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Reply to "Sister is pregnant and says we need to stop being toxic around her baby"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Wow I’m surprised everyone is so anti-OP. I actually find food and fitness to come up a lot with friends - it’s a big part of daily life. And it becomes a slippery slope of what is ok to talk about and what is vanity. So I think making weight a completely taboo topic isn’t the answer. The answer is balance like most things. I have seen how body positive all my 19 year old friends are and most of them [b]came back from their freshman year of college having gained weight as you absolutely can’t say anything. [/b] This just isn’t healthy either! Regardless your sister is telling you she’s not comfortable either because you all talk about it too much or her own personal insecurities or whatever. You have to respect that. To lay down this boundary when she’s pregnant before the child is born or can talk…yep, I agree it’s over the top. [/quote] Why do you *need* to say something to a 19 year old who gained weight? And why do you think that pointing it out would help? Lady, you are the problem. [/quote] Family history of diabetes here. It’s certainly worth educating my children about. I just spent time with my father who is unable to walk because he didn’t take care of his diabetes. It’s much easier to change eating habits when you’re younger. I want better for my kids. In my house with my teenage girls we don’t avoid talking about food and weight. We talk about it in a very clinical manner and try to keep emotion/judgment out of it. We talk about macros and food as fuel for your body. To me, that is the correct way to approach it, not ignore it. None of us know the conversations OP has with her sister. I don’t think all talk of weight is bad though. The talk some people (mostly mothers) are using as an example? Yep, that’s toxic. [/quote]
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