@james02s40 I have a larger twin and a smaller twin. It's been that way since about month 3 and they are 4.5 now
I have literally fed the smaller child straight up butter and she's always in the 20% percentile.
My advice? Don't panic. Some days they will eat more. At restaurants, they may eat less or slower. They may decide they don't like that places seasoning. They may just be taking it all in.
My smaller kid is a slow eater. She takes her sweet time and sometimes doesn't eat before we have paid. She eats a lot of what we call 'car snacks' where she will grab a roll or a piece of chicken or something and just carry it out of the restaurant.
Focus on offering a balanced meal, but if they don't eat, don't force it. Just wait. They typically know their bodies well and just because one isn't growing at the same rate as the other kid doesn't mean they aren't growing. They are different kids completely, being fraternal this is even more true.
At 4.5, my smaller twin is actually still taller than my 'larger' twin. Her bottom still fits in 18m or 2t clothing but the length she needs is 4t.
I'm not trying to feed her more or change her. She has energy. She grows. She just doesn't grow in the same way as her twin sister or even her older sister.
It's hard not to be anxious, but the anxiety around the food will cause its own problems. You are offering a balanced meal, that's what matters.
You've gotten a lot of good advice and I'm reiterating, but hoping showing that being on the small side of the percentile can continue and be normal. It's just in relation to other kids their age and they may just be smaller humans forever. As long as there is weight gain year over year, you've accomplished it. And growth spurts will change eating patterns greatly. I watch my kids go a week grazing and barely eating then dive into 'I will eat a whole cup of rice and half a steak' this meal the next week.
But getting them into restaurants and comfortable at this age is good. At least from our experience, it makes our lives easier. Vacations are easier. Meeting with family and friends is easier. Try and confront that anxiety.
Best of luck! It gets easier and easier with time!
I have literally fed the smaller child straight up butter and she's always in the 20% percentile.
My advice? Don't panic. Some days they will eat more. At restaurants, they may eat less or slower. They may decide they don't like that places seasoning. They may just be taking it all in.
My smaller kid is a slow eater. She takes her sweet time and sometimes doesn't eat before we have paid. She eats a lot of what we call 'car snacks' where she will grab a roll or a piece of chicken or something and just carry it out of the restaurant.
Focus on offering a balanced meal, but if they don't eat, don't force it. Just wait. They typically know their bodies well and just because one isn't growing at the same rate as the other kid doesn't mean they aren't growing. They are different kids completely, being fraternal this is even more true.
At 4.5, my smaller twin is actually still taller than my 'larger' twin. Her bottom still fits in 18m or 2t clothing but the length she needs is 4t.
I'm not trying to feed her more or change her. She has energy. She grows. She just doesn't grow in the same way as her twin sister or even her older sister.
It's hard not to be anxious, but the anxiety around the food will cause its own problems. You are offering a balanced meal, that's what matters.
You've gotten a lot of good advice and I'm reiterating, but hoping showing that being on the small side of the percentile can continue and be normal. It's just in relation to other kids their age and they may just be smaller humans forever. As long as there is weight gain year over year, you've accomplished it. And growth spurts will change eating patterns greatly. I watch my kids go a week grazing and barely eating then dive into 'I will eat a whole cup of rice and half a steak' this meal the next week.
But getting them into restaurants and comfortable at this age is good. At least from our experience, it makes our lives easier. Vacations are easier. Meeting with family and friends is easier. Try and confront that anxiety.
Best of luck! It gets easier and easier with time!