Today has gone fairly well. Felicity tried my squash soup and even drank some! I thought the soups tasted great, but maybe after several days of this I will feel differently. :) I bought the book What Can I Eat Now? to guide me through the introduction stages, and it has been very helpful. Today we ate squash soup, carrot soup, boiled broccoli, cooked onions and a whole chicken!
Day 2 -
More challenging than day 1 for sure. The second Felicity woke up, she was asking for cereal. After her first few bites of food, she threw up which concerned me a bit. After that, she was fine and did eat a good amount of food today. She would not try any soup, although she did eat a little of a popsicle I made out of the pureed squash soup. We ate hamburgers cooked in broth, carrot/cauliflower soup, broccoli soup, leek and onion soup (I won't make that one again), and some roast. Also I have been drinking ginger honey tea and plan to make a popsicle out of that tomorrow. Really, I am doing fine. Having been gluten-free for years, I am used to turning down things I know I would like, and I don't mind eating a small variety of foods for a while. But this is very hard to do with a kid. If they don't like something, they simply will not eat it, and that's hard on a diet where eating nourishing things is crucial. There should be a "Doing GAPS with kids" support group! Today we did survive a trip to Sam's Club avoiding the samples (I really expected a full tantrum, but she did great!), and I treated myself to some new Pyrex containers at Wal-Mart. We have also been doing a lot of TV (or You Tube Veggie Tales songs) for distraction.
Days 3-5
These days have gone much better. I don't know why I started with pureed soups instead of just going to normal broth/veggie/meat soup like we have had many times. Felicity ate that kind much better than the purees. I have started adding phase 2 things for her (egg in the soup) just to keep it interesting, but I will start phase 2 tomorrow. She loved the ginger tea and honey popsicle, which is basically the only "treat" I am giving her right now, so she asks for one often. I also have been better about involving her with making the food, and I think that has helped. I let her put the egg in her soup, she "helped" me cook the chicken today, and she loves putting salt on our food with the new grinder I got. Fortunately she doesn't seem to notice that all our meals are almost the same - or doesn't care! Today I was trying to feed her some leftovers and she asked for soup instead. :) She hasn't followed all the "rules" like having broth with each meal, and she has probably had more honey than is recommended for stage 1, but we did our best and I'm proud of her for all the good food she is eating with a great attitude.
By day 3, I was finally able to take a break from cooking. I had lots of leftovers, so I didn't need to make everything on the meal plan. I cooked a lot on day 4, and today (5) has been rather easy again. We went to a few garage sales, went to the park, and had a bike ride this evening.
Yay we survived stage 1! I decided that doing GAPS intro, especially with kids, is kind of like having a baby. It's not easy - it is a lot of work. But it's also not impossible - you get through the hard parts, and you can do it! Also, things don't always turn out perfectly, but you do the best you can in the moment.
Things that have surprised me about GAPS intro:
- How much time this takes. Seriously, chopping and cooking this much from-scratch food is a full-time job! Left-over days are a huge blessing.
- How many dishes I would have to wash. I have used most of my pots several times, I have to wash the Vita-mix a couple times a day, and I am constantly running out of food storage (I try to use only glass but don't have enough) containers. Also, since nearly every food contains broth, the dishes are very greasy and hard to wash.
- How emotional this would get. I have been almost in tears several times today whenever Felicity was in actual tears over something she couldn't have. It's hard to explain to a child for the 20th time, "No you can't have _____ . It's not a GAPS diet food." With many things I can say. "We'll be able to eat that in a few days, just not today," but that doesn't really help. I have explained to her the reasons we are doing this, but those don't mean much to a kid who JUST WANTS A BANANA! Soon, honey!
- How much water I am using. Seriously, like 2 gallons a day! I've already had to send Jeff on a late-night run to fill our bottles at the store.
On to Stage 2.
Good luck! Audrey went through detox and even withdrawl when we eliminated gluten from her diet and pumped in probiotics. It did get really difficult at one point but quickly better thereafter. She has had no ezcema, stomach pain, annoying cough, reoccuring colds, night terrors or diarrhea since. It took about (gasp) 10 weeks. -Kate Smith
ReplyDeleteHey Christine,
ReplyDeleteJust another thought to throw out there. My friend's son recently had these scabs and ezcema like rashes pop up all over his scalp. At first she tried removing different things (like gluten, etc), but it was only getting worse and she felt like she was just guessing blindly. Her naturopath suggested an allergy test for him. Although it was expensive, it was incredibly helpful. His top 5 allergens ended up being tapioca (which was in his gummy vitamins that she gave him everyday), chickpeas (they ate a lot of hummus on their sandwiches and wraps for lunch), thyme, sole, and veal. So 5 seemingly random things that weren't related at all. And he scored fine with things that seem like high allergens, like peanuts or gluten.
All that to say, once she got rid of his top 5 severe allergens, and even took out most of the things he scored as moderately allergic to, his symptoms completely went away.
At least in her situation, she would have never guessed the things that he was allergic to. While I think removal diets can definitely be helpful, it seems that having an allergy test done can be better if it helps you pinpoint specific things that need to be taken out.
May God bring you wisdom and healing friend! - Debra
Thanks! I will definitely look into allergy testing if this does not help her. Was the doc who did it local here?
DeleteSorry, my friend lives in Missouri. I haven't researched naturopath docs here yet. Thankfully we just haven't had to go to doctors much so far.
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