Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has she gone through puberty? Have you taken her for a checkup to make sure blood work is ok (no anemia, not serious Vitamin D deficiency)? Is there another activity she’d like to do? Is she depressed because her dad is checked out? Are you serving food at home that’s conducive to energy and not just easy simple carbs? Have you looked into a therapy consult for her? If not, why not?
OP here.
Yes she’s gone through most of puberty, 5’6”, 150# today. She wasn’t happy to hear that at annual appt last month.
She has not has bloodwork done. She looks tall and strong, but gets winded quickly.
She eats meats/fish and rice/bread, potatoes, but limited palate of fruits or veg. She will sneak candy, granola bars (if we have them), bagels and croissants immediately upon return from school. She likes to bake but will eat all the muffins herself in 2 days. So now we don’t bake nor have most breads in the house.
Surfing the web is no good for anyone. So now that’s limited.
She’d like to do more art.
She doesn’t have close friends to do things with outside of school. We moved 3 years ago but she was having various refusal issues since grade 2 (refuse to do math or homework, refuse to eat fruit, refuse to go to practice).
Yes father figure or role model and marriage model is lacking. He also stonewalls, avoids and temper tantrums if there’s a concern to address.
I work full time. Other kid is fine, no such issues—- which becomes an issue with the older one, who bullies the 10 yo.
Anonymous wrote:There are so many issues here. You need a full neuropsych and then medication for what is diagnosed. You need parent coaching because your approach sounds terrible. Focus on her mental health, not her weight.
That said, binge eating is totally normal for ADHD. Once you get a full evaluation, see how meds may help this as well.
Anonymous wrote:Has she gone through puberty? Have you taken her for a checkup to make sure blood work is ok (no anemia, not serious Vitamin D deficiency)? Is there another activity she’d like to do? Is she depressed because her dad is checked out? Are you serving food at home that’s conducive to energy and not just easy simple carbs? Have you looked into a therapy consult for her? If not, why not?
Anonymous wrote:I would take it seriously, but I don't think that means mental health treatment at this time.
What it means is - fun family activities - what does she like that you'd do with her on the weekends? Board games, hikes, going to events (professional basketball? Go see high school games?), going out to eat at a restaurant (turn food into a fun special thing rather than a source of stress). Cooking, gardening, building something, fun hairstyling?
Major screen time limits. Let her be bored without the laptop or watch. See what happens.
Are there other hobbies you can help her deepen? Art, music, other sports, whatever. Be creative.
Encouraging socializing? Would she like to have friends over more often? Volunteer to go pick them up. Is there something they're doing that she would want to join? Opportunities to expand her social circle?
Overfocusing on her eating and lectures are NOT the answer her. Helping her find real joy in life is. The eating is a symptom of her unhappiness. Focus on helping her find joy and happiness, not the food or weight.
And take a look, critically, at yourself. Do you have and nurture hobbies? Do you socialize and have friends? Are you active, not in the form of exercise designed to keep your weight/tone, but fun, active hobbies that move and use your body? Do you spend too much time on a screen? Be the change. Lead by example.