BROWSE CAR REVIEWS BY:

Click on a car body type for search results.
![]() |
![]() |
| SUVs (two rows) | SUVs (three rows) |
![]() |
![]() |
| Crossover | Minivans |
![]() |
![]() |
| Sedan | Hybrids |
![]() |
![]() |
| Wagons/Hatchbacks | Just for Fun |
Momosphere: 10.2.09
Oct 02 2009 by Jennifer Newman
Dinnertime is the new parenting battleground at my house. My husband and I are done being short-order cooks in an attempt to fix something our boys will eat. If the boys don’t want to eat what we’re having for dinner, then they get nothing. It’s a little harsh, but I’m done giving them a bowl of cereal or a sandwich every time they don’t like what we’re eating. It’s made our family dinnertime a little more peaceful, too. These bloggers are having their own dinner battles, too.
The Faces of Hunger, Confessions of a Pioneer Woman
Ree Drummond is the Pioneer Woman, and, yes, she lives on a ranch. This mother of four knows a little something about dinner drama, but her youngest is destined to win the battles for awhile. All it takes is one look at that adorable baby face (photo above) and I’d cave, too.
When the Naughty Step Isn’t So Bad, The Papa Bear Memoirs
It’s battle broccoli in the Bear house. Papa Bear, a father of three, writes of his youngest daughter’s refusal to eat the dreaded vegetable. “Here was a 4-year-old girl who was willing to not only give up her chance to play a game with her brother, sister and dad, but would rather sit at the naughty step voluntarily than eat her broccoli,” he writes.
Nightly Dinner Battles, Parenting.com
Mighty Maggie knows the only way to win the food battle with her son is to send him to bed without supper (after he’s turned his nose up at it), but she just can’t do it. She writes, “Do you want to go to bed without dinner? We have yet to follow this universally approved advice. And as I type, Jack is polishing off his corn dog at 8:07 pm. This has FAIL written all over it.”











Right on, Jen! You can do it! We do the same with Eliot.