Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume she's also eating a lot of junk if she's gained that much weight so exercise alone isn't going to provide "results". She can't outexercise a bad diet. I recommend that she also work with a nutritionist, and not just someone who will tell her once what she should eat or not eat. Someone who will actively coach her - ask her to keep food logs, help her figure out how to make healthier substitutions for things she likes, help her to troubleshoot the scenarios where she's making less healthy food choices etc. Someone who will provide both accountability and support and keep her from picking up disordered eating tips from the internet.
Op here and this almost made me laugh. The kid eats four food, there’s no “healthy choices” or troubleshooting going on here. We have tried literally everything since she was 3 year old. Dietitians, feeding therapy, OT, talk therapy, you name it. She gained weight from eating too much pasta (one of the four foods and literally the ONLY startch she will eat), lying around all day, being allowed unlimited snacks at any of rhe activities she’ll do, and being on medication that causes weight gain.
You’re right though, she’s not going to get “ripped” by exercise alone, but we figure it’s a really really good start. She’s not going to be able to change her eating unless she’s very interested in doing so.
Got to love it when people tell you what you're doing wrong with your asd teen they know nothing about.
My asd teen is similar.. I can't vouch for this yet but there's some talk now about food texture avoidance being connected to a "posterior tongue tie" I'm having dc evaluated for this soon. If he has it, it's a quick co2 laser that's painless. And some tongue exercises to make sure the tissue doesn't reattach etc. Despite having a high narrow pallete and snoring and avoiding food textures etc. No one had ever mentioned this to me so I thought I'd pass it along
Thanks, that is so interesting!! WHO evaluates for this, a dentist/oral surgeon or pediatrician? Mine also has something going on with gag reflex where she throws up when she takes her pills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume she's also eating a lot of junk if she's gained that much weight so exercise alone isn't going to provide "results". She can't outexercise a bad diet. I recommend that she also work with a nutritionist, and not just someone who will tell her once what she should eat or not eat. Someone who will actively coach her - ask her to keep food logs, help her figure out how to make healthier substitutions for things she likes, help her to troubleshoot the scenarios where she's making less healthy food choices etc. Someone who will provide both accountability and support and keep her from picking up disordered eating tips from the internet.
Op here and this almost made me laugh. The kid eats four food, there’s no “healthy choices” or troubleshooting going on here. We have tried literally everything since she was 3 year old. Dietitians, feeding therapy, OT, talk therapy, you name it. She gained weight from eating too much pasta (one of the four foods and literally the ONLY startch she will eat), lying around all day, being allowed unlimited snacks at any of rhe activities she’ll do, and being on medication that causes weight gain.
You’re right though, she’s not going to get “ripped” by exercise alone, but we figure it’s a really really good start. She’s not going to be able to change her eating unless she’s very interested in doing so.
Got to love it when people tell you what you're doing wrong with your asd teen they know nothing about.
My asd teen is similar.. I can't vouch for this yet but there's some talk now about food texture avoidance being connected to a "posterior tongue tie" I'm having dc evaluated for this soon. If he has it, it's a quick co2 laser that's painless. And some tongue exercises to make sure the tissue doesn't reattach etc. Despite having a high narrow pallete and snoring and avoiding food textures etc. No one had ever mentioned this to me so I thought I'd pass it along
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume she's also eating a lot of junk if she's gained that much weight so exercise alone isn't going to provide "results". She can't outexercise a bad diet. I recommend that she also work with a nutritionist, and not just someone who will tell her once what she should eat or not eat. Someone who will actively coach her - ask her to keep food logs, help her figure out how to make healthier substitutions for things she likes, help her to troubleshoot the scenarios where she's making less healthy food choices etc. Someone who will provide both accountability and support and keep her from picking up disordered eating tips from the internet.
Op here and this almost made me laugh. The kid eats four food, there’s no “healthy choices” or troubleshooting going on here. We have tried literally everything since she was 3 year old. Dietitians, feeding therapy, OT, talk therapy, you name it. She gained weight from eating too much pasta (one of the four foods and literally the ONLY startch she will eat), lying around all day, being allowed unlimited snacks at any of rhe activities she’ll do, and being on medication that causes weight gain.
You’re right though, she’s not going to get “ripped” by exercise alone, but we figure it’s a really really good start. She’s not going to be able to change her eating unless she’s very interested in doing so.
Anonymous wrote:I assume she's also eating a lot of junk if she's gained that much weight so exercise alone isn't going to provide "results". She can't outexercise a bad diet. I recommend that she also work with a nutritionist, and not just someone who will tell her once what she should eat or not eat. Someone who will actively coach her - ask her to keep food logs, help her figure out how to make healthier substitutions for things she likes, help her to troubleshoot the scenarios where she's making less healthy food choices etc. Someone who will provide both accountability and support and keep her from picking up disordered eating tips from the internet.