For years we managed to avoid the topic completely: one of the many advantages of homeschooling. In fact last year (the kids first year in public school in a long, long time) it wasn't much of an issue either. We just packed our lunches and took them. As a treat I would allow each child to buy their lunch at school once a week. Two of them took advantage of that offer. One detested the school food so much, they never bought their lunch at school. Not once the entire year.
Child #1 enjoyed taking their lunch last year and even made fun of school food. Their favorite things to take were fresh fruit, M&M's and a mini-sub sandwich that I made to their exact
specifications. Child #2 refused to eat school food even when given the option once a week. This Child took the exact same thing everyday for the entire year - turkey and
American cheese on wheat bread. Yes, there were other things in their lunch, I am addressing the 'main dish'. Child #3, being the easiest to please, probably would have been just as happy to eat at school everyday, instead he took
PBJ, baby carrots, and ranch dressing.
So, can someone please explain to me why there is now a lunch-war in my house? Suddenly the "gross-fake-chicken" is preferred to a homemade sub sandwich. And, I kid you not, "beef bites" are more desirable than organic peanut butter with grape jam. Even the staunchest hold out will eat at school this year. (OK, this particular child has moved on to a new school and says that the food is actually pretty good.)
Could I be the problem? I am fairly particular about what my kids eat. Not in a count-the-calories-and-fat kind of way, but in a real food vs. fake food kind of way. Lunches packed from home need to include fresh fruit and a source of protein with water to drink. If you want to receive favored-child status, voluntarily add in a vegetable.
Even so, I try to allow as many normal things as possible. Chips, gummy-fruity things and granola bars (the kind dipped in chocolate). Occasionally they even get to take a soda, as long as it is made with real sugar, not corn syrup.
Some days the battle is very subtle. One child has been known to wait upstairs in their room so they have no time to make a lunch. Here 'make a lunch' is a phrase meaning tell mom what you would like in your lunch today. This same child has also resorted to taking their own money to school and buying their lunch while telling one parent that the other said it was OK. Problem is, neither parent said that. Other days it is down right ugly.
Now that I read this it occurs to me that really only 1 child is protesting greatly. Given this
child's age, I think I'll chalk it up to hormones, stand my ground and go eat a piece of chocolate cheesecake.