Jump to content

Losing the willpower with mealtimes - and a fear of flies??


jennyh

Recommended Posts

So for the last 2 weeks my 18 month old has become obsessed with things being 'hot'. It started before we went on holiday, got worse when we were away and is still doing my head in now we are home. EVERYTHING that goes near her mouth is hot - toast, pasta, yoghurt, grapes, beans, cheese...etc. obviously many of the things are stone cold but she purses her lips and refuses to eat, as a result she has grazed for quite some time and fills up on snacks between meals. Whilst we were away the hire car got very hot in the sun so she became very upset about that being hot, as a result she also claims our carseat here is hot. Lukewarm bath water is hot, her drinkin water is hot. The sun on the carpet is hot. Its not something that I have taught her in particular so it must be a nursery thing.


I am try to be patient and we just say 'nope it's not hot, it's nice' and will try the food ourselves etc, let her feed it to us, let her do it in her own time but the phase is starting to really grate on me and just wondered if anyone else has been here and has any bright ideas. We are not really entertaining it much and tend to just say 'nope, it's fine' rather than dwell on it or make a big deal about it but it rarely results in a decent meal. Any tips!


Whilst I'm here as well - any suggestions on an extreme fear of flies??? I understand why she's freaked out by them as it must be odd seeing something that buzzes around your head and makes an odd noise, is fast etc. when on holiday it away the cause of constant tears and terrified leaping into my arms and again is continuing at home. To be honest it ha prob been going on for a few months. Again we reassure her, say hello to the flies (which she does), draw pictures of them with smiley faces, have books about them etc. Anyone else have a mtoddler sensitive to insects (also weird about ants and bees etc too.)


Thanks forumites!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure what to suggest except keep up the good work and just wait it out. Weird toddler phobias do seem to come and go. My 16 month old has been terrified of such things as baby dolls with plasticky arms/legs/heads, and most recently wind-up or battery-powered toys that move or make a sound. At first he would run away from such toys crying, but over time it seems to improve. He's already completely fine with the dolls again, and doesn't cry or run from moving toys, though he still won't (usually) touch them... Who knows what it's all about, eh?
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We had a similar thing at maybe 18/19 months. It was frustrating as every meal time everything was hot and also the bath was hot (even when it wasn't) but in retrospect I think it was a concept thing, she was learning that some things were hot and it probably came from me "don't touch that. It's hot" for my coffee etc. She would see the steam and say "hot" or never go near the oven (even when turned off) as it was "hot".

Now at 23 months it has largely gone, I wasn't even aware of the phase passing it just isn't prevalent everyday, but has been replaced by "scary". At the moment everything is "scary", thomas the tank engine on tv, dogs in the park. I can only assume with awareness comes emotions and little heads have to make the best sense they can of everything. For a while spiders were fascinating and funny, this week they are "scary" but that seems to be as much derived from the reactions she sees in other people to spiders/bees/wasps etc etc. Although flies are ok as she finds it amusing to see me swat at them with a tea towel and say " go away dirty fly"

It will pass (and be replaced!)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, yes that makes sense. I just find it infuriating but I suppose I am oddly grateful that she is finding her way in the world. I want to support her but struggle sometimes when I need to take some time out, its interesting that you have had the same experience and moved on from it! Not that I imagined things would be hot for the rest of her life but you know what I mean. Deep breaths are required a lot!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, it is frustrating, especially when you think they don't eat enough, drink enough. We go up and down with meals but I think it was Fuschia on here who said look at what they eat over a week, not just at one meal. That has kept me sane.

Are you at the Why? Why? Why? stage yet ?!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hiya- one way we keep overcoming irrational fears is by "kissing" - i.e. what ever LO is scared off, I show that it is safe by giving it a kiss and saying what a good xyz it is. We had kissing the pop-up book, kissing the hairdryer, (almost) kissing the microwave... although I have drawn the line at kissing the hoover & lawnmower... No idea how you can "kiss" the fly or bugs, though...
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I've known of this forum for a while, and given its very active and obviously contains a lot of locals I thought this would be a good place to ask... I have a dilemma and I could find some old thread from '14, but obviously in a decade much has changed with all of these areas (maybe the village less so) - so some background I'll supply, and I'd love to know what folks think on the area that will suit best based on below situation and wants/needs Us Mid/late 30's have lived nearer to Clapham/Brixton for many years - current house large enough but small garden, and Brixton area not great for kids plus long school commute A young kid starting school in the not too distant future (school slap bang in the middle of all the Dulwich's (not state, so without naming it, you get the idea of location) Work remote mostly around St Pauls a few days (both parents) so half decent links to that area of London good  Requirements Access out of London to the SW/W required occasionally by car, don't know anyone further East/South really Want a larger garden for kid/us - ideally semi detached house at the least and nothing smaller than what we have (which rules out most of ED apart from Upland/Friern type houses) Things locally to do with kids (soft play/fun park/cinema etc) and also a few handy shops (Rosendale Road/Park Hall Road would likely cover most little things) Nice and relatively safe neighbourhood feel - currently most of our street are 20 something sharers who aren't able to work out how the wheeliebins work/Brixton nutters roam about here Not too loud, there is a lot of noise where we are now, and its not what I want next time - so away from main road/bus route ideally. Ideally a walk to school or very short car/bike/scooter ride weather permitting it is one of the well known Dulwich schools  My take on things - please correct me/add to this, as I am not a local! Budget is up to around £2m, and in ED to get the same size house (circa 1800 sqft 4/5 bed) I'd probably end up quite a way from things, either on Upland/Friern or the bottom of Peck Rye for example I've seen some houses, seems a bit remote - most of the houses with good access to Lordship are quite small. Houses in the Village are either too expensive or are going to be the same as what I have now albeit with a better garden, but decent neighbourhood feel/access to park/local shops and things etc I feel is peak here of all areas - its nice and quiet - transport is a bit pants mind you Houses in WD seem to be larger in size, have nice sized gardens, depending how close I can get to WD station, the school is very close, there are 3 stations that would work well, and there is a small selection of local shops, feels OK neighbourhood wise? Nearer Norwood end I worry of all the things I dislike about being near Brixton, but maybe that is unfounded.   On balance I think trying to buy something around Rosendale road shops in either direction a couple hundred meters is likely going to offer the best house, best transport options, and meet my criteria with quieter life and being best for the school. But it isn't close to any of the parks really, and is it a bit dull if I get sick of The Rosendale? Dulwich Village I suspect is the best all round option but transport isn't great and obviously its the most expensive, and the LTN on Court Lane makes living in the roads there (which is likely all I could afford) and trying to get out SW a pain as you have to go all the way around. I like Lordship lane the most as a place for 'stuff' (although not sure these days if its that child compatible with loads of young people?), but house wise I'd likely end up too far from anything interesting as anything within a short walk of LL is pretty small and they don't have decent sized gardens. Any opinions welcome and encouraged as short of spending bloody ages online I only know what I know from my handful of visits to either location over the years.
    • You might possibly consider that the the degree of scepticism and suspicion your original post encountered was largely due to the accusatory nature of the title in which you specifically identified a long-standing and respected local business. You also sensationalised the matter by using the words "poisoning" and  "twice!" in the heading.  
    • Thank you for your replies all. Elloriac, I followed your advice: I filled out the form and they said they would collect today. So I left the sharps bins on my front door last night, with a not like you said and this morning they were all gone! Fantastic. 
    • I feel like I need a 'Rory Stewart' style quick explanation on the debate around Dulwich LTN. Would anyone have any pointers to a balanced summary? I'm moving to the village soon and I feel like I need to understand this better given the strength of sentiment expressed on some of these threads. Any help appreciated!  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...