Love and good food bring out the best in a child. Providing a nurturing environment, loving nourishment, and wholesome food are fundamental for your child to be healthy, happy, “wholly”, AND as smart as possible.
Eating a
variety of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, legumes, protein along
with avoiding overly processed, refined, and chemically laden foods will
enhance your child's intellectual, physical, emotional, and mental development.
Sharing
at least one family meal per day, at a regular time, creates stability for
children. Blessing the food and giving thanks will add a great deal of meaning
to a child's life, and helps a child form a positive relationship with food.
Mealtime is really not the time to have disagreeable discussions as this
increases anxiety and decreases digestion.
Children
love to play with food, so consider cultivating your child's interest in food
and eating by encouraging him or her to help you (stirring, modeling dough into
fun shapes, grinding spices with a mortar and pestle, peeling almonds, etc.).
Make the main meal the most interesting and most important. When children are
part of the meal preparation, they tend to enjoy it more.
It is
also a good idea to involve your child in menu planning and table-setting. For
example, ask your Pitta child to make a list of required tasks for meal
preparation; Pitta-children love to make lists. The artistic Vata child could
be selected to set a pretty table with place mats, candles and flowers, and the
strong Kapha child could play waiter and clear the table.
These
tasks give children a sense of responsibility and ownership towards the family
dinner ritual, allowing their natural playfulness to come forward, bringing joy
to mealtime.
Parents
often encourage children to eat healthy, but this could backfire. As the child
continually and repeatedly is told to eat healthy foods, his association to
wholesome healthy eating can become a negative, nagging one. Do not force your
child to eat because you think it is healthy. If you don't mention the word
“healthy,” they just may eat it out of curiosity and authentic hunger. Also, it
is quite normal for children to lose their appetites for a few days at a time.
Below are tips that can ease the transition to healthy eating habits.
Offer
small servings and let your child ask for more, or better yet, place the food
on the centre of the table and let them help themselves, including dessert.
Announce
the day's menu and tell your children that they may choose to eat the foods in
any order, as long as they eat everything on the menu. This tactic,
surprisingly, is highly successful.
Invite
them to serve the meal as in serving others your child forms lifelong habits of
mindfulness and kindness.
Offer
small servings and let your child ask for more, or better yet, place the food
on the centre of the table and let them help themselves, including dessert.
Announce
the day's menu and tell your children that they may choose to eat the foods in
any order, as long as they eat everything on the menu. This tactic,
surprisingly, is highly successful.
Invite
them to serve the meal. Involving your child in serving others forms lifelong
habits of mindfulness.
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