In article ,
"J. Clarke" wrote:
I actually debate that. If I go to a dinner party and hate the food,
I cannot just not eat it without offending the host. I take a small
amount and eat it as best I can. If I visit a foreign country and am
not used to their cuisine, it is the height of rudeness to flatly refuse
it or take a bite and push the plate away as I don't care for it. If a
person from a foreign country visits and makes a meal for me, it is rude
to stop eating it because it disgusts you.
We train our children to take small amounts of new things, try
everything, eat at least three good bites of it and to be gracious.
Even if the food isn't good, the fact that someone made it for you shows
that they care for you and you ought to be thankful for that. The
example I've used with our children is that when they bring us handfuls
of weeds or scribble drawings, we didn't toss them or make remarks about
how they weren't really as nice as they ought to be. It was a gift from
their hearts and would be hurtful and rude to treat it otherwise. We do
not wish to hurt people's feelings when they have gone to the effort
(and expense) of making a meal for us. We want to be open to new
things, because we like travel and visiting with people from other
nations. We are Christians and believe in missions (please don't go all
flammable on me over this), and a missionary won't be very effective if
he can't even handle eating the foods of the new nation or tribe.
Eating at someone's home, even one's own, is not the same thing as
cooking for oneself or eating at a restaurant. You are not taking care
of only your own needs or preferences nor are you paying someone to
please your palate.
Also, I don't know of many (any?) parents who exclusively cook things
that their children hate. Even when I make things that someone or a few
people don't like, I make sure to have other things on the plate they
do. I am one of the few people who likes sushi in our house, so we
rarely eat it. OTOH, neither Rich nor I like mushrooms all that well,
so, though we don't discourage our children from eating it, we don't
really have it at home a lot. We used to give all our foods we didn't
like _to_ the children when they were very little and ate off our plates
at restaurants. We'd give them bites of the other parts, too, but Rich
would give them his zucchini and I'd give them my mushrooms and they
were fine with it. It was just a different food to them.
Regards,
Ranee @ Arabian Knits
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/