19 answers

Can My 15 Month Old Eat Too Much?

My 15-month old daughter always wants to eat. She's always been in the 90th percentile for height and weight since birth and her growth has been steady - no large jumps. Her energy level is through the roof. She doesn't stop moving from the time she wakes up in the morning until she we put her down for a nap or nighttime. I don't think she'd ever sleep if we didn't make her!

She ate like a bird up until about a month ago. Now she eats like crazy and throughout the day she will regularly go to the refrigerator and whine or take a can of soup out of the pantry and bring it to me in between planned meal and snack times.

For breakfast every morning she eats oatmeal that I make with mashed bananas, applesauce, and raisins. She eats a portion about the size I would eat. After about an hour she's hungry again and will eat a banana or some yogurt & Cheerios. Lunch is usually some homemade soup with cooked brown rice or whole wheat pasta that I put in it. Or she has cooked chicken and vegetables or some leftovers from the previous night's dinner. After her afternoon nap she has a snack of maybe crackers with natural peanut butter or some black beans. She's ready for dinner by 4:30 or 5, so she'll have either soup again or chicken and vegetables. Then we eat dinner as a family about 6:30 and she'll eat again. She eats whatever we eat. She can eat a couple big scoops of mashed potatoes at a time, a few ounces of chicken and tons of vegetables. Before bed she always has a small snack such as a banana, yogurt, or some oatmeal.

I'm wondering if she's eating too much. I plan 3 meals and 3 snacks a day and she's hungry in between those times. Everything she eats is healthy, so I'm not worried about empty calories or junk food. She loves most cooked vegetables, so I try to give her vegetables if she's telling me she's hungry in between planned meals and snacks. She eats them up like she's never eaten before. I let her feed herself most of the time, so it's not like I'm shoving it down her throat. Should I refuse her when she's telling me she's hungry? If she goes to the refrigerator I can distract her for a little bit, but suddenly she'll just go back to the refrigerator and start whining. I always try to give her a drink first thinking she's just thirsty, but she wants food!

Any ideas and thoughts would be appreciated.

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

S.-My son is 14 1/2 months and his peditrician advices to let him eat as much as he wants...He says that at this age, they don't eat if their not hungry.

V.

More Answers

Go ahead and let her eat, this is the age where another growth spurt happens, so long as it is healthy and she isn't seditary, things are most likely OK.

Hi S.,
It seems that you offer pretty healthy choices for food and you may be concerned about establishing good eating habits now. Toddlers either seem to live on air (not eat much at all) or like yours eat tons! And moms always have something to be worried about! But here's a thought you may be curious to look into some more: Eat Right for Your Type. My son would eat a carbohydrate laden meal until he simply couldn't stuff another bite in his mouth. (He actually ate until it hurt) When I way increased his protiens he ate much more normally.
Well it's something to look into.
Good luck.
Y.

Sounds just like my daughter! As long as you are feeding her so healthy, just let her eat like you are. She probably is hitting a growth spurt and on top of already being a big eater, it can seem like a ton! My son and daughter are big eaters, 95% to off the charts in size, and when she hits a growth spurt, she will eat as much if not more than me. If she seems to be looking alittle skinny or just not ever getting full, then try to add in some healthy fats to her diet like olive oil or cheese on those veggies. That slows my daughter down a bit to get some extra fat calories into her during a spurt. Healthy food are always best, it's just that sometimes they can be alittle too low calorie for a growing toddler. Good Luck

It sounds to me like she runs as musch as she eats. I would think as long as you keep her with the healthy snacks, and she doesn't start having major jumps in percentages, it should be ok to feed her. Good job on giving her veggies and stuff. She might just be hitting a growth spurt, as well.

It sounds like you feed her very healthy things. That's ok! Let her eat! She's probably growing. As long as you're not letting her have cookies and sugary snacks all the time, let her snack. My son is 4 and eats like that. I call him my little hobbit, because he eats breakfast and second breakfast and elevensies and lunch and luncheon...well you get the idea. I just don't let him have sweets for all these snacks. He's very happy with fruit or carrot sticks or cheese or yogurt. So as long as you just keep giving her healthy choices, let her eat! Especially if she's an active child.

Sounds a little like my last child. He was always big as a baby in the 95% percentile and he seemed to always eat a lot. Unlike my other three children who were all steady 50%ers, he craved the fruits and vegetables which I was only too happy to serve. He even shunned some of the other, unhealthier, family favorites. Today he's 4, and a sturdy 70%. He still requests all the healthy foods, even the ones I don't care for myself.

So I'd say as long as she's eating healthy food, let her eat. It's probably a growth spurt. If at your next doctor's appt. she's gone up a few percentiles, discuss it with your doctor and plan to cut back.

You are feeding your daughter all healthy foods and if she is not overweight, feed her when she tells you she is hungry. Kids know their bodies and can tell you at an early age what they need.....just listen. Kids burn a lot of energy all day long, she needs refueling! Kids go through spurts where they eat a LOT and then they eat like birds. As the doctors always say, they will eat when they need to!

Hi S. -

I am new to this mamasource thing. My niece invited me to join. My daughters are both grown - 25 and 22. I have always been involved with children in some way in my life and work. I was a La Leche League leader when my girls were little and I taught Kindermusik among other things.

My guess is that she is going to go through a growth spurt. It sounds like you are feeding her nutritious food. My experience is, if you offer them just nutritious foods they will eat what they need. Just make sure she is getting protein and carbs at the same time. I have learned over the years (after years of being a vegetarian) that the body needs the balance of the two.

I haven't looked on the La Leche website in a long time, but I do know they used to be a wonderful resource for books about childhood nutrition among many other things.

Good luck. You are doing all of the right things.

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