“I raised three kids and they turned out fine.”
❤️Have you ever found yourself navigating feeding advice from a grandparent, babysitter, neighbor, or well-meaning friend?
The truth is, they probably DID do a wonderful job raising their children.
⚠️But feeding recommendations have changed.
Just like car seats, sleep safety, and medical care have evolved, so has our understanding of how children learn to eat.
Today we know more about:
☑️ Starting solids safely
☑️ Food allergy prevention
☑️ Responsive feeding
☑️ Choking prevention
☑️ Oral motor development
☑️ Sensory learning through food
☑️ Hunger & fullness cues
This isn’t about proving someone wrong.
It’s about helping children benefit from what we’ve learned through research and clinical practice over time.
✨After 25+ years in feeding therapy, one thing I know for sure is that we’re all still learning. I certainly am.
That’s why I created a free handout called Misconceptions About Feeding Solids to help make these conversations easier with grandparents, babysitters, childcare providers, and other loving caregivers. It’s in this week’s newsletter!
And if you’d like a deeper dive into how feeding develops from infancy through childhood, my Feeding Development Course is currently 40% off through June 13.
Inside, you’ll learn from a multidisciplinary team including a pediatrician, psychologist, registered dietitian nutritionist (RDN), and me, with practical strategies you can use right away.
✨ Comment JUNE and I’ll send you the details in my newsletter, plus your 40% discount code. (💗be sure you’re following me, thanks!)
Because at the end of the day, we’re all working toward the same goal:
💜 Helping children develop a healthy, joyful relationship with food.
🥰Melanie
feeding development, starting solids, grandparents, responsive feeding, choking prevention, food allergies, picky eating, toddler feeding, baby feeding, oral motor development, sensory feeding, hunger cues, fullness cues