|
|
|

Dessert Tips
By Abigail Natenshon
TIPS
When you shop for desserts, you neednt even walk down the supermarket aisles that contain chips and cookies. Be more creative than that! Think color! Cherry tomatoes or berries are every bit as delicious as a cookie or piece of pastry and far more beautiful, satisfying, sumptuous and nutritious. Take your child shopping with you. Is there a type of yogurt that he or she particularly loves? Stock up on these to use with ice cream and/or fruit to make a smoothie dessert or snack.
When was the last time your child had the opportunity to choose his or her favorite fruit juice as a way to top off a meal with something sweet? Fruit juices are full of anti-oxidants.
Fresh fruits contain natural sugars that can satisfy a sweet tooth and that are healthier for the body. Fresh or cooked, cut up or whole, dried or in combination with nuts, fruits are yummy and DIVERSE!
Wander around your produce department, preferably with your child, and you will find unusual, exotic fruits in and out of season, which you probably have never seen or tasted before. Be adventurous. Try everything. Your child will be watching you and learning how to approach food in an open minded and adventurous way.
Understand that eating processed sugar and food dyes can trigger a need to eat more of them. Do you keep candy in your cupboard as a staple food? Do you know why?
Think about your own needs for sweets and junk foods as you make decisions about which foods to bring home from the supermarket. Know that what you buy for yourself is what your child will learn to choose for her or himself.
Are you prepared to change any of your own eating habits in the interest of teaching your child a healthier eating lifestyle? If not, why not?
Remember that your child needs to learn how to eat healthfully, but more important, how to care for his or her body in a responsible and conscientious way, now and forevermore. Food choices should not be arbitrary. We eat as we do for good reasons, and we choose not to eat certain foods at certain times in certain quantities for good reasons as well. Kids need to become familiar with the process of how to decide, more than they need to know that certain foods are bad or good.
Psychotherapist Abigail H. Natenshon has specialized in the treatment of eating disorders with individuals, families, and groups for the past 31years. She is the author of When Your Child Has An Eating Disorder, A Step-by-Step Workbook For Parents And Other Caregivers, Jossey-Bass, 1999. Based on hundreds of successful outcomes, this book shepherds concerned parents step-by-step through the processes of eating disorder recognition, confronting the child, finding the most effective treatment for patient and family, and evaluating and insuring a timely recovery. A guide to eating disorder prevention, this book is useful to parents, health professionals and school personnel alike in countering the pervasive epidemic of unhealthy eating and body image concerns, and destructive media and peer influences. Her work can be reviewed further at www.empoweredparents.com, www.empoweredkidZ.com,
www.treatingeatingdisorders.com.
|
|
|
|