Many children refuse to eat, causing stress for their parents. If this sounds familiar, don’t be discouraged. Below are practical strategies to help create a more positive and pleasant experience around food.
🍽️ What You Can Try:
- Serve small portions: A full plate can overwhelm a child. Small amounts give them the chance to ask for more—something very positive!
• Be patient with new foods: A new food may need 8–10 exposures. Gently offer it again at different meals.
• Use color and presentation: Fun tableware and colorful meals can spark interest.
• Avoid pressure: Too much insistence leads to resistance. Keep mealtimes calm and pleasant.
• Don’t use sweets as a reward: Avoid saying “eat the broccoli to get chocolate.” This reinforces the “good vs. bad food” mindset.
• Involve them in the process: Take your child to the store, cook together, let them choose ingredients.
• Manage your own anxiety: Kids feel it—even when you don’t show it.
• Introduce new foods gradually: One new item at a time, next to familiar favorites. Even accepting it on their plate is progress!
• Read children’s books about food and how it helps the body.
• Eat together at the table, away from screens. Modeling behavior is the strongest teacher.
• Play with smells: Try guessing foods by scent with closed eyes. Room temperature enhances aroma.
• Consult a speech therapist specializing in feeding and selective eating if needed.
💡 Remember: The goal isn’t for your child to clean their plate, but to develop a healthy and positive relationship with food.
Maria Lazarou
Speech and Language Therapist (SLP, BSc, M.A.)
Head of the Multidisciplinary Team, Evlogon