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Woman Can’t Stand Future Stepdaughter’s Picky Eating, Says No To Marrying Her Dad
Young girl in kitchen looking upset at plate of broccoli and vegetables, reflecting foodie woman and kid conflict.

Woman Can’t Stand Future Stepdaughter’s Picky Eating, Says No To Marrying Her Dad

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Have you ever encountered a picky eater? Odds are that you have, as such a habit is pretty common, of course, with varying levels. What we’re also interested in is how you reacted to them – did you accept them, or couldn’t you help but feel annoyed? 

Well, the latter reaction is what this woman had about her future stepdaughter. She just couldn’t handle the fact that she eats a very limited range of foods and that her father doesn’t want to do anything about it. And this, sadly, turned their joint future very doom and gloom. 

More info: Reddit

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    People tend to react differently when they meet someone who is a picky eater

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    For example, this woman was beyond annoyed when it turned out that her future stepdaughter is one

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    In her eyes, it wasn’t a failure of the girl herself, but rather her fiancé, who fathered her

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    You see, when her own daughter developed picky eating some time ago, the woman managed to “fix it”

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    Foodie woman breaks up with fiancé over his kid and future of buttered noodles in their relationship.

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    So, it’s a deal-breaker for her that her fiancé doesn’t seem fazed about his daughter’s eating habits

    The OP recently got engaged to her boyfriend, who has an 8-year-old daughter. Her own daughter gets along with this girl, which is good, since they’re about to be stepsisters

    When her fiancé got granted 50/50 custody of his daughter, and she started spending more time with the post’s author, the woman noticed that the girl was an extremely picky eater. For instance, she eats only foods like chicken tenders, French fries, and pizza. And let’s just say that kind of habit didn’t really please the future stepmom. 

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    You see, she’s in the military, and that means she’s all about the importance of a healthy and well-balanced diet, especially for children. When her daughter had picked up a picky eating habit back in the day, she made sure to fix it, which took about 6 months. 

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    So, she tried speaking with her fiancé about his daughter’s eating habits and how they should strive to snap her out of it. Yet, he didn’t make this out to be as big an issue as she did, and that’s why he didn’t feel like fixing it or anything.

    And that’s beyond frustrating for the woman. In fact, it’s not only frustrating, but a whole deal-breaker. She just can’t wrap her head around how someone can be so laidback on “fixing” their child. 

    Family enjoying a meal together at a bright restaurant, highlighting a foodie woman and a child sharing food moments.

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    Well, technically, the woman isn’t wrong about the fact that picky eating can be “cured.” Only, just as it was for her daughter, it takes quite a lot of time and patience. Making the food more appetizing, starting small, and finding what motivates a picky eater to leave their food comfort zone are essential in this process. 

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    But what should be taken into consideration when it comes to picky eating is that quite often it stems from something deeper than just stubbornness. For example, some theories suggest that genetics can play a part in it. 

    The most popular theory is that picky eating is connected to the TAS2R38 gene, which affects the ability to taste bitterness. That means that certain folks might not like the foods, like broccoli or Brussels sprouts, that tend to carry that bitter taste. And it’s not limited to these examples; they might just feel aversion to many other vegetables or foods with strong flavor, too. 

    Of course, neurodivergence and sensitivity issues can be a common reason behind picky eating as well, but in this case, at least according to the OP, it isn’t. Yet, as some netizens pointed out, you can never be sure, especially when you’re not an expert, like this woman. She’s not qualified to say that the girl doesn’t have any neurodivergence for sure. And when you add the fact that she also has struggles with reading, who knows? 

    Either way, what people online also pointed out is that the OP isn’t really compatible with this fiancé, and maybe breaking up isn’t the worst-case scenario here. What do you think?

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    Netizens pointed out that the woman is rather ignorant about it all, as the picky eating might be coming from the girl’s neurodivergence, which the woman wrote off as nonexistent

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    Ugnė Bulotaitė

    Ugnė Bulotaitė

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. I have loved creating and writing down stories about people and things since I was little and I think this passion led me to get degrees in sociology, communication, and journalism. These degrees opened various paths for me, and I got a chance to be a volunteer in the human rights field, and also try myself out in social research and journalism areas. Besides writing, my passions include pop culture: music, movies, TV shows; literature, and board games. In fact, I have been dubbed a board games devotee by some people in my life.

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    Ugnė Bulotaitė

    Ugnė Bulotaitė

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. I have loved creating and writing down stories about people and things since I was little and I think this passion led me to get degrees in sociology, communication, and journalism. These degrees opened various paths for me, and I got a chance to be a volunteer in the human rights field, and also try myself out in social research and journalism areas. Besides writing, my passions include pop culture: music, movies, TV shows; literature, and board games. In fact, I have been dubbed a board games devotee by some people in my life.

    What do you think ?
    Nova Rook
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She seems very reasonable and her concerns seem very valid.

    🇺🇦 🇵🇸 TribbleThinking
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree. If he can't even do something as basic as enforcing his own no dessert rule, it's not a good sign. This is coming from someone who is autistic, over half a century old, and still has some strange eating habits to this day.

    Load More Replies...
    Lee Gilliland
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Merely because someone hasn't been classed as neurodivergent doesn't mean she isn't, and it's a spectrum. The texture of things is far more important to kids, and they have more taste buds for adults.

    Jac Carr
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That's a cop out for doing nothing about normal child issues

    Load More Replies...
    Kim Shannon
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If she marries him, she won't be gaining a husband. She'll be taking on another child (HIM).

    Lola July
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Everyone is MISSING THE POINT! HE wants HER to do his job. He's being a neglectful father. She see him as the problem. Maybe the child is whatever new Label (excuse) for being young & a picky eater. We had a rule, 1 no thank you bite. You had to eat 1 bite, a bite, not a itsy bitsy nibble. Then if you didn't like it fine. My children ate just about anything. He needs to sit with his daughter & read age appropriate books. It's a wonderful time they'll always remember. My children read before they went to school, even though my daughter is dyslexic. You create a love of books. She sees his attitude as the deal breaker.

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If anything, she looks like a better parent than the actual father. At least she cares about the girl's well-being and education. Does he not care that eating nothing but all-but-fastfood will be bad for her growing body?

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was - and still am to some extent - the pickiest eater out there. So I'll say this: you can force feed a child whatever you think they should eat but when they're on their own and you aren't around, they'll eat as they want anyway. The more my mom forced me to eat what I didn't like, the more I fought her and I honestly think that hindered me more than anything else from trying new foods. I don't remember happy family dinners. All I remember is fighting about food, having to sit for hours until I "cleaned up my plate", and being sent to bed early. I hated mealtime with my family. Is this what this woman wants for her family? Because that's what she's going to get as well as giving that stepdaughter some eating issues that will hurt her down the road if she doesn't back off. I eat a lot of different things now and the main reason I do is because someone isn't shoving them down my throat. As long as you're not having to prep separate meals, let it go. It'll work itself out.

    Melissa Harris
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd say the OP realized what the real issue is already: her fiance is an inattentive and uninterested parent and wants to dump his parenting duties onto her. Don't date men going through custody battles. More often then not they're looking for a nanny to relieve them of their parenting role and not an actual partner.

    LookASquirrel
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "When I received her back at age 5.5,". Bad chat bot!

    Westerly
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I went into a similar relationship to this, in the end I was doing all the parenting for all 3 kids, lunch time.. always me making it, bedtime always me enforcing it, he's just waiting for you to move in and do ALL the mummy roles for all kids, his included, homework, school lunches, .. I ended the relationship and was much happier with my little family unit.

    Janelle Collard
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP's being reasonable in trying to change the kid's diet. I agree - her fiancé is not doing enough to change kid's diet or to back up OP who's trying to help. The fact that it worked for OP with her daughter leads me to believe it could with with the other kid but dad doesn't want to be bothered. I'm with OP - I wouldn't want to make special meals for a picky eater either. I get the "mouth feel" part of not liking certain foods - I have it also.

    Lousha
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What someone in the comments mentioned about the "try it once policy" is very far from a universal solution. Lots of kids are determined to not like anything that is not their 3 favourite junk foods. They will comply if they must, and try one piece of green pea, or a sliver of a new type of cheese, and immediately gag and make disgusted faces, because they convince themselves before they even touch the food that it is terrible. I used to feed such a child daily, and it was exhausting. (He was "ruined" by his neglectful parents and string of nannies for whom it was more comfortable to feed him 3 types of frozen rubbish all the time and he got used to it.) I was trying for a year and a half, and hardly any progress was made.

    Ace
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Is she trying to make a perfectly normal slightly picky eating habit develop into a full-blown Eating Disorder? Sound like Dad is trying to gently encourage, without forcing the issue, perfectly reasonable IMO. What may have worked for the OP's kid may not work for the other one, she really needs to let it sort itself out in time, which it probably will if she stops making such a big deal out of it.

    nicoleermintrude
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment has been deleted.

    Load More Replies...
    Southie
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    she doesn't like it.....best she call it off because she's never going to be happy. Problem solved

    Community Member
    5 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    As others point out though: she is the innocent here and not the crux of the matter. If Dad is unable/unwilling to be an able partner - to his own daughter - it is very unlikely to change once OP marries him: she will be doing the heavy lifting, in all areas, not only childcare. One thing not mentioned is the trauma this child must have gone through during the marriage falling apart, the custody "battle," and divorce. The food and poor school work are very likely, at least partially, the result of the the stress she has experienced. If she is an only child, that would have been a LOT: being bounced around, fought over, and/or just living in places with constant tension/unhappiness. Who knows what led to the separation and what happened during it. It is entirely possible one/both parents were too far in to their "battle" to even care how it effected her. Or she could just be a typical kid, stuck in a rut for a bit. Or, yes, neurodivergent.

    Steff
    Community Member
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Never enough information provided in this slop to truly make an informed judgement; just one person's perspective presented from an obviously self serving pov. What do the other two individuals trotted out to be judged have to say??

    tameson
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was a very selective eater as a. child. I hated it. My parents tried to enforce the rule that I had to try everything on the table. I did try, but I gagged and just couldn't swallow. I would sit at the table with tears running down my face. My parents eventually gave up and just told me that I had to eat something that was on the table. I couldn't just get up and find some other food. When I went to college I made a conscious decision to add at least one new food to my diet every year. Now I can eat most things. Please people, don't enforce food eating rules on children who have food aversions. Work with them to develop reasonable expectations that they voluntarily agree to. It will make dinner time much more pleasant for everyone.

    K Barnes
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The daughter could be undiagnosed neurodivergent or have serious food issues, but for most kids I think OP is right that without dad's lazy parenting her eating habits could be improved. My brother and his wife were extremely devoted when their boys were young and they encouraged them to eat a variety, the boys weren't picky at all. Then they got overwhelmed and kind of phoned it in and started feeding them c**p, now the kids have become very picky. Just one example but interesting to see the change in them now that they're used to junk food they never used to get.

    Key Lime
    Community Member
    5 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's not just about the pickiness, it's the lack of parenting. Her Dad (and maybe her Mum too) needs to step up and help with her schooling and eating. Kids rarley get held back school. Does she have dyslexia?

    Janissary35680
    Community Member
    Premium
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is about much more than picky eating. It's a clash of parenting and childrearing styles and approaches. OP is right not to let herself be cast in the role of Evil Stepmother.

    Doodles1983
    Community Member
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sounds like BOTH parents are letting her down. Reading and diet. No wonder mom supports it. OP will be picking up the slack! This is a compatability issue too. So no, postpone.

    Sarah Kathrin Matsoukis
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I wouldn't have the patience. Eat what's on the table or stay hungry.

    Jac Carr
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He's using her as a child behaviourist because she's been though similar things and of course, she's a woman so she'll just naturally be "better at that kind of thing". Weaponised incompetence by a terrible father; get the hell out

    Roberta Surprenant
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I can remember when I was a child who ordered tuna sandwich at chinese restaurants or at fisherman's wharf. Now I love spicy asian foods or scallops and clams. OOP sounds like a bit of control freak.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    From another country? In the military? She's a spy!!

    FreeTheUnicorn
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    YTA. You're trying to exercise control just fornthr sake of it it doesn't matter if she eats pizza every night, she's old enough to cook frozen pizza She can take vitamins, keep encouraging healthy eating but also bullying her about food all the time is going to give her even more food anxiety than she already has. If you can't handle this in a mature and living way, don't get married.

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Vitamin tablets are NOT a replacement for vitamins in foods. All vitamins do is make your pee expensive. Mother Nature groups things in foods so that they ameliorate each other. Vitamins don’t; they’re just single vitamins without the other things that make them do their jobs better. And there are methods to get kids to develop good eating habits that don’t involve “bullying” them. (I saw a funny one on “Shark Tank”: Someone’s developed foods like mashed potatoes that have broccoli and cauliflower in them. I also saw some ice cream at the store that does the same thing. I thought they were hilariously brilliant!

    Load More Replies...
    Nova Rook
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She seems very reasonable and her concerns seem very valid.

    🇺🇦 🇵🇸 TribbleThinking
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree. If he can't even do something as basic as enforcing his own no dessert rule, it's not a good sign. This is coming from someone who is autistic, over half a century old, and still has some strange eating habits to this day.

    Load More Replies...
    Lee Gilliland
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Merely because someone hasn't been classed as neurodivergent doesn't mean she isn't, and it's a spectrum. The texture of things is far more important to kids, and they have more taste buds for adults.

    Jac Carr
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That's a cop out for doing nothing about normal child issues

    Load More Replies...
    Kim Shannon
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If she marries him, she won't be gaining a husband. She'll be taking on another child (HIM).

    Lola July
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Everyone is MISSING THE POINT! HE wants HER to do his job. He's being a neglectful father. She see him as the problem. Maybe the child is whatever new Label (excuse) for being young & a picky eater. We had a rule, 1 no thank you bite. You had to eat 1 bite, a bite, not a itsy bitsy nibble. Then if you didn't like it fine. My children ate just about anything. He needs to sit with his daughter & read age appropriate books. It's a wonderful time they'll always remember. My children read before they went to school, even though my daughter is dyslexic. You create a love of books. She sees his attitude as the deal breaker.

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If anything, she looks like a better parent than the actual father. At least she cares about the girl's well-being and education. Does he not care that eating nothing but all-but-fastfood will be bad for her growing body?

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was - and still am to some extent - the pickiest eater out there. So I'll say this: you can force feed a child whatever you think they should eat but when they're on their own and you aren't around, they'll eat as they want anyway. The more my mom forced me to eat what I didn't like, the more I fought her and I honestly think that hindered me more than anything else from trying new foods. I don't remember happy family dinners. All I remember is fighting about food, having to sit for hours until I "cleaned up my plate", and being sent to bed early. I hated mealtime with my family. Is this what this woman wants for her family? Because that's what she's going to get as well as giving that stepdaughter some eating issues that will hurt her down the road if she doesn't back off. I eat a lot of different things now and the main reason I do is because someone isn't shoving them down my throat. As long as you're not having to prep separate meals, let it go. It'll work itself out.

    Melissa Harris
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd say the OP realized what the real issue is already: her fiance is an inattentive and uninterested parent and wants to dump his parenting duties onto her. Don't date men going through custody battles. More often then not they're looking for a nanny to relieve them of their parenting role and not an actual partner.

    LookASquirrel
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "When I received her back at age 5.5,". Bad chat bot!

    Westerly
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I went into a similar relationship to this, in the end I was doing all the parenting for all 3 kids, lunch time.. always me making it, bedtime always me enforcing it, he's just waiting for you to move in and do ALL the mummy roles for all kids, his included, homework, school lunches, .. I ended the relationship and was much happier with my little family unit.

    Janelle Collard
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 week ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP's being reasonable in trying to change the kid's diet. I agree - her fiancé is not doing enough to change kid's diet or to back up OP who's trying to help. The fact that it worked for OP with her daughter leads me to believe it could with with the other kid but dad doesn't want to be bothered. I'm with OP - I wouldn't want to make special meals for a picky eater either. I get the "mouth feel" part of not liking certain foods - I have it also.

    Lousha
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What someone in the comments mentioned about the "try it once policy" is very far from a universal solution. Lots of kids are determined to not like anything that is not their 3 favourite junk foods. They will comply if they must, and try one piece of green pea, or a sliver of a new type of cheese, and immediately gag and make disgusted faces, because they convince themselves before they even touch the food that it is terrible. I used to feed such a child daily, and it was exhausting. (He was "ruined" by his neglectful parents and string of nannies for whom it was more comfortable to feed him 3 types of frozen rubbish all the time and he got used to it.) I was trying for a year and a half, and hardly any progress was made.

    Ace
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Is she trying to make a perfectly normal slightly picky eating habit develop into a full-blown Eating Disorder? Sound like Dad is trying to gently encourage, without forcing the issue, perfectly reasonable IMO. What may have worked for the OP's kid may not work for the other one, she really needs to let it sort itself out in time, which it probably will if she stops making such a big deal out of it.

    nicoleermintrude
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment has been deleted.

    Load More Replies...
    Southie
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    she doesn't like it.....best she call it off because she's never going to be happy. Problem solved

    Community Member
    5 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    As others point out though: she is the innocent here and not the crux of the matter. If Dad is unable/unwilling to be an able partner - to his own daughter - it is very unlikely to change once OP marries him: she will be doing the heavy lifting, in all areas, not only childcare. One thing not mentioned is the trauma this child must have gone through during the marriage falling apart, the custody "battle," and divorce. The food and poor school work are very likely, at least partially, the result of the the stress she has experienced. If she is an only child, that would have been a LOT: being bounced around, fought over, and/or just living in places with constant tension/unhappiness. Who knows what led to the separation and what happened during it. It is entirely possible one/both parents were too far in to their "battle" to even care how it effected her. Or she could just be a typical kid, stuck in a rut for a bit. Or, yes, neurodivergent.

    Steff
    Community Member
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Never enough information provided in this slop to truly make an informed judgement; just one person's perspective presented from an obviously self serving pov. What do the other two individuals trotted out to be judged have to say??

    tameson
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was a very selective eater as a. child. I hated it. My parents tried to enforce the rule that I had to try everything on the table. I did try, but I gagged and just couldn't swallow. I would sit at the table with tears running down my face. My parents eventually gave up and just told me that I had to eat something that was on the table. I couldn't just get up and find some other food. When I went to college I made a conscious decision to add at least one new food to my diet every year. Now I can eat most things. Please people, don't enforce food eating rules on children who have food aversions. Work with them to develop reasonable expectations that they voluntarily agree to. It will make dinner time much more pleasant for everyone.

    K Barnes
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The daughter could be undiagnosed neurodivergent or have serious food issues, but for most kids I think OP is right that without dad's lazy parenting her eating habits could be improved. My brother and his wife were extremely devoted when their boys were young and they encouraged them to eat a variety, the boys weren't picky at all. Then they got overwhelmed and kind of phoned it in and started feeding them c**p, now the kids have become very picky. Just one example but interesting to see the change in them now that they're used to junk food they never used to get.

    Key Lime
    Community Member
    5 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's not just about the pickiness, it's the lack of parenting. Her Dad (and maybe her Mum too) needs to step up and help with her schooling and eating. Kids rarley get held back school. Does she have dyslexia?

    Janissary35680
    Community Member
    Premium
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is about much more than picky eating. It's a clash of parenting and childrearing styles and approaches. OP is right not to let herself be cast in the role of Evil Stepmother.

    Doodles1983
    Community Member
    6 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sounds like BOTH parents are letting her down. Reading and diet. No wonder mom supports it. OP will be picking up the slack! This is a compatability issue too. So no, postpone.

    Sarah Kathrin Matsoukis
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I wouldn't have the patience. Eat what's on the table or stay hungry.

    Jac Carr
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He's using her as a child behaviourist because she's been though similar things and of course, she's a woman so she'll just naturally be "better at that kind of thing". Weaponised incompetence by a terrible father; get the hell out

    Roberta Surprenant
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I can remember when I was a child who ordered tuna sandwich at chinese restaurants or at fisherman's wharf. Now I love spicy asian foods or scallops and clams. OOP sounds like a bit of control freak.

    Apatheist Account2
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    From another country? In the military? She's a spy!!

    FreeTheUnicorn
    Community Member
    1 week ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    YTA. You're trying to exercise control just fornthr sake of it it doesn't matter if she eats pizza every night, she's old enough to cook frozen pizza She can take vitamins, keep encouraging healthy eating but also bullying her about food all the time is going to give her even more food anxiety than she already has. If you can't handle this in a mature and living way, don't get married.

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    1 week ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Vitamin tablets are NOT a replacement for vitamins in foods. All vitamins do is make your pee expensive. Mother Nature groups things in foods so that they ameliorate each other. Vitamins don’t; they’re just single vitamins without the other things that make them do their jobs better. And there are methods to get kids to develop good eating habits that don’t involve “bullying” them. (I saw a funny one on “Shark Tank”: Someone’s developed foods like mashed potatoes that have broccoli and cauliflower in them. I also saw some ice cream at the store that does the same thing. I thought they were hilariously brilliant!

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