Stop blaming yourself.
I know how soul-destroying it is to have a fussy eater. Not just a kid who knocks back the occasional green vegetable, but a truly fussy eater. As a parent, your number one job is to make sure your child is properly nourished. And if you feel you’re not doing that, the weight of guilt is crushing.
You look at your friends’ kids who seem to eat everything put in front of them, and you ask yourself why your kid doesn’t do the same.
There’s no shortage of self-styled experts giving advice, but most of them seem to repeat the same suggestion: “Add vegetables to your child’s pasta sauce.” Which would be great, if your child actually ate pasta with sauce.
Information leaflets and books will tell you that if you just put healthy food down in front of your child, they’ll eat it. What, they think you HAVEN’T TRIED THAT?
Okay. Deep breath.
There are all sorts of reasons why kids are fussy eaters. For starters, humans are biologically programmed to become wary of new foods when they’re toddlers. So when they wander out of the cave, they don’t immediately eat the poisonous berries on the bush outside. As well, about a quarter of kids are what’s known as “supertasters”. This means that certain vegetables like broccoli and brussels sprouts do taste genuinely horrible to them. On top of that, a dislike for certain foods can be genetic. A British study of identical and fraternal twins found that 78 per cent of picky eating was inherited.
So stop blaming yourself.
No matter how terrible your child's diet may seem, there are other kids out there living on the same limited foods. Brisbane dietitian and mum-of-two Kate Di Prima has seen it all. She's even found herself in the firing line when kids have worked out that she's the person convincing their parents to change their diet.