You don't go east of 16th Street much, do you? |
| junk food, processed food, screens and the internet and they no longer move or play sports anymore. |
|
Data posted by OP is only through 2018.
|
You are right but let me rephrase what I mean a little. The problem is exasperated in rural areas. I mean I see people with canes and using the motor wheelchairs in Walmart because of their size and children waddling around. Obesity to the point of a negative effect on mobility is what is rare for me to see here. https://www.cdc.gov/obesity/data-and-statistics/adult-obesity-prevalence-maps.html DC and Colorado have the lowest obesity rates in the country. |
Yeah, there’s no cutoff. Alpha might be worse. It is obviously food, and more specifically sugar. It is straight up addictive and food conglomerates know this and put it in everything in high quantities. But there are other factors. A bunch of kids are on antidepressants/anti-anxiety meds which have weight gain as a side effect. I have an Alpha who is overweight. My wife nixes attempts to restrict food because she doesn’t want our daughter to get a complex about food like she did. I still try to be smart about it, but it is unreal how so much of American society is built around eating as a reward/celebration. |
|
I think obese parents are the problem.
It is rare to see families with overweight kids but two thin/athletic parents. Often kids with obese parents are thin up until a certain age then they start putting on weight. I have seen families where the kids were totally normal weight as children, but then something happens and the kids gradually start putting on weight. It's like biologically the kids bodies were thin and they were healthy, but the parents' chronic overfeeding makes them obese? IDK. I have seen obese parents constantly push food on their kids even when the kids aren't hungry. I've seen parents offer a snack even though they could hold off and just wait for the next meal. I have also seen parents pile huge portions on their kids plates. I feel like parents are the problem. |
Lots of sports have obese extremely out of shape parents pushing their kids the hardest, riding them the most. It's so hypocritical because if genetics are the issue then those kids are doomed. |
| Sedentary |
|
MAGA
MAGA MAGA Easy |
| Stop body shaming. It’s getting old. |
| Starbucks |
If you try to limit food at a party look how the people here get attacked and vilified, especially by other ethnicities who want to deride Americans for being stingy and cheap. Gluttony all the way, every time. |
Or someone will call the police on you for allowing your child to have some independence. |
|
Too much food, snacking, sugar. Food as reward. Birthday parties at 2:30 that serve pizza. All the juice.
Food has been cheap and used as entertainment. No one needs a 16 oz milkshake. Serving sizes are way too large. With all the asking, kids and people have no idea if they are actually hungry or not. |
|
Well, I have a gen Alpha who is overweight, close to obese. We are super fit parents (both active duty Marines) and have two sons - one of whom is lean and muscular and one of whom is very overweight. What is the difference? I really don't know. Both kids have done sports from an early age. We are a very active family. Screens are used but not to excess. We eat very healthy and cook almost everything at home. We maybe eat out once a month and don't keep junk food or convenience food in the house.
Certainly our overweight kid has an innately different relationship with food than the rest of us. He doesn't seem to know when to stop or what portions are reasonable. We've tried to teach that, but it's always working against his natural instincts. He also tends to be a couch potato unless we actively make him move with us (which we do often and regularly). I'm not sure if this is the norm for kids who are overweight or if our family situation makes him an outlier, but I wanted to make it clear that you can be very fit and a healthy eating family and still have an overweight kid. We have definitely struggled with the balance between insisting on a healthy weight and creating self-image issues and possible eating disorders. I've seen enough of that at work with colleagues dealing with the Marine Corps's very strict weight standards and I don't want to create long-term mental issues surrounding food. We try to highlight keeping active and have him cook a lot of his own healthy food, but I think it will be a life long struggle for him. It is on our mind a lot as parents. |