Thank you, thank you thank you so much for your email.
It's nice to hear from someone who is actually
fighting the battle! I definitely agree it's going to
be a battle and a hard one at that! Has your daughter
been eating Paleo since birth?
When I do get to the point where I send my son to
school with a bagged lunch, I was thinking to stick to
the easier foods. Like finger fruits like grapes or
berries or maybe a banana.
Then maybe a zip lock baggie with baby carrots. Then
for meat maybe plain grilled chicken chopped into bite
size pieces. A zip lock baggie of almonds is good too.
Things like this won't be too smelly and shouldn't
attract too much attention. Then for dinner I can
load him up with red meat, onions and garlic and fruit
for dessert. Breakfast can be eggs with pork side.
He already takes after mommy and loves his beef.
--- mark wilson <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> > Debby > Do you have any kids? Do/would you teach
> > your kids to eat flour
> > and sugar believing they are poison?
> teachers, peer pressure, etc. My daughter has come
> home from school several times upset because the
> macaroni and cheese, Dorito chip, and Pepsi crowd
> told
> her that her food was gross, or smelled bad.
>
> To really make this work I think you have to make
> compromises. I send my daughter a sandwich made
> with
> bread that is gluten and dairy free (rice & almond
> flour). Not perfect, but a decent compromise. I
Perhaps you can make a bread with true Paleo
ingredients:
http://www.paleofood.com/baked.htm
I agree a compromise is a good thing to do. I will
have to start learning to make imitation technology
foods from Paleo foods.
> it up with turkey and avocado and she loves it, and
> gets to eat a sandwich like a lot of the other kids.
> Along with the sandwich I send nuts, fruit, a paleo
> treat, and a bottle of water. Since I've made the
> adjustments, and stopped sending meat by itself,
> which
> is what causes the teasing,
It's good to know that is what caused the teasing.
Darn kids can be so mean!
> for almost 9 months, and has been on antibiotics
> almost that entire period. I told her mom to take
> her
> off dairy and wheat, but she just looked at me like
> I
> was some sort of a nut.
We are nuts, in a good way. :)
> With the information I know now, I could never feed
> my
> daughter typical western foods. It may be hard, but
> as a parent, I strongly feel that it's the right
> thing to do.
Me too. This is a challenge I feel I have to take
on.. a battle that is important enough to fight. I'd
rather my son be teased at school than eat unhealthy
foods. Besides, adversity often builds character. I
really appreciate your email. Perhaps I can write you
off line sometime?
Luv,
Debby
San Jose, CA
Website for my son Hunter Hudson, born 10/11/04:
http://debbypadilla.0catch.com/hunter/
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