Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 This is true to a point. My kids have plenty of fresh healthy choices but they also get to have some crackers, chips and snacks that would not be considered appropriate for Type 2's. They certainly are not over indulged in junk food, but the occasional treats are allowed and available at all times. Dessert is not a term known to my children. They eat their meals and snacks and dessert isn't an option whether they eat or not. The picky bugs I was referring to is some of my day care children. Some of these kids just plum won't eat what I serve. I am a licensed provider and am on the California Day Care food program. I have been for 16 years. We have to keep daily food records for each child and have to serve certain foods and turn these into the state at the end of each month. A breakfast consists of a serving of bread or cereal, a serving of milk, and a serving of fruit. Snack has to have two components of a protein, milk, fruit, bread, or veggie. Lunch has to be a serving of protein, a serving of veggie, a serving of fruit, a serving of bread or pasta, and a serving of milk. Dinner is the same as Lunch. So these kids are having to have healthy choices. I have both healthy grain breads and vitamin fortified white bread available and these kids ARE given choices. Even my own children. My daughter is 15 and I can tell you most definitely that some kids WILL starve and won't change regardless of what is available to them. I have followed the Day Care diet with all of my kids. At age 6 my daughter was refusing to eat anything " healthy. " We ended up having to see a pediatric nutritionist (after she started losing weight) who told us that with some kids that you have to offer alternatives or you WILL have eating disorders down the road. I had already been down that road and didn't want that for my daughter. This is when we switched from only whole grains breads to having " choices, " and she began to eat again. Now all of the kids have simple choices. 9 times out of 10 they will pick the healthier, but some of them won't and don't and they are still healthy. I just don't think if a family has been eating a certain way all of their lives and then another family member is diagnosed, that the whole family should have to change what they know for that one person. I certainly don't expect my daughter to change because of her brother's diagnosis. Also I don't remember who posted about the eating disorder, but I agree wholeheartedly because I was that person the poster spoke about. I was raised in a no sugar, no junk food, no fast food, only healthy choices home. I was 87lbs when I got married a year out of high school and I suddenly found myself in charge of grocery shopping. I was a skin bone because I never ate. I have oral textile defensiveness from being a preemie myself and so for me many healthy choices although they taste good, I can't get beyond the texture to be able to chew/swallow those foods. I overindulged in just about everything. It led to adult anorexia/bulimia. My psych docs all told me this was due to being deprived as a child. So while setting a pattern of healthy eating it can just as easily be setting a pattern for disaster!!! hugs Keri In a message dated 7/19/2004 10:45:19 AM Pacific Standard Time, naladmw@... writes: If you have fresh fruit and vegetables ready to eat in the fridge and there is no popsicles in the house, eventually, even picky little bugs will eat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 Well, obviously I have some explaining to do. I did not mean to cause such a stir. metaylorokc and Mom2KJDJ, I realize that Type 1 is unpreventable in children. The pancreas just doesn't work from the get go, but Type 2 is possibly preventable. Maybe not 100% of the cases, but researchers have now determined that there is a path to becoming Type 2 Diabetic. First you are Hypoglycemic, then you become Insulin Resistant, then Pre- Diabetic, then full blow Type 2 Diabetes. If the blood glucose levels are held somewhat constant during the early phases (hypoglycemia and insulin resistance) it is possible to prevent or at least delay the onset of Type 2 diabetes. There is also the genetic link to the increased risk for developing Type 2 diabetes. So I was saying that providing healthy foods would be better for getting children's taste buds used to the more natural sweetness of wholesome foods. Also, limiting the carbohydrate intake of children is not a good way to go because their bodies do need the carbohydrates to grow and function properly, but they also need proteins and fats. They don't need sugar, but avoiding a lot of splurging is a healthier way to go. It has to do with balancing things out in an overall nutritious manner than saying no to everything. In response to the Porkettes thread (which I know I didn't put input in on, but in a way it is related to the rest of this), you don't have to suffer, and you don't have to make your family suffer. If the family is following a healthy low sugar (not low carb there is a big difference there), who is really suffering? No one, everyone is healthy and happy (hopefully, there are many things out there, this is only one). There is also a much bigger picture here because there is a real world out there. Kids and adults both have to face the fact that not everyone has to be concerned with diet/sugar/carbs/protein/fat/etc. like they are. It is fine to splurge here and there, even for some that are diagnosed with metabolic disorders are able to splurge here and there. I am not saying deprive your family of everything, but make them healthy as much as possible. Ice cream man comes and little Junior wants some ice cream and mommy is diabetic. That is fine, it is a splurge, but if at the dinner table Junior doesn't want to eat his beef, brown rice and broccoli and he gets to eat a scoop or two of ice cream for dessert, it could be hurting him in the long run and you are teaching him that its ok not to eat nutritious and ok to eat the sweets. And why would you give your family something lacking in nutrients while you are at the other side of the table eating something that would be good for their bodies as well. If you have fresh fruit and vegetables ready to eat in the fridge and there is no popsicles in the house, eventually, even picky little bugs will eat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 What you said is exactly what I was trying to get out. The point I was trying to make is I dont see how having the whole family follow a healthy diabetic style diet is torturing the family.. Personally, i think it is crueller to provide the family with sugary junk foods as options.JMO > metaylorokc and Mom2KJDJ, > I realize that Type 1 is unpreventable in children. The pancreas > just doesn't work from the get go, but Type 2 is possibly > preventable. Maybe not 100% of the cases, but researchers have now > determined that there is a path to becoming Type 2 Diabetic. First > you are Hypoglycemic, then you become Insulin Resistant, then Pre- > Diabetic, then full blow Type 2 Diabetes. If the blood glucose > levels are held somewhat constant during the early phases > (hypoglycemia and insulin resistance) it is possible to prevent or at > least delay the onset of Type 2 diabetes. There is also the genetic > link to the increased risk for developing Type 2 diabetes. So I was > saying that providing healthy foods would be better for getting > children's taste buds used to the more natural sweetness of wholesome > foods. Also, limiting the carbohydrate intake of children is not a > good way to go because their bodies do need the carbohydrates to grow > and function properly, but they also need proteins and fats. They > don't need sugar, but avoiding a lot of splurging is a healthier way > to go. It has to do with balancing things out in an overall > nutritious manner than saying no to everything. > > In response to the Porkettes thread (which I know I didn't put input > in on, but in a way it is related to the rest of this), you don't > have to suffer, and you don't have to make your family suffer. If > the family is following a healthy low sugar (not low carb there is a > big difference there), who is really suffering? No one, everyone is > healthy and happy (hopefully, there are many things out there, this > is only one). There is also a much bigger picture here because there > is a real world out there. Kids and adults both have to face the > fact that not everyone has to be concerned with > diet/sugar/carbs/protein/fat/etc. like they are. It is fine to > splurge here and there, even for some that are diagnosed with > metabolic disorders are able to splurge here and there. I am not > saying deprive your family of everything, but make them healthy as > much as possible. Ice cream man comes and little Junior wants some > ice cream and mommy is diabetic. That is fine, it is a splurge, but > if at the dinner table Junior doesn't want to eat his beef, brown > rice and broccoli and he gets to eat a scoop or two of ice cream for > dessert, it could be hurting him in the long run and you are teaching > him that its ok not to eat nutritious and ok to eat the sweets. And > why would you give your family something lacking in nutrients while > you are at the other side of the table eating something that would be > good for their bodies as well. If you have fresh fruit and > vegetables ready to eat in the fridge and there is no popsicles in > the house, eventually, even picky little bugs will eat. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 I dont want to get in a huge fight about all this, but I think the notion of it being cruelty to have the family eat healthy is ridiculous. Secondly, I feel if your situation was bad enough to cause psychological issues that is way more extreme than having the family eat healthy. > I just don't think if a family has been eating a certain way all of their > lives and then another family member is diagnosed, that the whole family > should > have to change what they know for that one person. I certainly don't expect > my > daughter to change because of her brother's diagnosis. > > Also I don't remember who posted about the eating disorder, but I agree > wholeheartedly because I was that person the poster spoke about. I was > raised in a > no sugar, no junk food, no fast food, only healthy choices home. I was > 87lbs > when I got married a year out of high school and I suddenly found myself in > charge of grocery shopping. I was a skin bone because I never ate. I have > oral textile defensiveness from being a preemie myself and so for me many > healthy > choices although they taste good, I can't get beyond the texture to be able > to chew/swallow those foods. I overindulged in just about everything. It > led > to adult anorexia/bulimia. My psych docs all told me this was due to being > deprived as a child. So while setting a pattern of healthy eating it can > just > as easily be setting a pattern for disaster!!! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 In a message dated 7/19/2004 9:55:41 PM Pacific Standard Time, METAYLOROKC writes: I feel if your situation was bad enough to cause psychological issues that is way more extreme than having the family eat healthy. I was raised in a completely Christian non-abusive upper middle class home, went to the best private schools, and had everything " material " and emotionally I ever needed or wanted. EXCEPT FOOD!!! My parents never even argued and my sibling was my best friend. The ONLY issue in that household was having to eat healthy and not allowed any sweets or unnatural foods....so the only bad in my life was the food issue created by a mother who wanted us to eat only totally healthy, depriving us of anything remotely unhealthy. So pull your closed mind out of your....and see for a change that YOUR VIEW has been proven to be WRONG this time! What my mother did WAS cruel and she'd be the first to admit it to you NOW!! As a member of this group I don't need to be sent mail privately that is copied to the list.... Thanks Keri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 naladmw wrote: >I realize that Type 1 is unpreventable in children. You are absolutely correct. Type 1 is unpreventable in either children or adults. Sandy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 > You are absolutely correct. Type 1 is unpreventable in either children or > adults. > Sandy > Yup that is what they told me. i was soooo upset when I got it, for years I have tried to prevent getting type 2 diabetes like my mom has, exercised, ate right (most of the time) etc.. then BAM out of the blue I got type one :-( Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 > What my mother did WAS cruel and she'd be the first to admit > it to you NOW!! > > As a member of this group I don't need to be sent mail privately that is > copied to the list.... > Yes and what your mother did was not having her family " eat healthy " . If what she did about food is why you are so emotionally disturbed that is not just eating healthy... Im sorry if this has touched a nerve with you that is keeping you from seeing what Im saying. Secondly, maybe you should breathe for a moment. If you think that I have ever said what YOUR mother did was normal or healthy, you need to re-read the emails. Again, i do not feel providing healthy food to a family, such as diabetic friendly dinners is abuse. Also Im not sure what the heck you are saying about the email thing. i have never privately emailed you, i just hit reply??? Im not going to argue with you, nor am I going to allow you to talk to me the way you did. Apparently you have issues that need proffesional assistance, and that have nothing to do with cooking a diabetic friendly dinner or providing healthy food in the place of chips and sugar. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 Sorry you are the one who needs to reread. She only allowed healthy foods in the house no sugar cereals, no cookies, no candy, no white bread, no chips, no popsicles,etc. Just healthy balanced natural food meals and fruits and veggies for snacks. She didn't want us to get heart disease or diabetes. She wanted us to be healthy. This is EXACTLY what you were saying is not cruel... Obviously it ISN'T as completely healthy as you believe. It left her children to binge and purge when they became old enough to get their hands on the " forbidden " at a later age. Everything in modesty is healthy. People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw rocks... what you are now a psych doc diagnosing me as needing therapy because I called you on an error in your judgement???? WHATEVER buddy Im sorry if this has touched a nerve with you that is keeping you from seeing what Im saying. Secondly, maybe you should breathe for a moment. If you think that I have ever said what YOUR mother did was normal or healthy, you need to re-read the emails. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2004 Report Share Posted July 20, 2004 << Sorry you are the one who needs to reread. She only allowed healthy foods in the house no sugar cereals, no cookies, no candy, no white bread, no chips, no popsicles,etc. >> Im not going to argue with you on this. It is obvious we have a difference of opinion on the subject. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 21, 2004 Report Share Posted July 21, 2004 Just thought I would chime in again....seems like this is more common than one (especially myself) would think....I can't believe such " normal " appearing friends and co-workers as I have, had such awful childhoods....Not that I was let loose to do anything I could get away with.....and we weren't the richest family in our neighborhood.....but I was satisfied....and I could have used a lot more " moderation " in my diet....but this type of deprivation for totally healthy families is not moderation or even balanced....I have a new appreciation for those who suffered this way.....ROLF Re: [alldiabeticinternational] Please let me explain... << Sorry you are the one who needs to reread. She only allowed healthy foods in the house no sugar cereals, no cookies, no candy, no white bread, no chips, no popsicles,etc. >> Im not going to argue with you on this. It is obvious we have a difference of opinion on the subject. pancreatitis info http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/ThePancreatitisPlace/ diabetic recipes http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetic_recipes/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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