Not entirely clear that you have one. Good to know. |
Oh man this is very delusional. First of all, the teens are in the same grade so they’re all the same age and similar development. The other girls are used to a culture of fitness and have incorporated it into their lives. Plus, sports like tennis are things that are easy to continue recreationally and socially as they get older—that’s a big part of why wealthy families encourage them. Long after these girls have aged out of tournaments, they will get together for friendly games. It’s very silly to pretend that it’s more likely the sedentary girl who hates to work out is going to end up being fit while the girls working hard to win tournaments are going to end up fat. |
| She will not get cut from the track team. Cross country in the fall, winter track, and then spring track and field. She will make friends and get in great physical shape. |
That’s all well and good, but your previous response (“I’m not sure [protein] is the answer [for losing weight]”) must have been deliberately disingenuous. Your boys aren’t eating *protein* to gain weight. They are eating “a ton” to gain weight. |
You're being disingenious. Bc when people say that their teen boys are trying to put on weight, they don't just mean a higher number on the scale; those boys are trying to put on muscle mass. So yes, those boys are eating a ton of protein. My 14yo hits the weights hard. He's 5'9 and about 160-165 lbs (still very lean) and he consumes over 200 grams of protein a day. As he gets up to 185-200 lbs, we'll increase his protein to closer to 225 grams. But nobody just wants to put on "weight" They want a clean bulk. and the teenagers that are smart about it are consuming a TON of protein |
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As someone LMC who went and graduated from private school OP, you may want to reconsider that private school.
She already stands out by being less well to do (like I did) and it's going to be a lot harder to look the same as all the other girls without a lot of $$$ for clothing and for exercise activities etc ... There is a lot more to private school than tuition, and it's going to incredibly hard for her to fit in with out the money. And I am afraid she will develop an eating disorder trying to keep up. |
And this is the thing: it takes money to pursue tennis and golf and horse riding, etc... Yes, you can practice on public courts and so on, but that's not usually where private school students are getting together for games. (I'm the former private lifer from the above post.) I wanted so much to fit in, and took those rec lessons, and went with a public school friend to the public tennis courts to practice, and I never could catch up to all the rich girls even during gym class tennis. There was a special "B" group in our private school gym class so all us poors with suboptimal skills could play each other. |
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And, I know I'm on a soap box here, but going to a private where I could never keep up or compete in most anything (although smart and actually slim and in good shape) didn't help me.
I just learned I didn't have a chance, which is what your dad seems to be learning, and to just stay in my lane. Problem is I didn't get to have fun trying a whole bunch of different things while in high school because those doors were already closed to me in my private school by that point. On the plus side, I learned early on how much difference money makes, downside was it just demoralized me at that age. |
| Dad should be "dd" |
| Butt mr why is this |
Growing up in the 70s and 80s and 90s teens didn’t have to run cross country to be thin. They also didn’t have to go to a gym 4x a week. That was adults trying to stay thin. Most girls were naturally thin because portion sizes were appropriate. Some families had the lousy genetics and/or food choices but most teens lived their lives without worry about gaining weight, they just didn’t. It must be the food that changed. |
I don’t know why people keep saying this. I was a rail-thin private school teen for whom the aggressively unathletic Daria was my alter-ego. I came home from school and ate a massive bowl of ice cream every day. A lot of it is just youth. Not everyone is out running around with a hockey stick for hours every day. |
You think about your sons’ bodies too much. |
JFC no sh!t Sherlock. That’s the point. Teen boys eating a sh!t ton of protein to put on muscle has absolutely NOTHING to do with a teen girl eating more protein to curb her appetite and lose weight. The boys are consuming protein PLUS an absolute sh!t ton of CALORIES to put on weight. If they stick to JUST eating more protein more likely than not they will be under eating and won’t see the results they want at the gym. Because protein is incredibly SATIATING. |
We are a thin family who eats the same desserts daily too. It’s portion control. Does she eat a normal size bowl of ice cream everyday, so what? Two pints a day is the problem. A few cookies a day is no big deal. Two sleeves of Oreos are a big deal. Common sense. |