Healthy Risk Taking
Learn how to support healthy risk-taking and help your child avoid taking unhealthy risks.
As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an essential role in your two-year-olds success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-child relationship from the start, and developing healthy eating habits is a great way to do it.
Healthy eating habits begin in the early years, including developing family eating routines, giving your child choices about what and how much to eat, and modeling healthy options. Eating offers a time to learn about nutrition and socializing, making independent choices, sharing portions with others, impulse control, and contributing to the food preparation needed for a family meal.
Family preferences and habits are deeply influenced by culture and allow children to learn an essential part of their identity. When a child learns about their family’s eating habits and how they are different and similar to other families, they learn what makes their family culture unique and special. Eating together is an important part of childhood and can be a time for family bonding and making healthy eating a way of life.1
Despite cultural differences in the use of utensils, spices, ingredients, and rituals, there are standard guidelines for healthy portions and food choices that are helpful for all families. Although it may be frustrating when your child does not always choose the foods or the portion sizes that are the most healthy,2 it is essential to be flexible and patient. Being too rigid about eating rules will lead to disagreements and often end up with you feeling that you need to reward or punish your child for what they do or do not eat.
Sometimes, parents and those in a parenting role end up using food as a reward (“If you eat three more bites, I will let you have a cookie”) or a punishment (“Because you did not eat a healthy breakfast, now you have to eat broccoli for lunch”). This can damage your relationship with your child, add to your daily stress, and result in your child not liking healthy foods. Rather than developing healthy eating habits, your child will just comply with your rules and will likely try to defy these rules when you are not watching.
Throughout the early years, children’s experiences with food will change as they can eat a more comprehensive range of foods and experiment with independence and exploration. Your child might find certain foods they like and others they are unwilling to try. Being able to control what they eat is part of their attempt to assert independence. Involving children in grocery shopping, vegetable growing, and food preparation increases their chances of trying various foods.
When trying something new at a friend’s house or a restaurant, you might notice your two-year-old turn to you to see if you are there and ensure that this will be okay to eat. Your trusting relationship will give your child a sense that it is okay to approach a challenge because you are there for them.
We all face challenges sticking to healthy eating habits. As your child develops, though, it is important that they can turn to you to offer suggestions for new foods to try, be patient as they experiment with new foods, and welcome them unconditionally to the family dinner table. The steps below include specific and practical strategies to help you discuss healthy eating habits and build a relationship with your child with reliable and unconditional support and love.
Your child’s openness to try new foods and engagement with others around the meal table is essential to developing lifelong healthy eating habits. You can begin by exposing your child to new foods that are just the right level of challenge for them, offering just enough support and patience to know they can trust you, and helping them recognize and feel a sense of success and empowerment when they master the experience.
Today, in the short term, healthy eating habits can create
Tomorrow, in the long term, helping your child develop healthy eating habits
This five-step process helps you and your child develop healthy eating habits together. It also builds critical life skills in your child. The same process can be used to address other parenting issues (learn more about the process).
Understanding what your child thinks and feels will make a big difference in setting the stage for healthy eating habits. Your child will give you lots of cues about whether a change or an addition to their eating routine feels too big or too small for them. Every child is different, and your child may change daily how willing they are to take on new foods and habits. The more they can contribute to the family’s eating routines (e.g., shopping, growing, preparing, planning), the more they will be excited about meals together.
You will know your child’s cues better than anyone else, and you will be able to anticipate whether eating something new and being flexible with expectations is right for today. Is your child feeling particularly tired? Did they just get hurt, or are they hungry? Knowing how they are doing and what their facial expressions and body language mean will help you decide if a challenge is the right size for your child right now.
In paying attention and noting slight differences in your child’s cries, body language, and speaking when trying to be healthy, you
Teaching is different than just telling. Teaching builds basic skills, grows problem-solving abilities, and prepares your child for success. Teaching also involves modeling and practicing the positive behaviors you want to see, promoting skills, and preventing problems.
Practice also provides essential opportunities to grow self-efficacy – a child’s sense that they can try something new successfully. This leads to confidence. It helps them understand that mistakes and failures are part of learning.
To build healthy eating habits, it is essential to practice noticing feelings, giving your child a choice to try something new when they are ready, seeing the trusted adults who are always there to help, and remembering that the child’s strengths and pride in their own culture’s eating traditions can help them embrace family eating routines.
You can offer support when needed by reteaching, monitoring, and coaching. This support also tells your child that you see their challenge and are here to support them. Parents and those in a parenting role naturally offer support as they see their child fumble with a situation in which they need help. This is no different.
If your child is working to grow their skills – even in small ways – it will be worthwhile to recognize it. Your recognition can go a long way in promoting positive behaviors and expanding your child’s confidence. Your recognition also encourages safe, secure, and nurturing relationships — a foundation for strong communication and a healthy relationship with you as they grow.
There are many ways to reinforce your child’s efforts. It is essential to distinguish between three types of reinforcement: recognition, rewards, and bribes. These three distinct parenting behaviors have different impacts on your child’s behavior.
Recognition occurs after you observe the desired behavior in your child. Noticing and naming the specific behavior you want to reinforce is key to promoting more of it. For example, “You tried the new carrots — I love seeing that!” Recognition can include nonverbal acknowledgment such as a smile, high five, or hug.
Rewards can be helpful in certain situations by providing a concrete, timely, and positive incentive for doing a good job. A reward is determined beforehand so the child knows what to expect, like “If you try the new food at dinner tonight, we will read your favorite book before bed.” (If you XX, then I’ll XX.) It stops any negotiations in the heat of the moment. A reward could be used to teach positive behavior or break a bad habit. The goal should be to help your child progress to a time when the reward will no longer be needed. If used too often, rewards can decrease a child’s internal motivation.
Unlike a reward, bribes aren’t planned ahead of time and generally happen when a parent or someone in a parenting role is in the middle of a crisis (like in the grocery store checkout line and a child is having a tantrum. To avoid disaster, a parent or someone in a parenting role offers to buy a sucker if the child will stop the tantrum). While bribes can be helpful in the short term to manage stressful situations, they will not grow lasting motivation or behavior change and should be avoided.
Engaging in these five steps is an investment that will strengthen your skills as an effective parent or someone in a parenting role on many other issues and develop essential skills that will last a lifetime for your child. Through this tool, children can become more self-aware, deepen their social awareness, exercise their self-management skills, work on their relationship skills, and demonstrate and practice responsible decision-making.
Learn how to support healthy risk-taking and help your child avoid taking unhealthy risks.
Explore a step by step process for dealing with simple and challenging parenting topics to build critical life skills and improve your relationship with your child.
© 2024 Center for Health and Safety Culture at Montana State University