Managing Sweets (Part 2): The Word That Will Transform Your Family’s Eating

by Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD on September 7, 2010

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In the movie Eat, Pray, Love Julia Roberts, who plays journalist Elizabeth Gilbert, travels across the globe to find herself.  She sets out to discover the “word” that best describes what she stands for in life.  

Each country she visits symbolizes an important aspect of life.  Italy, her first stop, is all about enjoying food. You could say the Italian “word” for eating is “pleasure” and she joins right in, deciding she is “done with the guilt” when it comes to her favorite pastime.

In part 2 of our Managing Sweets Series, we’ll help you pinpoint your family’s unspoken “word” for eating, the beliefs it is teaching your children and whether or not your want to change it.

But first, why beliefs about food matter

How many times do you hear someone say they were “bad” because of something they ate?  Or read an advertisement for a guilt-free dessert?  How about someone who says they should order the healthy option but really don’t want to?

Most people don’t realize that the judgments they make about food, especially in regards to health and indulgence, have an impact on what and how much they eat. 

Take a recent study published in the Journal of Consumer Research.  People asked to eat food labeled as “healthy” reported more hunger than individuals asked to eat the same food described as “tasty.”  The belief that the healthy food would be less satisfying had more of an effect on physical hunger than the food itself. 

Another study published in Food Quality and Preference demonstrated how beliefs can be stronger than facts.  People chose 3 slices of bacon (109 calories) as more weight-promoting than a large raisin bran muffin (460 calories) even when the calorie content was printed out for the subjects to see. 

Rochelle, a new mom from Palo Alto, is amazed at how differently she and her Eastern European husband, Victor, view sweets. 

“In Victor’s culture it is routine to have something sweet following a well balanced meal like baklava or gelato but no one gorges on it,” she says. “It is viewed the same as the main course meaning there is no real judgment on these foods.”

She explains how his side of the family also has no phobia of alcohol or bread.  “Alcohol is not to get drunk on and bread is not something you get fat on and BOTH are expected at most meals.”

Maybe eliminating the judgments around food can help us not only enjoy eating but figure out what it is we really want to eat — and finally feel satisfied.

Take a look at Your Pre-Kid Word

Emily and her husband, who live on a farm, came from very different worlds when it came to eating sweets. 

“My brother and I always had well balanced meals, chock full of protein, veggies, fruits — sweets in moderation just kind of came with the package,” she says.  “They were never taboo, and therefore, I never felt guilty about enjoying them.”

Emily says that “her husband  grew up in a family that treated sweets as the devil, and if you didn’t gobble up the evidence quickly, it would be there staring at you in the face.”  He has learned, through his wife and children, that that sweets and other “high density foods” should be enjoyed, not devoured.

A family’s culture of eating comes directly from the parents– they set the tone.  So every parent needs to ask themselves whether or not they want to hand down their own food legacy or take steps to change it.

Colleen, a recovering dieter from Baltimore, is working on revamping her relationship with food before having kids. 

“I’m trying to accept and love my body as it is and to listen to it,” she says. “If I’m really listening to what my body wants and when it’s full, I don’t have to worry about the depriving/binging cycle.”

She explains how this is a big mental shift for her. “I have by no means gotten this down perfectly yet, but I’m so much happier (and slowly getting healthier) than when I was dieting.”

Choosing your family’s word 

Dietitians are notorious for saying all foods can fit into a balanced diet — and it’s true.  Instead of teaching kids there are good and bad foods — even healthy and unhealthy ones — they can learn that there is a time and place for all foods.  Some are served more (or less) frequently than others but all should be enjoyed. 

While there is no one right word to stand for your family’s eating one that comes to mind is balance.

Finding that balance between all foods, including sweets, gives people the best of both worlds.  Yes, there are times where eating becomes unbalanced like dietitian Jill Castle discusses in her post on Vacation Food. 

But once true balance is achieved you won’t want to stray from it for too long.  And your kids won’t either.  

Stay tuned for the next three posts in our Managing Sweets series where we’ll show you how to achieve an enjoyable balance in your family’s diet.

I’m curious, anyone feel like they have the balance-thing down?

Previous: The Real Reason Families Eat Too Many Sweets

Next: Want to Raise a Sweet-Obsessed Kid? Do These 8 Things

References

Finkelstein SR. Fishbach A. When healthy food makes you hungry. J of Consumer Research. 2010; 37.

Oakes ME. Beauty or beast: does stereotypical thinking about foods contribute to overeating?  Food Quality and Preference. 2005; 16:447-454.

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{ 11 comments… read them below or add one }

Merri Ann September 7, 2010 at 12:24 pm

No. We definitely don’t have it yet. I’m fighting for my own balance on the issue and trying to bring my husband on board. Just this weekend he thought it necessary to make a negative comment on my meal of a salad then a scoop of mango ice cream vs. his meal of steak and mashed pototoes … amazingly the only problem he had was that I had dared to eat something sweet. I later looked up the calorie count on both our meals (available on the restaurants website) and he still wasn’t convinced.

He seems open to changing our habits and our language … maybe this series will finally convince him.

Thanks for all the good info.

Evelyn September 7, 2010 at 1:34 pm

Perfect timing. My family just returned from vacation where we had brownies, apple pie, ice cream and more, several times a day. It got so bad that I had brownies at breakfast! I snuck them so my hubby would not know. He emailed me today saying we need to get off this sugar.
We normally have something sweet in the house or with dinner so I do not binge, but vacation was crazy.
Funny thing is our 4 yr old can take or leave dessert; he listens to his body.

Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD September 7, 2010 at 3:00 pm

Hey Merri Ann,

It’s important to be on the same wave length as your spouse. Luckily my husband has adopted most of my ideas on food and eating (as long as I let him take over our finances). An even swap I guess. I hope this series helps you get more balance!

Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD September 7, 2010 at 3:04 pm

Evelyn — some times it’s nice to eat differently while on vacation. My daughter has a real sweet tooth but I’m not sure my son will. He seems to turn away from sweet foods like fruit. Good luck with the vacation detox!

Jill Castle September 7, 2010 at 6:16 pm

MaryAnn–
Great post and thanks for the mention. As for balance…I prefer to think of balance as an ongoing state of mind and reality. Not sure that I am ever “balanced”, rather in the constant state of “balancing”. Because in my world, balance is brief, and then time marches on, and with it, imbalance.

AKeo September 8, 2010 at 6:25 am

We are still working on that. My husband is Cambodian and eats just about anything, including LOTS of vegetables. He’s not a big sweets fan but eats it when the mood hits him. I grew up in a mostly meat and potatoes household with a mother that loved veggies but a father that made it perfectly clear he hated most greens. I have definitely branched out as the years go on and thanks to my husband. Through feeding my son I am finding greater balance for myself and listening to my body more. But I still struggle with guilt of eating sweets and thinking it hurts my efforts at maintaining a healthy weight. I definitely don’t want to pass my food history onto my son, but I’m hoping the changes I’m making will be enough to positively influence him. We are on the right track.

Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD September 8, 2010 at 11:54 am

AKeo — it sounds like you are doing a wonderful job. You son is very lucky. Even after all these years I still find myself slipping back into old habits. Awareness is key.

Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD September 8, 2010 at 11:56 am

Good point. Balance is a great goal but we shouldn’t get hung up on expecting perfect balance all the time.

Deb September 13, 2010 at 8:22 am

Great article! I most definitely struggle with the balance and not labeling foods as bad. It’s not that I don’t want my kids or myself to have sweets…I’m perfectly fine with serving sweets with our meals. It’s the ingredients in our “foods”, especially the indulgent “foods”, that I’m struggling with… HFCS & dyes in particular. I’m not sure how to strike that balance with all the negative research on the ingredients in our “foods” these days.

Maryann Tomovich Jacobsen, MS, RD September 13, 2010 at 1:01 pm

Deb — I know it can be hard. I hope to address this balance in the next few articles in the series. One thing you could do is serve more natural sweets (no dyes or HFCS) at home and allow your kids other sweets outside the home.

Meal Plan Mom (Brenda) September 19, 2010 at 10:20 am

Excellent series Maryann! Serving sweets in our home has been a struggle that I’ve faced for many years. I remember when my son was just two years old or so…often the first thing he would ask for in the morning was candy! He is a candy (and sweets) monster! Both my husband and I have big sweet tooths so elminating sweets altogether is something we don’t want to give up. At meals we always ask that everyone at least try everything on their plates and I am happy to say that when the lunchboxes come home I can tell that everything has been eaten–or at least most of it–so overall I think we’re doing ok.

But as you remind us it’s all about balance. I don’t think I’ve got it down but it’s posts like these that help remind me that I’m further along than I often give credit for!

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