Many children develop the “need” for “sameness” in the foods they will accept, tolerate, or even try. When new foods are presented your child may become anxious, have a sensory meltdown, or refuse to eat anything at all. The tips that follow will help to promote and help your child try new foods, new tastes, new textures, new ways to pick up and eat food that is just “outside their comfort zone.” Does your child only seem to want to eat french fries, chicken nuggets, sugar-coated cereal, and only the same-ole, same-ole all the time?
There are so many different reasons a child may have difficulty with feeding which includes delayed oral motor development, difficulties with visual motor skills and perception, sensory motor processing issues, fine motor control and grasping skills, distractions in the environment, difficulty with focus, and so many other reasons that there are too many to add here. All of these issues and deficits can affect the skills needed to properly use utensils, focus, tolerate texture, chew, and swallow.