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And yet, he still wakes up in the middle of the night to eat…

  • Posted on February 5, 2009 at 02:29

…sometimes.

My night last night:

[I am sitting in the kitchen, with Stewie. It is after bath, but before bed. Dinner was finished a mere hour ago.]

Stewie (sitting on the counter, eating peas). Finishes bowl of peas, and announces, “Want more peas.”

Naomi gets more peas. (YES, he is eating PEAS. As a snack. Before bed. By choice. And I did make him say please) “It’s time for bed, Stewie, eat your peas.”

S: Eats peas. Stops. “I have to pee & poo.” (stall tactic).

N: Takes Stewie off the counter, and watches as he RUNS up the stairs (yelling that he’s “gonna beat me up”).

Stewie Gets to bathroom, takes off pants and I sit him on the toilet. Meanwhile, I put a load of laundry in the machine. Just as I’m finishing, I hear clamoring from the bathroom…

S: “I want to push the button!!” (on the washing machine). I pick him up, and he pushes the button. “I want to put the soap!!” (I’d already put the soap, but to avoid a tantrum – yes, a tantrum, tears and all – I gave him a cup of water to pour in.)

Stewie then runs back to the kitchen (he is naked from the waist down at this point) and demands that he get to finish his peas.  Back on the counter he goes, and continues to eat the peas.  Finishes them, and asks for more.  I try to convince him that there are no more, but he starts to cry, so I give him some more, but tell him that that’s it.

He eats the peas.  As he’s about to eat the last handful, he announces that he has to pee again.

Down off the counter he goes.  Runs to the bathroom again, this time on the same floor as the kitchen.  Pees.  Then pees again.  And again.  Puts seat down.  Goes to put the lid down, stops, looks at me, and says, “I watch it go down?”

N: (stifling a giggle) “Yes, Stewie, you can watch it go down.”

Stewie flushes, watching the pee, then closes the lid.  Washes his hands, and heads back to the kitchen.  This time he stands on the stool (that he carried in from the bathroom earlier in the evening) at the counter, and finishes his peas.

“Want grapes,” he announces.  There is a bowl of grapes on the counter waiting for him.  He eats grapes every night before bed.  Every. Single. Night.

Instead of eating the grapes, he takes them all off the stems and moves them to the bowl that held the peas.  We eat them together.

He stops me. “Bite it, mummy,” and he shows me how he bit the grape in half.

Stewie finishes his bowl of grapes (with several pauses for water).

“Want blueberries, mummy.”

At this point, almost 30 minutes after the whole endeavour began, I drag him upstairs to bed.

This scenario, or some reasonable facsimile thereof occurs every night.

Feeding Children

  • Posted on January 16, 2009 at 15:15

I had an interesting conversation the other night. I was out for dessert with a group of moms that I’ve been friends with for a few years, since Linus was born. We try to get together every few months “just us girls,” and occasionally get the families together for bbqs and the like (although it’s been a while).

Anyway, someone brought up the topic of vegetarian children. Apparently they have a friend (or acquaintance, I guess?) that has decided to bring up their children as vegetarians.

My friend took issue with that. She suggested that the child’s health was being compromised, and it wasn’t right to force a dietary choice on a child who doesn’t get a say in the matter.

Let me give a bit of background, first. I am not vegetarian. I would consider myself a flexitarian.  I was a vegetarian for 10 years or so, before I got married, but things have changed since then.  We still eat a predominantly vegetarian diet, but we do eat meat or fish 2 or 3 days per week.  I read vegan & vegetarian cookbooks & blogs, and I am really prudent on the food that my family eats.

Surprisingly, I took issue with this.  Our family keeps kosher, as do several of these women, so my first comment was that keeping kosher forces a dietary choice on a child who doesn’t get a say in the matter.  She felt this was different, because a vegetarian diet deprives the child of things that they need (nutrients, protein, etc).

I find it interesting to hear people’s perception of vegetarianism.  Although I’m not avegetarian anymore, I am aware of nutrition and food combining, and what foods have protein, carbohydrates, et cetera.  Clearly, I disagreed with her, but I was in the minority in the group.

What do you think?

Menu Plan Monday: January 12th Edition

  • Posted on January 12, 2009 at 12:26

In my previous incarnation, I would, occasionally, share my menu plan. I would like to continue this tradition, in case anyone out there is looking for some inspiration! So, without further ado, I present…

Menu Plan Monday

We’ve embraced what I call the flexitarian lifestyle.  We are not vegetarian, but we do not eat meat that often.  In fact, we eat meat or fish 2 (or sometimes 3) nights a week, and are vegetarian the others.

For lots more fun menu plans, visit the Org Junkie.  You won’t be sorry!

This week our menu looks like this:

Monday: Chick pea curry with basmati rice

Tuesday: Baked salmon, barley pilaf, steamed broccoli

Wednesday: Soup Night: Miso noodle soup with tofu and assorted vegetables

Thursday: Homemade pizza

Friday: Mayonnaise-chutney/curry chicken, rice, sauteed veggies

WHAT’S ON YOUR MENU THIS WEEK?