5 Important Things To Consider Before You Pack Another School Lunch for Your Kids

Written by Joanne on October 2, 2008 – -



by Shannon Leone and Tera Warner

Getting kids to eat properly in today’s fast-paced, fast-food world is a huge challenge for us moms. Add to that the school policies on no nuts and the fact that food has to stay unrefrigerated for 3 hours and you’ve got some real creativity that needs to be in order to get your kids on healthy lunches.

Yet so much hangs in the balance if we fall short. Food will affect their bio-chemistry, their energy level, their ability to focus, and even their sense of self. If blood sugar levels are unstable, or if meals aren’t being digested, children will eventually be handicapped when it comes to reaching their potential. It is our privilege and responsibility as mothers to give our children the very best chances to succeed in life, and we do that by putting care and attention in the meals we serve.

Here are some clever tips for making more healthy lunches for kids.

1. Good Food Can Be Fast Food, Too.

These days the most color kids get in their lunch box is on the logo of a “Twinkie” wrapper!

The excessive packaging is an environmental nightmare! Just because some people know how to market to busy, multitasking women, doesn’t mean what they’re selling is ethical. Juice boxes, “Lunchables”, mini crackers and cheese and chocolate dips with cookies, all neatly packed and ready to send might be quick for you, but the long term consequences of these choices cannot be overlooked. The fastest food there is is an apple!

2. Insist a bit and be prepared for “Withdrawal”

Understand that many of the foods kids eat these days are physiologically addictive. You can actually think of your children as mini drug addicts, hooked on the dope of refined sugars, salty meats, cheeses, crackers and many poor quality breads. You need to get them through withdrawal!

But be warned, Mother. You’re going to need to get yourself through withdrawal, too, if these eating habits are reflective of your own unresolved patterns.

Once you’ve decided you’re going to do it, prepare for war! War against every bit of nutritional indoctrination you’ve ever been fed! When you’re children come to you protesting that they NEEEED those sausage links and cheese balls, when they tell you they HATE melon and celery and cucumber, then smile and tell them you understand and that this, too, shall pass!

They are in withdrawal! Persist and your children will be healthier, brighter, more calm and clear eyed that you have ever seen. You will reap the rewards of transitioning your kids to a healthier diet soon. You’ll have the assurance of knowing that you’re giving them the very best start in life you can, and that they will be thriving in those little bodies of theirs.

3. Don’t Overdo A Good Thing: Treat Reduction = Increased Appreciation

Remember when ‘treats’ were a rare and special thing growing up? I was talking to a lady who works in the grocery store where I shop- she calls me the GREEN QUEEN because they say my cart looks like a GARDEN. So I mentioned something to the effect of kids today get way too many treats. Her reply was “Kids today don’t get any treats”. I was confused and asked her what she meant. She responded “Kids today get whatever they want, whenever they want, so nothing is ever saved as a treat.” Well said!

This is a double rip-off because it means kids are missing out in more ways than one. GONE is the satisfaction that comes from longing for something special, having to wait until the right occasion, then achieving it and feeling how much more wonderful it is after having waited. Today kids are missing out on this subtle pleasure, which is also the learned skill of waiting to delay gratification.

4. What To Put In Their Lunches?

Many schools have strict policies that packed lunches cannot include nuts. This means no garden burgers, pates or desserts with any nuts or nut butters. PLUS the food has to hold up for about three hours without a fridge. There go the avocados, too. Let’s face it school lunches are tough, but here are a few helpful suggestions:

Things To Include:
• Loads of Fresh Fruit, Berries
• Halva: Freshly grind your sesame seeds and mix with a bit of honey.
• Manna Bread: Sprouted grain breads and loaves.
• Rice and sushi loaded with veggie strips
• All vegetable sticks.
• A cool pack with a smoothie.
• Bean salads (chick peas, sprouted lentils, etc.)
• Rice cakes
• Sunflower paté

Don’t feel guilty about keeping it simple. Let your kids be a beacon of color and include cute notes, loving messages and little surprises, too. Nothing is more beautiful than big slices of melon and fresh strawberries!

5. Slow Down, Mom! This One Counts!

I know how difficult it feels at times to keep all the plates spinning in the air with the busy lives we are living, but if we don’t have time to nurture our children by feeding them wholesome food, we set them up for all kinds of unnecessarily and avoidable struggles and difficulties then be considered to have lost the plot, the purpose and privilege we have to be raising children. We need to bring ourselves back to basics and get this right. Of all the things on your to do list, Mom, this one really is worth taking the time and making it happen the right way!

While you might be putting out a bit more time to put together your ecologically conscious, healthy school lunch, and while you may also have a bit of protest to get through in order to pull it off, the results will speak for themselves with a child who is calm, concentrated, has natural hunger and whose body thrives on good food and mama’s lovin’.

Shannon and Tera

p.s.
If any of you have any examples of a healthy lunches that work for your munchkins, please let us know! Send a photo of it, all packed if possible, describe the ingredients and the way it was prepared. Also, tell us your children’s name and ages too, and we’ll consider publishing you in our upcoming ebook on healthy school lunches for kids. If you contribute, we’ll definitely send you a copy for free!

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4 Responses to “5 Important Things To Consider Before You Pack Another School Lunch for Your Kids”

  1. By Joanne on Oct 2, 2008

    Tera and Shannon, this is FANTASTIC! Thanks for the great ideas. My girls will be starting school next year, so these ideas, and your new e-book, will be a godsend.

    I’m with you on the whole ‘treats’ thing – they really do need to be occasional, so that they’re then special and not everyday foods. I hadn’t thought of occasional treats as being a form of delayed gratification, but they are, aren’t they? And fostering that skill helps develop children’s emotional intelligence.

    There was a documentary on TV last night here in Australia, called Life at 3. It’s following some Australian children from birth to age 7 (there’s a broader, very detailed study of 10,000 children happening at the same time), seeing how environment, stress, habits, socioeconomic factors etc contribute to the development of children. Interestingly, they’re finding that the role of the FATHER is actually more important than the mother in terms of preventing childhood obesity (perhaps it’s sometimes fathers who ‘break the rules’ and give out treats?). So I guess we have to make sure that mums and dads are both on the ‘same page’ and have a shared approach when it comes to eating habits, exercise etc. They also say that when parents make activity an everyday part of life (dad goes for a bike ride in the mornings, mum goes to the gym, the family goes swimming together once a week), it becomes a very natural part of life for children. Makes sense!

    I’ve diverted from the theme, but just want to thank you for this GREAT post. (Those salads look amazing, by the way – any of chance of you being able to post the recipes?!).

    Thanks guys

    Love Jo

    [Reply]

  2. By Gina on Oct 3, 2008

    Great article ladies!!! Thanks!!!

    I love to send sprouted quinoa salad.. quinoa, lemon, olive oil, salt, dill, mint, parsley all chopped up with cukes and tomatoes added… then if u have extra time you can stuff some collards with this mixture ad make raw dolma.

    I also think loading a cracker recipe with veggies and cultured veggies makes for a crunchy clean way of getting their tummy’s full of green. (just use any sprouted grain and add a load of fave veggies and herbs, blend, spread on dehydrator sheets or pizza stone and dehydrate until crisp. You can use your oven on lowest temp to dehydrate as well.

    My son adores this simple treat: petite peas, raw apple cider vinegar, and coconut oil. to him this is a snack.

    or use cucumber rounds to replace bread and make little sammies. Fill with guacamole, seed cheese or fave dips.

    Gina

    [Reply]

  3. By Shannon on Oct 9, 2008

    GINA THIS IS AWESOME! I already have a QUINOA COUSCOUS but would love your photo of the DOLMA sent in for the book,and any other you wish to share. LOVE all your ideas and especially that you are DOING IT! I so salute you woman! reach me at sjkleone at yahoo dot com- anyone and EVERYONE please send your recipes for SIMPLE RAW/HIGH RAW HEALTHY lunchboxes WITH NICE PHOTOS plus the ages of your kids and names- LET’S DO THIS TOGETHER and make a dent in this daily chore that soooo many Mom’s in the trenches face! Bliss us! xo

    [Reply]

  4. By Ara on Jun 10, 2010

    Fantastic! Eating healthy veggies is really a good choice for a packed lunch. And your ideas are really awesome. Thank you! I also would like to share to you an incredible and amazing packed lunch container. Truly perfect for your packed lunch ideas, all the more when mommies out there decided to have more than three variants of food like fruits, sandwiches, veggies. Carrying won’t be an issue when you use a stainless steel tiffin container. As well as when you want to stack liquids in it too. It will never be a problem with a tiffin carrier as long as you set it up properly. Plus, using this kind of eco-friendly container is much safer than plastic wares/plastic bags because it has 100% BPA free. You can take a look at Happy Tiffin site for different styles/designs of products to choose from. =)

    [Reply]


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