I must say I don’t agree with SR nutritions ways and methods and her attitude stinks but each to their own, her kid her rules, and at least she’s qualified unlike st Joe spouting his shite to make a few quid
Joe is very much the master of do as I say, not as I do....Crazy when you put it all out like that , this bloke should never have done a weaning book
I weaned following her way and I have a 2 year old who refuses all veg and pretty much only wants toast. She used to eat absolutely everything and enjoy it. Makes me think there is no right or wrong way really.I must say I don’t agree with SR nutritions ways and methods and her attitude stinks but each to their own, her kid her rules, and at least she’s qualified unlike st Joe spouting his shite to make a few quid
I agree - nothing you do makes any difference. If you read stuff from baby led weaning advocates they'll also tell you their method is the only way to avoid a fussy eater. It's all bollocks. Lots of toddlers are fussy eaters. My baby ate everything when I weaned him, broccoli, quinoa, olives... I felt all smug, 'my baby eats everything, haven't I done well!' Then he got fussier and fussier and I wasn't so smug - it's normal.I weaned following her way and I have a 2 year old who refuses all veg and pretty much only wants toast. She used to eat absolutely everything and enjoy it. Makes me think there is no right or wrong way really.
"Indie..."
Seriously dude, she could not give less of a tit.
You've drilled and trained her to parrot this rubbish. Its not impressive. It's just sad.
Absolutely this - we did BLW and our little one ate anything and everything. Now they’re a toddler some days all they will eat is beansI agree - nothing you do makes any difference. If you read stuff from baby led weaning advocates they'll also tell you their method is the only way to avoid a fussy eater. It's all bollocks. Lots of toddlers are fussy eaters. My baby ate everything when I weaned him, broccoli, quinoa, olives... I felt all smug, 'my baby eats everything, haven't I done well!' Then he got fussier and fussier and I wasn't so smug - it's normal.
Shoved in a corner with a tablet while he prioritises himself. So selfish."Indie..."
Seriously dude, she could not give less of a tit.
You've drilled and trained her to parrot this rubbish. Its not impressive. It's just sad.
Just watched that this morning. I felt as sorry for her, she obviously wants to just sit and play with her toy."Indie..."
Seriously dude, she could not give less of a tit.
You've drilled and trained her to parrot this rubbish. Its not impressive. It's just sad.
My daughter has an egg allergy and has done from a young age. She also had several other allergies that she has outgrown thankfully (now 3).I remember when Indie was less than a year old, they posted that she had been taken to hospital in an ambulance as she'd had a bad reaction to a food. The hospital did allergy tests and they confirmed she was allergic to eggs, a kind of nut, and I think something else.
I was really interested in this as my little one is around the same age as Indie and also has a diagnosed egg allergy, so I thought I'd keep an eye on Indie's meals to see if there were any good egg free recipes or alternatives. A few months later, the WI15 account showed her eating scrambled egg My pediatrician had told me that whilst egg allergies were common in babies and toddlers and they'd normally grown out of them by age 4-5, all products containing egg should be avoided completely until medical testing confirmed that the child had outgrown the allergy. The progress tests are normally done once a year.
I commented on the post saying this and querying that she'd outgrown the allergy very quickly, and I think SR Nutrition replied saying Indie was only allergic to raw egg so scrambled egg was ok.
Now I'm not a doctor or in any way medically trained, but I thought that was a really odd response. For one thing, who eats or feeds their child raw eggs?! And I'm not sure the cooking process of raw to scrambled changes anything about the protein of an egg to make it less allergenic, but I could be wrong. Some children are fine with say, cakes, where egg makes up only a small part of it and it's baked really well, but I can't see how any child who has any kind of allergic response to egg would be able to eat scrambled egg.
It's just always struck me as very very odd, that a baby can go from being diagnosed as having an allergy to a food, to eating it fine a few months later. It goes against everything the pediatrician told us and doesn't sit right with me.
Yes probably, in the same way that when I'm working from home my toddler says 'why are you working mummy, let's go and play!'She’s probably asking why he exercises instead of spending time with her. Poor girl
He’s a real tight git.All the money he is making and he won't even pay for a licence to get some music on it
I thought about it so glad someone said it. He'd do a week and forget about it anyway
This is exactly why he does it. He’s always shown Indie off. We get it, she’s bright, but how much time must he spend drilling things into her rather than letting her be a normal toddler playing? He’ll have her at private preschool/prep as soon as they’re back open. Instead of letting her be a little kid. We spend long enough in formal education without starting writing, phonics etc at 2. Let her do something arty rather than school books!Why does he need to film everything she does too, it's strange he has to show her writing when she's not even school age yet. Like look how clever my child is! Wonder if Marley will get the same praise