Category Archives: sensory processing disorder

The Peanut Butter Sandwich

There was an incident with a peanut butter sandwich.

I packed it for his lunch.

Normally, I pack cold stuff – a yogurt tube, a cheese stick and a Babybel, a piece of fruit (apple, banana, or grapes), a crunchy snack (of the orange and salty variety), and a juice box.  I pack this same lunch for him every single day.

Every. Single. Day.

But on this day, he went on a field trip and needed a brown bag lunch.  He needed a completely disposable lunch that didn’t require a cold pack.  I thought a peanut butter sandwich would be a refreshing change.

I was wrong.

As soon as he opened his brown bag and discovered a peanut butter sandwich inside, he bolted to the garbage can and threw it out.  He threw out a perfectly good peanut butter sandwich.  I know this because I chaperoned the field trip and witnessed both the disposal of the sandwich and his tear-filled (regretful?) (embarrassed?) (scared?) eyes after he did it.

Sidebar:  I can now add “big yellow school bus filled with screaming Kindergarten children” to the list of things I’m afraid of.

Here’s the thing.  My sensory kid doesn’t like food much and he doesn’t like much food.  But he does like peanut butter.  I know this because he occasionally has a peanut butter sandwich for dinner when he’s bored of eating macaroni and cheese, bagels and cream cheese, and plain spaghetti.  I thought the peanut butter sandwich for lunch was a clever idea.  It wasn’t.  Here’s why.

There’s a reason he eats the same lunch every single day.  He thrives on the structure.  He depends on it.   My intentions were good but unwise.  Good because I want nothing more than for him to love food and enjoy eating it.  Unwise because I should’ve known that springing an unexpected food on him at school was going to turn his familiar order of things upside down.  (And what was the upside of that?)

A few months ago, I had a tearful conversation with his OT about camp this summer.  For the first time, he’s going to “big kid” day camp (vs. pre-school summer camp).  It’s going to be a big and adventurous experience, and he’s going to meet new people, try new activities, and visit new places.  It’s going to be an amazing summer, and I know in my heart that he’s ready for it.

But, here’s the thing.  I can’t pack his lunch.  I’m not allowed.  How’s he going to get through the summer if I can’t feed him?  If I can’t save him from spinning in an abyss of fear and anxiety in a lunchroom filled with unpleasant smells and food he won’t eat?

Hence, the tearful conversation with the OT.

You’ll be relieved to know that she talked me from the ledge.  She reminded me that he needs this push.  That he has to move forward.  That he can and will find his way.  That he will eat.  I also found out from the camp administrator that regardless of what’s on the lunch menu each day, the kids can always choose from an alternative menu that includes – you guessed it – a peanut butter sandwich.

So, I (selfishly) sent a peanut butter sandwich to school in a brown bag lunch as a test.

It failed.  The sandwich ended up in the garbage can before it ever came out of the plastic bag in which it was packed.

He failed.   Instead of eating it or staying calm and saying, “No thank you,” he panicked.

I failed.  I failed the most.  I should never have done it.  My attempt to get him to eat a peanut butter sandwich for lunch by surprising him with a peanut butter sandwich for lunch was the equivalent of yelling at a crying baby to get him or her to stop crying.  It wasn’t going to work.  I set him up for failure and then had the audacity to be angry with him for his inappropriate response.  (Yes, “inappropriate” is the word I used when I quietly confronted him by the garbage can.  I regretted it instantly.)

Sometimes my actions aren’t meant for the child I do have, but for the child I think I have.  (Or wish I had?)  If that sounds harsh, it’s because it is.  But, it’s the truth.  In my children’s beautiful flaws, I have the opportunity to see and face my own.

I know now (but should have known before the incident with the peanut butter sandwich) that introducing him to the lunch menu at camp must be a slow moving, delicately handled, and unsurprising process.

Isn’t it funny what chokes and humbles us as parents?  Of all the real and imagined things that have kept me up at night – and there have been many – I never thought in a million years the thing that would render me so completely unsure of myself as a mother would be a peanut butter sandwich.

What’s your peanut butter sandwich?

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Filed under camp, food, food issues, motherhood, parenting, school, sensory processing disorder

Happy Meal

For those of you who’ve followed the blog for a while, you know that I live with the pickiest eater on the planet (a.k.a. Dylan).  If you’re new to the blog, just click on “food issues” or “sensory processing disorder” in the category cloud (on the bottom left) to catch up.  (It could take a while.  Maybe you want to grab a snack.)

If there’s one thing I’ve learned along this exhausting food journey with Dylan, it’s that there’s only person who’s going to decide if Dylan eats new food, and that person is Dylan (i.e. not me).  That’s how he came to eat nibble celery, and it’s how he finally ate spaghetti (but not penne, never penne).  What I want more than anything for Dylan is for food to be a source of fun and joy.  I want every meal he eats to be happy.  I want him to have happy meals, always.

Speaking of which, on Friday evening, Dylan declared that he was going to eat a McDonald’s hamburger on Saturday afternoon and that after he ate the hamburger he was going to buy a bat cave (as a reward) at the toy store.

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Okee-dokie.

My kids, like most kids, love junk food.  Cake, cookies, cotton candy, movie theater popcorn, donuts, candy, etc.  For all of their picky eating, they’ll eat just about anything filled with sugar, fat, salt, and food coloring.  Last weekend at the carnival, Dylan ate salty, greasy popcorn and Riley slurped a blue raspberry snow cone.  By the time he finished, his entire face, including his teeth, were stained blue.  It was gross, but it was okay, because at home we eat wholesome (mostly) food, and we don’t eat fast food.

I grew up eating fast food occasionally.  (Didn’t we all?)  I especially loved McDonald’s breakfast.  Hotcakes with butter and syrup and a brick of Hash browns served up in a devastating-for-the-environment Styrofoam container.  I also remember having a birthday at McDonald’s.  Maybe it was my sister’s party, actually.  In any case, it was someone’s birthday and we ate happy meals and there was a Ronald McDonald cake and there were disposable metal ashtrays on all the tables.

Now, though, I have some pretty strong feelings about how food and disease are linked, how we are what we eat and all that stuff, and how McDonald’s hamburgers supposedly don’t decompose, so I don’t hit the drive-thru much…ever.  That said, the best way to describe my desperate desire for Dylan to broaden his diet is this:  If Dylan asks a McDonald’s hamburger, I’ll find a 24-hour drive-thru in the middle of the night.

On Saturday afternoon, Mike took Dylan to McDonald’s for a happy meal.  I didn’t go with them because Dylan + new food + me (Anxiety Mama) = nothing good.  In other words, it was best if I stayed home and waited nervously by my phone for text messages, pictures, and videos.

I won’t drag this out and make you wonder, Did he eat it?  He didn’t.

mcdonalds

Not lovin’ it.

But, he did taste the hamburger before he spit it out, and that’s better than running away from the table screaming.  (FYI: Riley didn’t like it either.  In fact, he wouldn’t even taste it.)  Was the happy meal a happy meal?  No.  Yes.  Maybe.  Of course, I wish Dylan had eaten the hamburger, because eating any new food is progress, but I must admit that I’m happy he didn’t like it.  (Sorry Mickey D’s).

Do your kids like fast food?

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Filed under Anxious Mama, food issues, sensory processing disorder, Uncategorized