment,
something
sacred that you can look
forward to. Another key is to get as
many people involved in the
cooking as possible. It becomes
less about eating
together and more
about preparing together.
Even kids as young as 2 can be given
something to do that
they’re excited about and that keeps them
occupied. And,
you
can set the standard that this is something we do
together.
Given the obesity epidemic that is affecting so many kids, how do parents
best teach their children to eat healthy? First and foremost, when
kids are
in the house, they can eat only what’s in the house.
So, to
any parent who
complains that their kids drink soda all
day long, I
say: Don’t keep soda in the
house. Also, from
a very young age on,
kids model what their parents do, so
if
we want them to eat in a
certain way, we have to set an example. Kids
look at
us and pick up all
of our good habits and all of our
bad habits. So, for
example, if
you’re a fast eater and don’t
receive pleasure from your food, guess
what your kids are
going to do? The next idea is what I call the
“20 times
rule”: A lot of foods you give to children maybe three or
four
times and they
don’t like it, but if you give it to them about 20
times, there’s a point at
which they start eating it. Look at
you, look
at me — there are foods we eat
today that we didn’t
eat 20 years ago.
Why? Because we acquire tastes for food.
It
simply takes patience and
persistence. What do you think of the
“Clean
Your Plate” rule many
parents instill in their
kids? I don’t believe in it.
It assumes you
gave the kid
the right amount of food in the first place. It also
doesn’t
make sense to me because it doesn’t teach body wisdom — that
is, paying
attention to satiety. It’s no different than going to a
restaurant where they
serve really big portions and having the
waiter
tell you, “You must clean your
plate.”
Many kids who eat too fast are told “chew your food!” by their parents. Can
you talk a little more about what you call the “psychobiology of
chewing” and
why exactly we need to chew? Chewing is really
discernment. Yes, it’s a
physical act — you are chomping your
food and
making it smaller and smaller so
you can digest it —
but what you’re
also doing is discerning, tasting what’s in
there. The more we chew
food, the more the body is able to
discern, Oh, this is
good for me, I
want more. Or, Oh, this is
enough. Chewing is noticing; it’s
giving the
body time to tap
into body wisdom. We just have to be alert and not
go
into
habit or habitual eating.
You’ve said that your favorite way to enjoy a meal is to be surrounded by
family and friends — people you love. You’ve also written that we
should dine
with people who nourish us emotionally and
intellectually.
What effect does
dining this way have on our
nutrition, digestion and
well-being? When we are
in
community, we can relax, and the body
digests and assimilates most
efficiently when it’s relaxed. Food is, to
a great degree, a
communal activity;
there’s something very deep and
cellular
about sharing a meal. We are social
creatures, and anything
that supports our true nature will support our true
metabolism. t
Marc David, MA, is the founder of The Institute for the Psychology of Eating
(www.psychologyofeating.com) and
was a nutritionist and teacher for many years with Canyon Ranch Resorts and
Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health.
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Resetting the Family Table
Our family mealtimes have become frenzied and stressful. Here’s how to make them
nourishing once again - for body and soul.
By Marc David | The Nourished Self Department, September 2009 |
The biggest complaint nutritional psychologist Marc David, MA,
hears from parents is that their kids won’t eat vegetables. David, however, is
more concerned about what they are eating: poor-quality fats and excess amounts
of sugar and white flour. “If your family eats a low-quality diet, you’ll have a
hard time getting your kids accustomed to foods like whole veggies and whole
grains, and your entire family’s energy and immunity will suffer,” says David,
author of The Slow Down Diet: Eating for Pleasure, Energy and Weight Loss
(Healing Arts Press, 2005). The even bigger problem, says David, is how today’s
families are eating: rushed, solo or in front of the TV. Here, he shares
insights and advice:
What are ways families can eat better together? The most important
thing
is to schedule meals together. Often, everybody is
moving in
different
directions, so it’s good to find at least
one day a week when
you can all have
dinner as a family. Once
you schedule it in, it
becomes a commitment,
something
sacred that you can look
forward to. Another key is to get as
many people involved in the
cooking as possible. It becomes
less about eating
together and more
about preparing together.
Even kids as young as 2 can be given
something to do that
they’re excited about and that keeps them
occupied. And,
you
can set the standard that this is something we do
together.
Given the obesity epidemic that is affecting so many kids, how do parents
best teach their children to eat healthy? First and foremost, when
kids are
in the house, they can eat only what’s in the house.
So, to
any parent who
complains that their kids drink soda all
day long, I
say: Don’t keep soda in the
house. Also, from
a very young age on,
kids model what their parents do, so
if
we want them to eat in a
certain way, we have to set an example. Kids
look at
us and pick up all
of our good habits and all of our
bad habits. So, for
example, if
you’re a fast eater and don’t
receive pleasure from your food, guess
what your kids are
going to do? The next idea is what I call the
“20 times
rule”: A lot of foods you give to children maybe three or
four
times and they
don’t like it, but if you give it to them about 20
times, there’s a point at
which they start eating it. Look at
you, look
at me — there are foods we eat
today that we didn’t
eat 20 years ago.
Why? Because we acquire tastes for food.
It
simply takes patience and
persistence. What do you think of the
“Clean
Your Plate” rule many
parents instill in their
kids? I don’t believe in it.
It assumes you
gave the kid
the right amount of food in the first place. It also
doesn’t
make sense to me because it doesn’t teach body wisdom — that
is, paying
attention to satiety. It’s no different than going to a
restaurant where they
serve really big portions and having the
waiter
tell you, “You must clean your
plate.”
Many kids who eat too fast are told “chew your food!” by their parents. Can
you talk a little more about what you call the “psychobiology of
chewing” and
why exactly we need to chew? Chewing is really
discernment. Yes, it’s a
physical act — you are chomping your
food and
making it smaller and smaller so
you can digest it —
but what you’re
also doing is discerning, tasting what’s in
there. The more we chew
food, the more the body is able to
discern, Oh, this is
good for me, I
want more. Or, Oh, this is
enough. Chewing is noticing; it’s
giving the
body time to tap
into body wisdom. We just have to be alert and not
go
into
habit or habitual eating.
You’ve said that your favorite way to enjoy a meal is to be surrounded by
family and friends — people you love. You’ve also written that we
should dine
with people who nourish us emotionally and
intellectually.
What effect does
dining this way have on our
nutrition, digestion and
well-being? When we are
in
community, we can relax, and the body
digests and assimilates most
efficiently when it’s relaxed. Food is, to
a great degree, a
communal activity;
there’s something very deep and
cellular
about sharing a meal. We are social
creatures, and anything
that supports our true nature will support our true
metabolism. t
Marc David, MA, is the founder of The Institute for the Psychology of Eating
(www.psychologyofeating.com) and
was a nutritionist and teacher for many years with Canyon Ranch Resorts and
Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health.
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