Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day.
Make sure that there is an unlimited amount of carbs (pasta, rice, bread) available at every meal and encourage him to eat as much as he wants.
Not this. ^ Don't fatten him up and create bad eating habits.
Fats stimulate growth and hormones.
Cheap garbage carbs like pasta and bread stimulate cortisol and estrogen and weight gain of fat.
Wives tail
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is like this (and was actually the exact same height/weight at 13). In my experience- nothing truly works to gain weight for- some- skinny teen boys, and we have tried pretty much everything!
It is mostly down to genetics/puberty. Mine had a somewhat delayed puberty and is currently 16 and 6’1” 135. Our pediatrician is not concerned and is confident he will fill out a bit more in time. He is healthy, plays a sport, and eats plenty.
Don’t get me wrong- trying to add more healthy calories etc is great. You will get a lot of great suggestions. But just don’t push too hard…some boys are just like this. Most fill out eventually.
6 foot 1 135 wut?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day.
Make sure that there is an unlimited amount of carbs (pasta, rice, bread) available at every meal and encourage him to eat as much as he wants.
Not this. ^ Don't fatten him up and create bad eating habits.
Fats stimulate growth and hormones.
Cheap garbage carbs like pasta and bread stimulate cortisol and estrogen and weight gain of fat.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is like this (and was actually the exact same height/weight at 13). In my experience- nothing truly works to gain weight for- some- skinny teen boys, and we have tried pretty much everything!
It is mostly down to genetics/puberty. Mine had a somewhat delayed puberty and is currently 16 and 6’1” 135. Our pediatrician is not concerned and is confident he will fill out a bit more in time. He is healthy, plays a sport, and eats plenty.
Don’t get me wrong- trying to add more healthy calories etc is great. You will get a lot of great suggestions. But just don’t push too hard…some boys are just like this. Most fill out eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day.
Make sure that there is an unlimited amount of carbs (pasta, rice, bread) available at every meal and encourage him to eat as much as he wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day.
Make sure that there is an unlimited amount of carbs (pasta, rice, bread) available at every meal and encourage him to eat as much as he wants.
Anonymous wrote:He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day.
Anonymous wrote:My 13 year old son seems to eat all the time but cannot gain any weight and has not yet had a growth spurt. He is a high level swimmer and swims at least 10 hours/week plus maybe 2-3 hours of dryland. He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day. Yet, he has stayed at the same weight (90-95 pounds) for the past 9 months or so, and has not yet had a height spurt either (about 5’3). He is a young 13 and doesn’t have any outward signs of puberty yet.
I am a little worried about the seeming inability to gain any weight and whether this might delay his growth. At his checkup, the pediatrician said he has a lot of growing to do/hasn’t really started, and to make sure he is getting plenty of calories since his activity level is so high.
I have a very naturally thin body type as does most of my family, while DH is more muscular. Based on genetics, DS should be above average to somewhat tall in height. I do think he tends more toward my family’s body type which is long-limbed/tall and thin. I was late to puberty and very skinny as a middle schooler.
Is there anything more we can do to make sure he is getting adequate calories and nutrition for growth?
Anonymous wrote:My 13 year old son seems to eat all the time but cannot gain any weight and has not yet had a growth spurt. He is a high level swimmer and swims at least 10 hours/week plus maybe 2-3 hours of dryland. He has a good and varied diet, plenty of meat, protein, fat, fruits and veggies, drinks several glasses of whole milk every day. Yet, he has stayed at the same weight (90-95 pounds) for the past 9 months or so, and has not yet had a height spurt either (about 5’3). He is a young 13 and doesn’t have any outward signs of puberty yet.
I am a little worried about the seeming inability to gain any weight and whether this might delay his growth. At his checkup, the pediatrician said he has a lot of growing to do/hasn’t really started, and to make sure he is getting plenty of calories since his activity level is so high.
I have a very naturally thin body type as does most of my family, while DH is more muscular. Based on genetics, DS should be above average to somewhat tall in height. I do think he tends more toward my family’s body type which is long-limbed/tall and thin. I was late to puberty and very skinny as a middle schooler.
Is there anything more we can do to make sure he is getting adequate calories and nutrition for growth?