Probably on the hunt for the best donut in town while listening to Noah Kahan and yapping about Taylor Swift.
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She picked a soft tortilla.
Then added brown beans. Tomato. Lettuce. Cheese.
Built the whole thing in Canva like a tiny digital chef.
And then, plot twist…she didn’t have to eat it.
This session was never about the taco.

ARFID (Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder) is often misunderstood as:
…which, respectfully, is like telling someone afraid of heights to “just jump off the balcony and see what happens.”
What’s actually happening is:
So instead of forcing exposure, we build safety first.

As a “severe picky eater” myself, I understand deeply what it feels like to be categorized as “stubborn”, “annoying to go out to eat with” and just plain picky! I now work with folks ages 6+ on their own food challenges, ARFID being one of them and use a empathy-first approach that is centered around first understanding what the core challenge or fear is. ARFID is incredibly misunderstood even in the therapy world and my hope with this blog series is to create a a world where ARFID is not as challenging to tackle as both parents, individuals & providers.
Feel free to follow along on my own personal journey of re-discovering safe foods after a new allergy wiped out majority of my safe-food lists.
If you’ve read Dragons Love Tacos, you already know:
Dragons = loveees tacos
Dragons + spicy salsa = absolute chaos
Which makes it perfect for ARFID work.
Because suddenly…
It’s not about your fear, but instead, about the dragon’s.
And kids will talk about a dragon’s fear wayyyyy faster than their own.
Instead of: “Take a bite”
We explored:
And just like that, we’re working on:
Without ever taking a single bite.
Instead of giving her a real taco…my client created one. I asked them to choose what ingredients that they would like to include and made sure to give options if they felt stuck.
Ingredients Chosen:
Then we built something even more important: A 6-level “brave brain” ladder
Using my tried-and-true methodology, we explore how brave brain could be accessed 1 level at a time. This looked like:
In the moment of building the taco, I thought the most difficult to explore was going to be the beans or tomatoes. But, instead the tortilla was the hardest.
Which is HUGE.
Because now we’re not guessing anymore—we’re targeting the exact fear.
This isn’t just a cute activity (though, it most certainly is), but it’s building:
We’re teaching the brain: “Hey… maybe this isn’t a 10/10 danger situation.”
This biggest takeaway here is that taking a bite was never an option. And that expectation was clear before we ever started.
We didn’t:
ARFID treatment isn’t about tricking the kid, it’s about helping their brain feel safe enough to try.
And funny enough, the real win had nothing to do with the taco at all. It was:
That’s the work. The bite will come later.
If you’re a parent reading this, know that the cognitive work is just as important as trying the food. But one cannot come without the other.
And if all else fails…
Blame the dragons.

April 21, 2026
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