When my son, my first baby, was 15 months he loved to throw food on the ground. He would take the mashed banana and blueberries, massage them in his hands and then fling them across the room. He would lock eye contact with me as he swept his chubby little arm across the tray of his high chair sweeping toast crust and pasta straight onto the ground. I took this behaviour really personally.
I wondered what kind of psychopath would make eye contact and blatantly do something so contrary to expectations and social norms. I would use a stern, sometimes raised voice and as instructed by my parenting books, remind him we do not throw food, this is not okay. I would get on my hands and knees to retrieve the food, sighing with frustration as he giggled.
When my daughter, the darling second child who came just less than three years later, made the same moves, at the same age, I completely ignored it. I mostly left the food on the ground; cleaning it up once she was wiped up and onto the next activity or nonchalantly put it back on her tray to be eaten or thrown again. I had a toddler to deal with, who had grown out of the throwing food stage and was now standing on his chair to chat. The kitchen mess no longer seemed like such a violation.
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