Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, turn it into some fun, just go out there, buy a three sizes smaller dress for you mom and say,
okay, how bout we do this your way but you have to do it my way.
No, no, no. Buy her a XXL. Make a big show of saying “sooo sorry! I was sure that was your size! Are you sure?...? That looked like was just your size.”
Anonymous wrote:Stay home. Seriously. I would never put my kid in this situation, or risk putting my kid in this situation (since I’m not sure I’d trust that she backed off).
Anonymous wrote:Oh, turn it into some fun, just go out there, buy a three sizes smaller dress for you mom and say,
okay, how bout we do this your way but you have to do it my way.
Anonymous wrote:I would discuss with your son and let him prioritize:
Grandma has decided to buy you clothes a size too small because she apparently has decided that you should be a different size and thinks that a good way to “fix” your perfectly normal, healthy body is to try to embarass you in front of our entire family. I have told her that I am absolutely livid and that I will never forgive her if she follows through with this plan, but I can’t guarantee that that threat will stop her from doing it.
So now we have a choice and I want your opinion:
1) We go to family Christmas, if Grandma is awful to you, we tell her it’s unacceptable and we leave
2) We go to family Christmas and if Grandma is awful we just ignore her and change the subject.
3) We skip family Christmas and just do our own thing with you, me and dad.
It depends on how much this bothers you and on whether you actually will miss seeing your cousins for the holiday. If you think it will be really upsetting and you don’t care much about seeing cousins we can just skip it, but I don’t want to just make that choice for you. You are a young man now, not a child and there are lots of way to deal with a bully.
Anonymous wrote:Will your son necessarily know it’s due to weight? I feel like grandparents are often way off in their sizing. I remember my MIL gave my 3 year old daughter a 24 month dress. Later, she gave her 2 year old brother a size 4 sweater. We’re always getting stuff that’s way too big or way too small from relatives. The kids know to say “thanks! That’s my favorite color!” Or “I love polka dots!” Even if it’s totally the wrong size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would discuss with your son and let him prioritize:
Grandma has decided to buy you clothes a size too small because she apparently has decided that you should be a different size and thinks that a good way to “fix” your perfectly normal, healthy body is to try to embarass you in front of our entire family. I have told her that I am absolutely livid and that I will never forgive her if she follows through with this plan, but I can’t guarantee that that threat will stop her from doing it.
So now we have a choice and I want your opinion:
1) We go to family Christmas, if Grandma is awful to you, we tell her it’s unacceptable and we leave
2) We go to family Christmas and if Grandma is awful we just ignore her and change the subject.
3) We skip family Christmas and just do our own thing with you, me and dad.
It depends on how much this bothers you and on whether you actually will miss seeing your cousins for the holiday. If you think it will be really upsetting and you don’t care much about seeing cousins we can just skip it, but I don’t want to just make that choice for you. You are a young man now, not a child and there are lots of way to deal with a bully.
This is the best answer here, OP. I love it.
It really isn’t. It’s abdicating responsibility and putting the whole family’s holiday happiness on your 16yo’s shoulders. The reason OP doesn’t want to cancel is because it’ll disappoint the entire extended family. How unfair to push that decision off on a kid. How exactly does that conversation go? “Hi son, how was school? Oh by the way, grandma thinks you’re so fat that normal tactics to get you to be healthy won’t work. She’s decided to give you an embarrassing gift in front of the whole family. What? No, your dad and I don’t think you’re that fat. In fact, when we ask the dr if you’re too fat, the dr said not to worry, so don’t feel self conscious about your weight. About Christmas though, you know everyone is expecting to see us there, and you know how I love seeing my whole family. Everyone will be disappointed if we cancel, but if you think it would be too embarrassing to open up clothes too small and listen to a couple of remarks about your weight from grandma, we can skip it. We’ll stay home and bake cookies, because I know how much you love cookies!”
Either you’re ok with throwing your kid to your wolf of a mother, or you’re strong enough to stand up to her and protect your child. Even telling the kid grandma’s cruel plan is mean. It’s like telling someone a third person was talking trash about them behind their back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would discuss with your son and let him prioritize:
Grandma has decided to buy you clothes a size too small because she apparently has decided that you should be a different size and thinks that a good way to “fix” your perfectly normal, healthy body is to try to embarass you in front of our entire family. I have told her that I am absolutely livid and that I will never forgive her if she follows through with this plan, but I can’t guarantee that that threat will stop her from doing it.
So now we have a choice and I want your opinion:
1) We go to family Christmas, if Grandma is awful to you, we tell her it’s unacceptable and we leave
2) We go to family Christmas and if Grandma is awful we just ignore her and change the subject.
3) We skip family Christmas and just do our own thing with you, me and dad.
It depends on how much this bothers you and on whether you actually will miss seeing your cousins for the holiday. If you think it will be really upsetting and you don’t care much about seeing cousins we can just skip it, but I don’t want to just make that choice for you. You are a young man now, not a child and there are lots of way to deal with a bully.
This is the best answer here, OP. I love it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 16 YO DS has a bit of a pot belly. Weight/height wise he is within normal ranges, he just carries a bit extra around his waist rather then elsewhere. We have talked to our doctor about this sevoral times and his advice is basically to keep him active (which he is voluntarily) and dont make a big deal about it - either he may grow into it during late puberty or can work it off later but she doesnt think it is a medical issue.
Now my mom, lovely woman that she is (or rather isnt) disagrees and feels that he is, 'chubby' and we should be doing more. And so recently she has told me and dh that her christmas gift for him this year will be a couple items of clothing he has on his list, but 1-2 sizes smaller then his size (which we have given her. I.e an adult medium shirt vs a large, or 32inch waist pants vs 34 inch. Her reasoning is that it would, "Give him a reason to lose his baby fat."
We have told her we disagree, and asked her kindly to reconsider as we feel this is embarrassing to him, especially since he will be opening these gifts in front of his whole family including cousins so they will watch as he opens these clothes he does want only to realize he wont be able to wear them. But she is stead fast, and these arguements only seem to make her more determined that this is, according to her, the best gift she could give him.
I need advice. Love my mom to bits, but I really dont think this is a good idea and need her to see that.
Arrive after gift-opening. Get a "flat tire," "dead battery," "Larla not feeling well and needed extra time to rest." Insist they don't wait and refuse to open gifts in front of everyone else when you arrive.