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5 Toddler Bad Eating Habits to Break Now

As parents, we hold the power to set our children up for a lifetime of healthy eating habits and a happy relationship with food and their bodies. The eating habits we enforce now, from the very beginning of their relationships with food, can determine how they will eat for the rest of their lives.

In my holistic nutrition practice, all of my weight loss clients have one (or more) of these three bad habits in common: snacking, emotional eating, and eating on the run.Growing up with bad eating habits can set you up for a frustrating years long battle with weight, dieting, stress eating, body hatred, hypoglycemia, and in more extreme cases, even type 2 diabetes.

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Thankfully, it’s not too late to break these bad eating habits, even if your child is no longer a toddler! But it takes commitment, and a bit of going against the grain. But I promise you, it is so worth it.

The Top 5 Toddler Bad Eating Habits To Break Now

I also share how these bad habits are impacting your child now, how they will impact them later in life, and what healthy habits to replace them with.

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1. Using Food To Calm/Distract/Entertain Your Baby

Why This Is A Bad Habit: When we use food as a pacifying tool to calm, distract, or entertain our toddlers and kids, we are teaching them two very dangerous lessons: your feelings don’t matter, and eating is a way to feel better. Now I know there are some dire circumstances (i.e.: screaming on an airplane, bored while stuck in line at the DMV, etc.) when a cracker is the only thing that will keep everyone sane and prevent a total meltdown, and that’s fine. The only time you should give your child food (other than the aforementioned extenuating circumstances and special occasions like birthday parties) is when they are hungry.

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Long-Term Impact: When we learn from a young age that food is a distraction from uncomfortable feelings, we are set up for a lifetime of struggles with emotional eating. We’ve all surely had bouts of eating our feelings: burying our face in a pint of ice cream after a breakup, stress eating pretzels after a long day, grabbing snacks at work when we’re bored. The occasional bout of emotional eating is normal. But when it becomes a regular, even daily occurrence — when it becomes your go-to for dealing with stress, boredom, fatigue, or sadness — that’s when you get into big trouble. When you’re eating from an emotional place, you are more likely to eat crap, eat too much, and ultimately, feel even worse about yourself. It’s a terrible cycle that is at the root of most struggles with weight.

What To Do Instead

2. Excessive Reliance On Snacking

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Why This Is A Bad Habit: Snacking fills up your toddler so they eat less during actual mealtimes; it raises insulin levels; it can cause overeating; and it sets the body up for poor metabolic functioning down the road.

Long-Term Impact: Snackers are much more likely to become hypoglycemic, to struggle with weight, and to spend an unhealthy amount of time thinking about food. Eating three healthy meals a day, without snacks, helps our body to burn body fat for fuel, helps to stabilize our blood sugar and speed up metabolism, and allows us to focus on other things between meals.

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What To Do Instead

3. Eating On The Go

Why This Is A Bad Habit: It is a common occurrence in this country to see kids walking around with food, eating while being pushed in their strollers, or being fed piecemeal while they’re busy playing or doing other things. This is a bad habit for several reasons: first, it discourages the healthy habit of mindfully eating a full, balanced meal, seated at the table. Second, it is a safety hazard — eating while walking, running or playing increases the risk of choking. Thirdly, distracted eating on the go means being less connected to the body’s signs of hunger and fullness, which can lead to over or under-eating. Lastly, eating on the go usually means eating packaged or processed foods, which are not a nutritious food option for growing bodies (see number 4 below).

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Long-Term Impact: The bad habit of eating on the go is one that so many of us are guilty of as adults. Grabbing a quick sandwich while walking to a meeting or eating a protein bar in the car, while sometimes more convenient than sitting down to an actual meal, leads to unhealthy food choices, not feeling satisfied (which leads to overeating later), nutrient deficiency, and stress. If you’re eating on the go, it also means you’re not taking time out of your day to refuel and take care of your body, the effects of which can permeate many areas of your health: weight gain, breakouts, hormonal imbalances, chronic stress, anxiety and depression just to name a few.

What To Do Instead

4. Relying On Packaged Or Processed Foods

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Why This Is A Bad Habit: While having a baby food pouch or some crackers on hand can save you in a pinch, these packaged foods should not make up a significant part of your child’s eating. Healthy food does not come from a pouch, box, or bag (with a few exceptions), and starting your child’s relationship to eating with a reliance on packaged foods sets them up for a lifetime of poor eating choices.

Regularly eating processed or packaged foods, even the “healthy” varieties, creates a confused definition for your child about what real, healthy eating looks like, which is very difficult to overcome later in life. And, of course, relying on packaged or processed foods robs your beautiful growing child of the vital nutrients that only fresh, whole foods can provide!

Brands like Plum Organics, Happy Baby Organics, and Sprout Organics offers some healthy options, but even so, there are a few things to look out for. With pouches, make sure the sugar level is low, and vegetables are ahead of fruit in the ingredient list. With crackers, make sure they are are made from sprouted whole wheat or brown rice, as opposed to white rice (and in general, try to limit crackers, cookies, and puffs — they really don’t provide much nutritional value at all). But again, these are for special circumstances, and not to be used daily.

Long-Term Impact: A diet high in packaged, processed foods can lead to weight gain, hormonal imbalances, nutrient deficiencies, and a whole slew of related health problems. So many of the chronic health problems we have in this country stem from our cultural reliance on fake foods. Let’s start our littles off right.

What To Do Instead

5. Giving In To Picky Eating

Why This Is A Bad Habit: Giving in to your child’s refusal to eat the healthy foods you’ve put in front of them sets a dangerous precedent. It makes them feel like they’re in charge, leads to power struggles and manipulations around eating. It also leads to the dreaded limited palate that some kids develop (i.e.: only eating white foods, or a diet limited to mac and cheese and chicken fingers). I’m not implying that you should force your child to eat foods they hate, but it is your job to introduce your little to a wide variety of healthy foods, and never “give up” and just feed them what is easy (like mac and cheese). If they don’t eat what’s in front of them, that’s fine! But it is not your job to then go into the kitchen and make them something else, just to get them to eat. Eventually, they will eat! It’s important to keep in mind that toddlers generally eat less than babies, and to gauge their overall eating, we have to look at the whole week, not just a single day.

Long-Term Impact: I have several adult clients who come to me with super limited “mono-diets” or extreme pickiness. Refusing to eat vegetables, for example, is completely unacceptable for an adult. But these habits become ingrained in childhood — 9 times out of 10, super finicky adult eaters were indulged as children by parents who allowed them to eat unhealthy or unbalanced meals just to get them to eat. Developing a broad palate for a variety of healthy foods is much more difficult as an adult than as a child. So make sure to set your littles up for success from the start!

What To Do Instead

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