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I belong to a Radical Unschooling group online and for the life of me I can't see eye to eye on their views of food. Someone had written in that her son was just eating Pringles and Kool Aid for weeks on end. I wrote back that I would just not have that stuff in my house. Some on the list have suggested that I leave the list for this response. My children are still young (3 years old and eight months old). But I have read and researched so much about food that I can't nonchalantly let them choose whatever they want to eat. I understand that companies put chemicals into food to make repeat customers. Not to mention the addictive quality of sugar, salt and wheat. We eat mainly primal at home. I do not allow anything in the house that I wouldn't want my children to eat. When we go out to eat or at other people's houses, I let my children eat what they want. We talk about the choices and how it affects their body. And that these are treats. Am I an unschooling failure? Am I setting my kids up for a bad relationship with food as others keep telling me? Thank you</p>
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I belong to a Radical Unschooling group online and for the life of me I can't see eye to eye on their views of food. Someone had written in that her son was just eating Pringles and Kool Aid for weeks on end. I wrote back that I would just not have that stuff in my house. Some on the list have suggested that I leave the list for this response. My children are still young (3 years old and eight months old). But I have read and researched so much about food that I can't nonchalantly let them choose whatever they want to eat. I understand that companies put chemicals into food to make repeat customers. Not to mention the addictive quality of sugar, salt and wheat. We eat mainly primal at home. I do not allow anything in the house that I wouldn't want my children to eat. When we go out to eat or at other people's houses, I let my children eat what they want. We talk about the choices and how it affects their body. And that these are treats. Am I an unschooling failure? Am I setting my kids up for a bad relationship with food as others keep telling me? Thank you</p>
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