What Is an Almond Mom? Why It’s a Problem & How to Break the Cycle

By

Tassia O'Callaghan

Mar 11 2025

·

7 min read

hero image

If you grew up hearing things like:

🙄 “Are you sure you need seconds?”

😖 “Ugh, I was so bad today — I ate a cookie.”

😡 “We don’t keep chips in the house. Too tempting!”

… you might have been raised by an almond mom.

So, let’s break it down — what is an almond mom, where did the term come from, and how do we make sure we’re not passing this mindset on to the next generation?

Content warning: This article discusses disordered eating — if you don’t want to read about it, you don’t have to.

In this article: 📝

What does "almond mom" mean?

Where did the term “almond mom” come from?

How do almond moms behave?

Why almond mom culture is a problem

How to make sure you’re not an almond mom

What does "almond mom" mean?

An almond mom is someone (usually a mother, but almond dads are also a thing) who pushes restrictive, diet-focused attitudes about food and body image — often under the guise of “health.”

They’re not necessarily starving themselves, but they’re hyper-aware of calories, labels food as “good” or “bad,” and treats eating like a moral decision.

Almond moms usually mean well.

Many grew up in the peak ‘90s diet culture era, where SlimFast shakes and Special K cereal “diets” were a thing (yikes).

They were taught that controlling food = controlling life.

Almond moms are the product of that era, passing down the same calories in, calories out mentality they were raised with — whether they meant to or not.

Kids raised by almond moms often develop a messed-up relationship with food, struggling with guilt, restriction, binge eating, or even full-blown eating disorders.

Crunchy mom vs. almond mom: what’s the difference?

Not every health-conscious mom is an almond mom.

A crunchy mom focuses on natural parenting — think organic food, cloth diapers, and essential oils.

While crunchy moms might be particular about ingredients (no artificial dyes! no seed oils!), they’re not always obsessed with restriction.

On the other hand, an almond mom isn’t just about what you eat — it’s about how little you eat.

Their focus is often on portion control, weight loss, and avoiding bad foods rather than nutritional benefits.

Butter mom vs. almond mom: total opposites

If almond moms are all about restriction, their polar opposite is the butter mom — a term for moms who embrace full-fat everything and don’t stress about calories.

Butter moms serve up rich, hearty meals without a second thought about macros.

An almond mom might say, "Do you know how many calories are in that?" while a butter mom is piling extra butter on your mashed potatoes.

One is constantly calculating, the other is enjoying the food.

Almond mom vs. granola mom: the overlap

A granola mom (sometimes called an “ingredient mom”) falls somewhere in between an almond mom and a crunchy mom.

They’re into whole foods, natural living, and health-conscious choices, but without the obsessive food guilt.

Granola moms will swap out processed snacks for homemade granola bars but won’t lecture their kids about calories.

They might prefer organic everything, but they’re not promoting diet culture like an almond mom would.

Where did the term “almond mom” come from?

Where did the term “almond mom” come from?

The term exploded online after a resurfaced clip of Yolanda Hadid advising her daughter, Gigi, to “have a couple of almonds and chew them really well” — after Gigi said she felt weak.

(She’s since said that the comment was taken out of context and that she was half-asleep when she said it, having recently had surgery.)

But almond moms aren’t just a celebrity thing — they’re everywhere.

They’re the moms who swear by clean eating, label food as good or bad, and constantly talk about dieting.

The phrase almond mom took off thanks to social media, but the concept has been around forever.

How do almond moms behave?

Almond moms might not raise their voices or physically abuse their children — they might think that their way of parenting is to the benefit of their child.

Here are some examples of how almond moms can behave:

  • Moralize food choices ("I was good today — I only had a salad.")
  • Encourage restriction ("You don’t need seconds, just drink some water!")
  • Obsess over weight and appearance ("I need to lose five pounds before vacation.")
  • Fear “bad” foods ("We don’t keep sweets in the house — too tempting!")

Why almond mom culture is a problem

Why almond mom culture is a problem

Almond mom culture, characterized by promoting restrictive eating habits and an obsession with thinness, can have significant negative impacts on children's physical and mental health.

Here's why:

1. Development of disordered eating behaviors

Children often model their parents' attitudes toward food.

When exposed to restrictive eating patterns and negative body talk, they may develop unhealthy relationships with food, leading to disordered eating behaviors.

Research indicates that parental influence is a significant factor in the development of children's eating behaviors, potentially contributing to conditions like anorexia and bulimia. [1-5]

2. Body dissatisfaction and low self-esteem

Emphasizing thinness as an ideal can lead children to internalize unrealistic body standards, resulting in body dissatisfaction and low self-esteem.

Studies have shown that exposure to the thin ideal is associated with negative psychological effects, including increased anger, depressed mood, and decreased self-worth. [6,7]

3. Increased risk of mental health issues

The pressure to conform to restrictive diets and maintain a specific body image can increase stress and anxiety in children.

This environment may contribute to the development of mental health issues, such as depression and anxiety disorders.

Nutritional psychiatry research has established a link between diet and mental health, highlighting that unhealthy eating patterns can negatively affect mood and overall mental well-being. [8-10]

4. Perpetuation of diet culture

Almond mom culture reinforces harmful diet culture norms, which prioritize appearance over health and well-being.

This perpetuation can lead to a cycle where children adopt similar behaviors and attitudes, continuing the spread of diet culture across generations. [11]

The rise of explicit diet talk on social media platforms exemplifies how these harmful norms are disseminated and normalized. [12]

5. Impact on physical health

Encouraging restrictive eating can result in nutritional deficiencies and negatively affect children's physical development.

For instance, pressuring children to adhere to specific diets or body standards can contribute to unhealthy eating behaviors and weight issues.

Research has shown that parental pressure regarding diet can influence children's eating behaviors and weight status. [13,14]

How to make sure you’re not an almond mom

How to make sure you’re not an almond mom

If you’re a parent now, the good news is you get to break the cycle.

Here’s how to be the opposite of an almond mom:

Ditch the food guilt. No food is “bad” or “good” — it’s just food.

✔ Stop body talk. Don’t comment on your own weight, your kids’, or anyone else’s.

Eat with your kids. Enjoy the food. Model a healthy, balanced approach, eating a variety of foods — including the “fun” ones — without shame.

Focus on how food makes you feel — not just how it looks on a label.

Let them listen to their bodies. Kids are naturally good at knowing when they’re hungry or full — trust them.

✔ Reframe movement. Exercise should feel good, not be a punishment for eating.

And if you do catch yourself saying something almond-mom-y?

Give yourself grace.

Unlearning decades of diet culture isn’t easy — but your kids will remember the way you made them feel about food, not what you actually ate. ❤️

References

Facebook logo
Threads logo
x logo
Copy link icon

Trending in the community

Nursery funding

My child turned 9 months last week. I applied for government funded hours nearly 2 months ago and so well within the required timeframe for the April term, however upon receiving my first invoice without the funding applied and having questioned this, I have now been informed that the stretched funding doesn’t start until 4th May.

Has anyone else been told it won’t start until May?

The government site states it should start from April 1st, and so I intentionally set my nursery start and return to work as the start of April for that reason, knowing that I wouldn’t be able to afford the nursery on my sole income without the funding

Avatar

6

Jealous of my husband

I’m so jealous of him and it’s making me resentful. We have a ten week old and I’m jealous that he is at work all day. I’m jealous he can leave for lunch and actually eat an uninterrupted lunch. Take a phone call uninterrupted. Chat with a friend he runs in to uninterrupted. Even go to the bathroom when he wants uninterrupted. He comes home from work when he wants. He’s not on a set schedule. Some days are late some are early. It depends on when he’s done. I’m jealous he can come home at 10pm and shower, eat and go right to bed uninterrupted because I already have the baby asleep. He doesn’t have to worry about anything house wise or baby wise because I’ve done it all. Meanwhile I’m covered in puke and crap and smell like rotten milk. When he is home he is VERY active and helpful. So it’s not that. I’m just jealous his world hasn’t changed and mine has I guess. This isn’t something he’s doing wrong so I’m not sure how to get past this. I wish I could keep him home all day because that’s how helpful he is, but I understand he obv needs to work.

Avatar

4

8

NHS job

Anyone work for the NHS and does 12 hour shifts? How do you work around childcare and your partners job?

Avatar

6

He has no respect for anything to do with me.

Husband and I decided to separate 3 days ago. I've been sleeping on the floor in the kids room, and we both have to stay in the same apartment for a while. He wont stop pushing little things and I am reaching my limit. Photos in comments

Avatar

8

Toddlers

How often are your toddlers asking for food? My oldest who is 3 just finished a whole plate of food and not even 10 minutes later he’s requesting more food. I know he’s going through a growth spurt, but how do you respond to this.

Avatar

18

Just need a vent

My MIL currently lives with us; as well as my SIL, her husband, and her 2 severely autistic children. My boyfriend has been redoing a house for their family to move into while he has been on paternity leave. All that is left is the electric and plumbing brought up to code. Which he doesn’t know how to do but my MIL family does for a living. He goes back to work starting Monday. My MIL decided that instead of helping with the electric and calling her family to come out and start on it, that she was going to go visit her oldest son and family that live 2 hours away. Which would have been fine if they hadn’t just gotten over the flu. Literally the day she goes to visit, she messaged my SIL and says that 2 of the kids are sick again. So she ends up staying up there for a week until the kids “get over it”. She’s been back since Tuesday and started saying yesterday that she doesn’t feel good. After trying multiple times to hold my 2 month old daughter, standing over me while I’m trying to take care of my daughter when crying, and coughing near my daughter. At 4am this morning when I woke up for a night feed, I felt like crap. My stomach has been hurting so bad that it made me feel nauseous. And I’ve (tmi) diarrhea all day so far. If she did bring something in, I now have to try and not give it to my newborn and take care of her sick at the same time. I’m just beyond pissed that she didn’t think of the baby before going there and coming back after being around sick kids. She also didn’t even try to quarantine herself from us and the baby.

Avatar

3

4

Read more on Peanut

Want to find your village?

qr code

Scan to Join

Rated 4.4

star
star
star
star
star half

Trusted by 5M+ women

join peanut