How do they kill animals for us to eat? Looking for kid-friendly version for a 6yo.

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I’ve never hunted, nor fished, nor been apart of the killing/processing of any kind of meat.

My 6yo is asking me how animals end up on our plate. I tend to over-explain and I think that wouldn’t be healthy in this situation.

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75 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

ELI5 what was the holocaust? looking for a kid friendly version for a 6yo.

Anonymous 0 Comments

ELI5 what was the holocaust? looking for a kid friendly version for a 6yo.

Anonymous 0 Comments

ELI5 what was the holocaust? looking for a kid friendly version for a 6yo.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I have an almost 5 year old and we have a small hobby farm, with lots of chickens. He asked to watch me kill and process one of the roosters for meat. I explained what would happen in really simple terms — “I will use a sharp knife to cut the rooster’s neck, all his blood will drain out, and then he will be dead, forever” — before hand and gave him lots of opportunities to opt out or even just cover his eyes. He stood back while I did the killing, but didn’t look away, and helped me with the plucking/gutting/etc.

Now when we visit other farms or eat meat that we didn’t process ourselves, he gets how it works and will ask me questions about how it’s the same or different for other animals. I think kids can handle the basics of where food comes from, and for me it’s been a good reminder of why I prefer to eat animals that only had one bad day. I know it’s different for “farm kids” but it’s definitely possible for a kid to know some details without it causing an existential crisis.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I have an almost 5 year old and we have a small hobby farm, with lots of chickens. He asked to watch me kill and process one of the roosters for meat. I explained what would happen in really simple terms — “I will use a sharp knife to cut the rooster’s neck, all his blood will drain out, and then he will be dead, forever” — before hand and gave him lots of opportunities to opt out or even just cover his eyes. He stood back while I did the killing, but didn’t look away, and helped me with the plucking/gutting/etc.

Now when we visit other farms or eat meat that we didn’t process ourselves, he gets how it works and will ask me questions about how it’s the same or different for other animals. I think kids can handle the basics of where food comes from, and for me it’s been a good reminder of why I prefer to eat animals that only had one bad day. I know it’s different for “farm kids” but it’s definitely possible for a kid to know some details without it causing an existential crisis.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I have an almost 5 year old and we have a small hobby farm, with lots of chickens. He asked to watch me kill and process one of the roosters for meat. I explained what would happen in really simple terms — “I will use a sharp knife to cut the rooster’s neck, all his blood will drain out, and then he will be dead, forever” — before hand and gave him lots of opportunities to opt out or even just cover his eyes. He stood back while I did the killing, but didn’t look away, and helped me with the plucking/gutting/etc.

Now when we visit other farms or eat meat that we didn’t process ourselves, he gets how it works and will ask me questions about how it’s the same or different for other animals. I think kids can handle the basics of where food comes from, and for me it’s been a good reminder of why I prefer to eat animals that only had one bad day. I know it’s different for “farm kids” but it’s definitely possible for a kid to know some details without it causing an existential crisis.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not to be “that vegan” but why lie to the child? If you can’t eat the sausage after you know how it was made, you probably shouldn’t have been eating it in the first place. I’m not saying describe in gruesome detail but sanitising it to entirely is just double-think. Animals are slaughtered, that’s how it happens, they don’t want to die but we kill them.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not to be “that vegan” but why lie to the child? If you can’t eat the sausage after you know how it was made, you probably shouldn’t have been eating it in the first place. I’m not saying describe in gruesome detail but sanitising it to entirely is just double-think. Animals are slaughtered, that’s how it happens, they don’t want to die but we kill them.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Not to be “that vegan” but why lie to the child? If you can’t eat the sausage after you know how it was made, you probably shouldn’t have been eating it in the first place. I’m not saying describe in gruesome detail but sanitising it to entirely is just double-think. Animals are slaughtered, that’s how it happens, they don’t want to die but we kill them.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Be prepared… when this was explained to me at 7, I stopped eating meat because “ I liked animals more than bacon”

This went off and on for years and finally stuck at adulthood. Be patient if that happens