Anonymous wrote:Why aren’t you directly asking your daughter? That is what I would do. “Hey, I’m worried about Larla. Have you noticed X? Do you think she might be Y?” And then I would listen. I’m pretty sure my 14 year old would be honest with me. And then I would weigh in with my concerns about my daughter and also ask her what she thought about telling someone else (like a parent or counselor). My kid would likely be a fairly reasonable judge of whether the parents would be helpful or even more destructive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually think you're being kind of selfish for worrying only about the impact on your own kid and not the friend, and I also wonder if your own history and baggage is clouding your judgment and perception of what's really going on.
Bottom line: you need to talk to an actual professional and not crowd source such a serious issue. You're not properly equipped.
WTF. I never said I was only worried about my kid. I’m worried about kid’s friend too, but parents get real angry if you dare suggest their kid has a problem. I don’t know the parents well, having only met them a couple of times. Like I said previously, I will talk to my dd, and then go to the school counselor. Why are you such an ass?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see what the counselor would do. You may find her behavior concerning, but there is no objective way to know if her health is actually compromised. What do you tell the counselor, she doesn’t eat at your house? She pretends to eat and doesn’t? It’s not like the counselor is going to do anything with this info besides maybe email the parent- but I don’t even know if they would do that. What would they say? Another parent reached out concerning your diets eating habits? How often is this kid over your house for you to feel you somehow have knowledge her parents don’t have?
I think the most you can do if state facts about what she is doing in your company to her parents: She refuses food we offer, she will only eat raw vegetables at our house, she pushes food around plate, she talks about losing weight…or whatever it is you have directly observed. I think it’s fine to say you find this concerning/unusual. The parents will likely say that they have noticed this too and are working on a plan or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:I actually think you're being kind of selfish for worrying only about the impact on your own kid and not the friend, and I also wonder if your own history and baggage is clouding your judgment and perception of what's really going on.
Bottom line: you need to talk to an actual professional and not crowd source such a serious issue. You're not properly equipped.
Anonymous wrote:Are you close with the parents? She lives with them, so presumably they see what you see. I would probably just raise it with the school counselor, who should have experience dealing with this kind of stuff with kids/their families. I would then ask the counselor the same question you have asked here: what if anything should you do with regard to your daughter? See what the counselor recommends for next steps. You can also reach out to your kids Pediatrician for ideas/resources.
I would start there.
Anonymous wrote:For you daughters friend - please escalate to someone. It can go very quickly from eating disorder to hospital.
For your daughter - you can start with making sure you are modeling good behavior. Do you talk about dieting, purchase diet beverages, make comments about weight.
Consciously make the conversation about being healthy and strong. Meal plan and cook meals together.