Life Coach Magazine

Read These 20 Top Mum Tips for Developing Their Child with a Healthy Relationship with Food

By Djridings @fivethingsnow

Seven in 10 mums feel their child is developing an unhealthy relationship to food.

It has been revealed that 69 per cent of mums around the country are worrying their child has an increasingly unhealthy approach to their food.

With eight in 10 admitting their children are fussy eaters, tempted by sugary snacks and fizzy drinks, modern mums are resorting to better ploys to encourage them to eat well.

In a new study by the Chilean Blueberries Committee, it was found that the average child only eats three of their five a day.

Two thirds of mums admit to sneaking fruit and veg onto the plate yet the majority fall back on unhealthy ‘tried and tested’ meals at some point during the week.

Mums felt most snacks marketed at their children were too sugary, with 88 per cent struggling to come up with a healthy meal plan and find child-friendly recipes.

Allowing dinners in front of the TV to crafting funny faces out of fruit and veg are just some of the methods mums are left with to get their children eat their five a day.

More than nine in 10 children were happy to eat fruit, compared to just over half willing to eat their vegetables. Fresh fruits such as bananas and blueberries were some of their children’s favourites.

Yet a whopping 70 per cent of mums confessed to giving their children sugar-packed chocolate as rewards or bribes for good behavior. This pattern was reinforced by extended family and friends.

Leading nutritionist, Dr Emma Derbyshire, said “Quite often unhealthy foods are used to reinforce good behavior yet we should be doing this with ‘healthy’ food options.

Otherwise, these will be seen as a lowly second choice. Fresh fruits such as blueberries provide vitamin C, K, manganese, potassium and fiber.

Survey data from mums also shows that these are a great alternative choice as they are naturally sweet tasting and can be eaten straight from the punnet”.

Here are the tips 

Allowing children to eat in front of a screen

Always dining with the children at the same time

Employ the ‘try it once’ rule – a full mouthful of food must be eaten before the child can make their mind up whether they like it or not

Cutting the fruit / veg into funny shapes

Let the children choose which fruit / veg they want in the supermarket

Preparing the food on the plate into the shape of a funny face or colourful picture

Only allowing the child to have pudding if all the veg has been eaten

Blending fruits into homemade smoothies as a ‘treat’

Give the children the opportunity to choose some of the meals the family has that week

Offer snack bowls of fruit / veg when they’re watching television

Not allowing children to snack on anything unhealthy until they have had a piece of fruit

Making fruit lollipops

Giving food silly names such as ‘dinosaur food’

Chopping fruit into healthy breakfast cereals

Taking a piece of fruit when they pick up the kids so it’s the first thing they have when they’re hungry

Letting the children cook (with assistance) whenever they want to

Having a color theme

Filling homemade cakes with a blended fruit puree

Introducing a brand new kind of fruit / veg every week for the whole family to try

Pureeing fruit and adding to porridge


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