Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Trevor, you have to at least taste these Lucky Charms...

Blair's Lucky Charms (Close Up)
Flickr: Laffy4K
"Trevor, you have to at least take a bite of these Lucky Charms," said my sister-in-law to her then pre-school son in one of the most surreal parenting moments I've ever witnessed.  Born in Hong Kong and visiting his great-grandparents' house in Cincinnati for a holiday, my nephew had never tasted the magically delicious cereal that was a Cincinnati family tradition.  Children can be oddly picky, and my nephew put his mother in the very strange position of forcing him to try a sugary cereal in the same manner she might use in the case of brussels sprouts.

I thought about that moment earlier this week when I forced my five-year-old to taste Cool Whip(TM).  He's rounding the corner from being extremely picky to cleaning his plate at dinner occasionally.  Horizons beyond beige food are opening up.  When he told me that he didn't like Cool Whip, i thought "Pish posh!  This child doesn't even know what Cool Whip is!"  It's rarely in our house, actually.  We usually only acquire it when we're planning to make a jello mold (yum!).  I just knew that he would like it.  What does scripture say about people, though we are evil, knowing how to give good gifts to our children?  He tasted it and made a face like it was mayonnaise that had been left in a car on the fourth of July.  I laughed my way through the shock and let him spit it out on a plate.  I have to think that in other circumstances in which he had not already made up his mind that he wasn't going to like it, he would have enjoyed artificial whipped cream.  Call me crazy.


Just a few days before, however, I'd been in the exact same position.  When a family friend came by to take the kids to see the new Muppet movie, Teddy protested that he hated Muppets and didn't want to go.  Our friend, a professional counselor of children, said "if he doesn't want to go, he doesn't have to".  After asking her to give us a minute, I delivered a surreal speech about how I'd lived a lot longer than him and knew for a fact that he would enjoy himself at that movie.  The rousing conclusion can be paraphrased "You are going; put your shoes on."   Long story short there: He went.  He loved it.  He made no move to acknowledge my sagacity.


What do you do when your child resists something you know he/she will find awesome if he/she gives it a chance?

5 comments:

  1. FWIW, I don't think Teddy was the only one he should've put on his shoes and gone.

    Fantastic movie - and I was admittedly a skeptic.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jason, I now have a wonderful mental image of Michelle grabbing you by the shoulders and telling you about her more advanced life experience and judgment as she convinces you to watch the Muppets.

    ReplyDelete
  3. We ordered Happy Meals for the girls recently while on a roadtrip. Stan got mad at them for only eating the fries and dropping the chicken nuggets on the floor. "You better eat those nuggets or I'm never getting you Happy Meals again!" Er, okay.

    Our family loved the new Muppet Movie too. Afterwards, we rented Muppets Wizard of Oz, which was terrible. Don't do that!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yesterday, we forced the boys to go on a carnival ride in Phu My Hung. They wanted to stay in the safe paddleboats floating on 16 inches of water. Mike actually said he wasn't sure if we could go to Disneyland if they weren't interested in the little row of seats that swings up and ovah. So I went with them. And they loved it. From the first moment of motion.

    ReplyDelete