5 foot 85 pounds? That’s definitely not stocky! That is <50% BMI. Did you mean 100 pound like OP said? |
According to the CDC, that is around 18th percentile BMI for that age, height, and weight. You have some very distorted views on what weight is "stocky." |
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5 feet and 100 pounds is not chubby for an 11 yo boy.
Solidly normal. |
| If it was his girlfriend saying that, it's not a compliment. Other than that, let it go. |
+1 DC's good friend is this size and weight, and you could literally see his ribs when they were at the pool. He is very skinny. What are you even talking about? |
DS was about 5 feet tall and slightly less than 100 at 11. Not stocky at all and people actually thought he was a runner because he looked strong although he's actually not very athletic and hates running. As a person of color we hear these kinds of comments often and it's really hard to figure out how to deal with these things. I'm sorry this happened OP. |
Same. Mine is 5 foot and 87 pounds and athletic but so thin we already worry about him. Any less and I'd be worried about a medical issue. |
You have no idea what 5 ft 85lbs even looks like. Just pipe down. |
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When my kid was 18, he was at an ice hockey showcase event in NJ which had a program of participants listing their heights and weights. My son is 5'9 and 190 lbs, but he is all muscle and is actually pretty fast and agile on the ice. After the game, a coach from a team down in Texas was speaking with my son (and with me), and said "I have to admit, when I saw you on roster, I really thought you would be kind of fat and out of shape, but that obviously was wrong."
So OP, I'd take the original comment as a compliment. |
| I have the opposite problem- my kid *is* slow and everyone comments on how slow he is. I guess the “stocky” PP would think he was downright obese at 5’4” and 115lbs. |
The fact that you're Central American makes this feel slightly racist. There are GREAT Central American runners who do tend to be a bit sturdier. Fast is fast. |
| My kid is 5'4 and 120 pounds and is a fast, strong, basketball player--and you can see his ribs-i.e., not fat. Some of you have some very, very strange ideas about kids and weight. |
| Hmm, I'm a mom and I would say that to another mom about their kid (although never in front of other kids). I wouldn't assume that it implied that the kid was chubby/obese or otherwise an insult... simply that some kids don't strike you as looking fast. I guess if it offends, one could ask, "what makes you say that?" but some kids just look athletic and some kids don't. And when the ones that don't are super athletic, most people are typically surprised. That's it. |
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I mean…it’s sports. It’s a coach. They are evaluating your child’s ability. They size kids up based on build and how they move. His initial assessment was wrong. That’s it.
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It's not that simple. Many people have stereotypes of what "fast" and "athletic" looks like and they are sometimes based on impressions that are race-based and discriminatory. Over many years of kid sports, I've heard parents make comments about tall kids who happen to be Black that they look like they would be great at basketball and how surprised they were that they were not (because they actually play another sport or don't play sports) or about small Asian kids that they said they thought looked "weak" (even though if you actually looked closely those small kids were actually all muscle). I have a child who is tall and has broad shoulders. He looks strong and fast. But he's just... not strong... not fast. |