Then along came Noah. As a baby he could not eat enough. He was a roly poly little guy who was eating cereal from a spoon at 3 months. As a young toddler (1-2 years old) he ate EVERYTHING! I prided myself on the amazing lunches I would make for him when he was in daycare- no lunchables or canned crap for my kid! Those days came to a screeching halt when he first started showing symptoms of Autism. No more fruits (besides bananas) no more milk, (besides ice cream) no more veggies of any kind and chicken nuggets were the only form of "meat" he would touch.
Good nutrition and autism rarely go hand in hand. Parents often give up and concentrate on other things. Which is exactly what happened to us. Our days of chicken and fries had begun. The kid would seriously eat chicken nuggets and fries for every meal, every day if we would let him. I literally adjusted my routes when out and about with him to try and avoid those damn Golden Arches. His once varied appetite was now limited to Chicken and fries, Spaghettios, Goldfish crackers, dill pickles, bread and butter, and "circles" (what he used to call salami). He did (and does) have sensory issues- smells and textures will bother him (ha- understatement of the year- he will lose his damn mind) so some things I don't even bother with- too crunchy, too yellow, too spicy, too, too too. *sigh*
Noah's dinner- all neutral colors- that salad- never crosses his lips |
So now a typical meal for Noah is chicken (or meat of any kind really), mac and cheese or Alfedo noodles and bread. Recently we went through a phase of letting him smell everything, touch it with his tongue and eventually try it- ABA (Advanced behavior Analysis) training at it's finest. But he still gagged, cried, threw things, and no amount of cajoling, bribery or threats would get him to try anything. I still put things on his plate- but I think he will win this stand off.
I "hide " things in food, juice etc. and I love the book The Sneaky Chef (spinach and blueberry brownies anyone?) but I think that Chicken McNuggets (any chicken in any nugget form really) are winning...in a Charlie Sheen kind of way.
You're lucky that Noah doesn't have leaky gut. It's a huge pain in the ass. My 7yo stepson has it, and is on such a restricted diet, it makes me crazy having to make separate meals.
ReplyDeleteI do have my suspicions that my 4yo might have some sensory issues and might have some food sensitivities and/or allergies, but I'm not too sure and have yet to get any tests done @ the Dr.
Chicken nuggets are the fallback food in this house for the smallest 2 boys. I guess that means we're winning, too. LOL
My son doesn't eat much variety either. Applesauce is his fruit and baby carrots are his vegetable.
ReplyDeleteWe worked hard at getting him to eat those carrots though - texture was an issue. We went from "a bite" to a whole to two carrots to now he'll eat four or five with every supper.
Keep trying!