Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she really wants a workout program check out Get Mom Strong. It’s great for women (especially post-babies, but all women are welcome) and it doesn’t encourage getting smaller. It encourages strength, loving your body, and taking up space.
No! A tween does not need a workout program of any kind. Good grief.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't take her to work out classes for the LOVE OF GOD. You reinforce (all the time) that all bodies are good bodies. Soft bellies are more prevalent than not and make sure she's not only following skinny white stick girls on social media.
I repeat: all bodies are good bodies.
Lol at all bodies are good bodies. You are delusional.
You're a psychotic piece of shit. Read the posts above your and then shut the f up.
Anonymous wrote:If she really wants a workout program check out Get Mom Strong. It’s great for women (especially post-babies, but all women are welcome) and it doesn’t encourage getting smaller. It encourages strength, loving your body, and taking up space.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't take her to work out classes for the LOVE OF GOD. You reinforce (all the time) that all bodies are good bodies. Soft bellies are more prevalent than not and make sure she's not only following skinny white stick girls on social media.
I repeat: all bodies are good bodies.
Lol at all bodies are good bodies. You are delusional.
Anonymous wrote:You don't take her to work out classes for the LOVE OF GOD. You reinforce (all the time) that all bodies are good bodies. Soft bellies are more prevalent than not and make sure she's not only following skinny white stick girls on social media.
I repeat: all bodies are good bodies.
Anonymous wrote:As the mom of a kid who nearly died from an ED, this gives me chills. Do not ever use the term “soft belly”. Do not talk about weight at all. Do not comment on her body, negativity or positivity. Having a flat belly shouldn’t even be in a tweens vocabulary.