06.03.2015 Views

12 Steps to Whole Foods

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Introduction<br />

parenting theory says that you should just keep offering the options, hoping that one day, the child’s natural<br />

instinct will be <strong>to</strong>wards the broccoli (while otherwise eating white flour and processed cheese for years). I<br />

wonder how much broccoli you will throw away (or eat yourself) attempting <strong>to</strong> follow this advice!<br />

This theory and advice is worthless on many levels, and I’ll mention just three. First, when we have given<br />

children a taste for processed food by serving it regularly, any desires for natural foods change and often<br />

diminish. (On the flip side: in my research published in The Green Smoothies Diet, 65% of regular greensmoothie<br />

drinkers noticed that their cravings for sweets and junk food was reduced or eliminated!) Sugar is the<br />

most addictive substance on the planet—more addictive than cocaine, according <strong>to</strong> several studies. Those<br />

addictions and unnaturally altered tastes lead a child <strong>to</strong> make poor choices most of the time.<br />

Second, a small child does not have the wisdom and judgment <strong>to</strong> make good food choices. He knows only what<br />

tastes good, not what his body needs. Once one of my university students gave a presentation on nutrition and<br />

asked the class, “When you were 8 years old, given the choice, would you have chosen a piece of Chuck E<br />

Cheese pizza or a plate of fruit?” One hundred percent of the class, myself included, raised their hands for the<br />

pizza. This is why God, in His infinite wisdom, gave children parents.<br />

Third, the past two generations have been the first in his<strong>to</strong>ry where this idea of “options” came in<strong>to</strong> vogue,<br />

especially where junk food is usually one of those “options.” I trust in the wisdom of his<strong>to</strong>ry and tradition:<br />

encouraging children <strong>to</strong> have tantrums, express an opinion about every food, and demand that parents go<br />

running <strong>to</strong> find something else is unwise counsel.<br />

Catering <strong>to</strong> every child’s likes and dislikes can be an exercise in frustration and burnout for a mom, and it’s just<br />

a bad habit <strong>to</strong> get in<strong>to</strong>. Young parents may not realize what the fruits of indulging “picky” will be. I may not be<br />

popular for saying what follows, but I’m going <strong>to</strong> do it anyway. If you allow your children <strong>to</strong> say no <strong>to</strong><br />

nutritious foods now, you will spend hundreds of hours in your future making separate meals for each of<br />

them—and preparing several different meals takes so much longer than just one. Do that <strong>to</strong>day and I promise<br />

that your child will absolutely demand it <strong>to</strong>morrow. You will also feel guilty and wonder what the difference<br />

good nutrition would have made, should your child encounter any of the many health problems caused by a<br />

modern diet of processed food. It’s not worth it.<br />

When you’re making a meal, everyone in the family eating that meal is both a worldwide tradition and an<br />

opportunity <strong>to</strong> learn many good things, open mindedness being just one of them. Emphasize good manners as<br />

you emphasize good nutrition. In my family growing up, we weren’t allowed <strong>to</strong> say that we “hate” or “don’t<br />

like” any food my mother made. Both of my parents required that we show respect for the effort my mom made<br />

in preparing the meal.<br />

We were allowed <strong>to</strong> say, “I don’t care for this very much.” Of course, that became something we joked about:<br />

imagine eight children saying that in the most proper British accent we could come up with. Imagine how I was<br />

mocked when I <strong>to</strong>ld my husband’s teenaged siblings that rule when we were first married and I made broccoli<br />

soup for his large family. But the joking did help my two youngest sisters-in-law open their minds enough <strong>to</strong><br />

try the soup. One of them even liked it.<br />

We learned good manners in addition <strong>to</strong> being open <strong>to</strong> new foods, and both are important <strong>to</strong> learn as we<br />

become adults and enter in<strong>to</strong> social situations. I hereby publicly thank my parents for providing one<br />

nutritionally sound meal, three times a day, with the only “option” being <strong>to</strong> eat it or go hungry.<br />

14 <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong><br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!