Structure Nurture & Boundaries

Supporting meaningful change in your child’s feeding journey

Changing how we eat can be hard … not least because many of our eating habits began before we even had words. From infancy, our relationship with food is shaped by sensory experience, connection and nervous system responses. My nutritional assessment packages offer a gentle entry point to explore your child’s unique food story and consider taking next steps towards meaningful change, no matter their age or stage. Through a holistic blend of nutrition guidance, physical and sensory awareness and repeating patterns, I help families make food-related changes that are respectful, developmentally appropriate, and tailored to your child, from infancy to adolescence.
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Understanding your child and young person's food journey

Each phase of childhood comes with its own feeding challenges and milestones:
Infants need safety, comfort, and sensory connection.
Toddlers are all about play and exploration - mealtimes can be messy and tricky.
School-age children begin forming social relationships with food - this can be a key time to work on food-related change.
Puberty brings emotional, social, and physical shifts that impact appetite, needs, and habits.
Adolescence is super a period charged with change, in which food, mood and body connection become key objects of identification

Together, we consider how developmental stage, experience, play, and daily life all shape a child’s relationship with food.

Structure: meeting nutritional needs

We look closely at your child or young person’s diet, and how it supports growth and wellbeing. Structure includes:
  • Meeting age-specific nutritional needs
  • Macronutrient balance (proteins, fats, carbs)
  • Key nutrients, fibre, fluids, and food quality
  • Mealtime rhythm, snacking habits, growth patterns
  • Sleep, bowel health, hormones, and more
We can also explore birth history, early feeding, family patterns, and medical background to understand the full picture.

nurture: connection & communication

Nurture is how we feed with care … this is about attention, tone, and presence. From eye contact in infancy to listening and being present in the teen years, it’s all about connection! Developing self-care and agency around choices to care for our bodies, connect with others and ourselves.
  • Notice and name what your child is doing well
  • Use encouragement and effective praise
  • Allow room for safe independence
  • Be open to hearing your child’s perspective
  • Consider what self-care and agency look like
These small moments of nurture build confidence and emotional safety. And finding ways to offer this to ourselves can be really powerful.

Boundaries: clarity & confidence

Boundaries create safe, clear expectations around food and mealtimes. They help children feel secure and parents feel empowered.
  • What’s negotiable and what’s not?
  • Where can we stretch comfort zones safely?
  • How do we model calm decision-making and self-regulation?
  • Recognising boundaries that develop agency & support, rather than control.
Boundaries support respectful feeding relationships and help children grow into capable, confident eaters.