AITA For giving my nephews “slop injections”?

A 20-year-old uncle steps up for a week of free babysitting, packing his picky nephews off to trampoline parks and hikes, only for their “slop injections” to spark parental fury upon return. He prepped for the boys’ mealtime meltdowns by stocking Walmart’s survival food paste in CVS syringes, dubbing it a nutrient-packed fix that silenced whines mid-adventure. Beyond that, the knot tightened when the older kid even requested seconds by day five, turning desperation into a quirky win.

What makes the story more complicated, the parents branded the tactic “inhumane,” insisting fast food would’ve sufficed over this practical paste ploy. He stood firm: with no allergies and a short stint, whatever keeps the peace—and the kids fueled—should fly. Now facing backlash, he questions if ingenuity crossed into cruelty.

'AITA For giving my nephews "slop injections"?'

The conflict ignited when a young uncle stepped up for family duty during summer break.

My (M20) brother (M28) has two boys (M4 and M7). I had the summer off and offered to look after his kids while he went on a vacation with his...

They dropped of his two boys, and they are staying over in my parent's house with me. I usually organize activities such as trampoline parks and hikes and whatever.

Yet the kids’ notorious eating habits quickly complicated the fun-filled days.

They're wonderful kids, but are both extremely picky eaters. I already knew this so I prepared by buying a huge box of survival food paste from walmart. After they kept...

The delivery method stunned them into silence at first, and acceptance grew over time.

I gave one of them the syringe and told them that it had all the nutrients of a meal. Both of them were so confused that the whining immediately stopped...

I repeated this the remainder of their stay and honestly they didn't even complain that much. On day 5 the older one even asked for a slop injection.

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Parental return shattered the peace, with additional details reinforcing his stance.

When my brother and sister in law got back, they became furious and said it was "inhumane" when they learned about my strategy. They stated that I should've just bought...

Edit: They boys both have 0 allergies. My logic is that for such an extended period of time, whatever "parenting technique" works the best for me personally should be allowed.

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Feeding picky children tests every caregiver, and this uncle’s syringe-delivered paste reveals a clever hack rooted in child psychology principles. Child nutrition experts often recommend neutral, reliable alternatives during fussy phases to avoid power struggles. The uncle’s method aligns with strategies that prioritize consistent nutrition over variety when kids resist, preventing skipped meals that lead to behavioral meltdowns.

Parents objected to the presentation, viewing syringes as extreme, yet the paste ensured balanced intake without rewarding tantrums via junk food. Opposing views stress normalcy in eating experiences, arguing “slop” undermines joyful family meals and models poor habits long-term. Beyond that, what makes the story more complicated involves temporary versus permanent authority—babysitters lack the ongoing role to reshape preferences.

Dr. Tanya Altmann, a pediatrician and author of What to Feed Your Baby, explains: “For short-term care, the goal is safe, adequate calories; creative delivery can work if it’s nutritious and non-forceful”. This supports the uncle’s practicality.

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Socially, the tale reflects broader debates on uncle/aunt roles in modern families. Many young relatives provide free childcare, yet face scrutiny over methods differing from parents’. The knot tightens when innovation clashes with tradition, especially amid rising awareness of food neophobia in kids. Parallel to this, survival pastes gain traction in emergency prep communities for efficiency, hinting at cultural shifts toward functional over flavorful eating in crises.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many social media users rallied behind the uncle, highlighting how his no-nonsense nutrition kept peace and health intact during the week.

PepperPhoenix − When my kid went through a picky phase the advice was to give an alternate meal that they would eat, but to make it “filling, not thrilling” because...

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The meal replacement is filling but boring, which ensures they are getting adequate nutrition while simultaneously encouraging them to try new, more interesting things.

It has the added advantage of being the same every time so if their reluctance is due to any medical reason they have a nutritious “safe” fallback. It’s almost certainly...

[Reddit User] − NTA. I don't see how this is any different than a protein bar or a protein shake.

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ArleneTheMad − You gave them paste with all the nutrients needed? Sounds to me like that's a Hell of a lot better for them than fast food! Definitely NTA! !...

When I was a child, my mom would always make me "meat mush" when I was sick. My daughter asks for it every time she is sick to this day...

JamSkully − NTA. Ingenious! You’re a great uncle.

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Others offered measured takes, acknowledging parental frustrations while crediting the temporary success and urging communication.

2bop2pie − My rule as an aunt-babysitter was ‘if your child is alive and has all original limbs attached when you get back, I’ve done my job and will hear...

No_Bluebird7716 − "Slop injections" 😂😂😂 That's priceless. NTA. The best way to get kids to do new things is to make it boring. They had a balanced diet. Parents are...

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Unhappy_Energy_741 − IT'S MADE OUT OF PEOPLE!

StunnedinTheSuburbs − NTA. Who TF criticises someone who takes his children for a WEEK while they go on vacation…and they return to healthy, happy children? !

wolfie0117 − NTA, you fed the kids a balanced diet. it's not like the food isn't fit for human consumption. honestly probably had more nutritional value than the fast food...

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Plenty injected humor to lighten the drama, turning the bizarre tactic into meme-worthy family lore without piling on judgment.

Imaginary-Yak-6487 − They ate without fussing. What’s the issue, bc it wasn’t “normal “ food? . Parents should be saying hey, that’s great thinking.

bear5official − this is the funniest post ive ever seen on this sub

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Tigger7894 − What is “survival food paste” that you get at Walmart?

South-Rabbit-4064 − Where can I get slop injections for myself for cheap? Sounds like a great budgetary measure heading into future uncertainty

BottleilLogical − NTA. Sounds hilarious. I agree with PP that this sounds similar to giving the kids a protein bar.

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Lower-Bottle6362 − What the actual f__k?

In the end, the uncle emerges not the asshole for prioritizing nutrition and sanity through an odd but effective method that silenced complaints and delivered balanced meals, even if the “slop injections” horrified the parents upon return. The week passed with happy, active kids, underscoring how short-term caregiving allows flexibility absent in daily parenting.

What creative feeding tricks have you tried with picky eaters? Would you draw the line at syringe delivery, or praise the ingenuity? Share your babysitting war stories below—vote in the comments on who was right, and tag a friend who needs “slop” survival tips!

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