Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you had her evaluated? This sounds like juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in addition to many other things. I would not be pushing her to do anything until she’s evaluated.
You scared me now. I am reading through the symptoms, I don't see anything that applies.
Her joints are not swollen and she is not feeling pain. She is not aware of her posture or her stiffness, or complaining about it. It's just something that you can see - when she was playing tennis she wasn't bending the knees (as she should have), and now, as she is walking, she is not bending them as much as she should, either.
This is odd enough that it is worth talking to her pediatrician about it.
We just had yearly exam. Nobody noticed anything.
Did you mention this to her doctor? They don’t go and look for zebras at the annual exam.
Did I mention what - that my DD's walk is not sufficiently soft and feminine? That would upset my DD and almost certainly raise a red flag with the doctor (about me, not DD).
Maybe I used a wrong a word (stiff) - DD has no problem bending knees to sit, walk stairs, run etc. If she needs to or is told to do it, it's a non issue. It's just that she doesn't have that natural softness of movement and needs reminders to bend knees when skiing, playing tennis etc - whereas someone (e.g. one of my other kids) else will just assume those positions naturally and won't need any reminders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given the age is it perhaps more that she's growing into her suddenly longer limbs after a growth spurt? You know, looks a little like Bambi the Disney movie deer? And that awkward movement translates into looking like she's stiff?
My 12 year old looks kind of ridiculous while playing her sport right now because she clearly just doesn't know how to move her growing-an-inch-a-month body.
What is her sport?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you had her evaluated? This sounds like juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in addition to many other things. I would not be pushing her to do anything until she’s evaluated.
You scared me now. I am reading through the symptoms, I don't see anything that applies.
Her joints are not swollen and she is not feeling pain. She is not aware of her posture or her stiffness, or complaining about it. It's just something that you can see - when she was playing tennis she wasn't bending the knees (as she should have), and now, as she is walking, she is not bending them as much as she should, either.
This is odd enough that it is worth talking to her pediatrician about it.
We just had yearly exam. Nobody noticed anything.
Did you mention this to her doctor? They don’t go and look for zebras at the annual exam.
Did I mention what - that my DD's walk is not sufficiently soft and feminine? That would upset my DD and almost certainly raise a red flag with the doctor (about me, not DD).
Maybe I used a wrong a word (stiff) - DD has no problem bending knees to sit, walk stairs, run etc. If she needs to or is told to do it, it's a non issue. It's just that she doesn't have that natural softness of movement and needs reminders to bend knees when skiing, playing tennis etc - whereas someone (e.g. one of my other kids) else will just assume those positions naturally and won't need any reminders.
Anonymous wrote:I would try yoga and/or ballet to start with the goal of moving into skating. I think skating would be pretty miserable to start and falling on the ice is really no fun at all. Once her body has more fluidity through something like yoga or ballet, then she'd have better balance and flexility on the blades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you had her evaluated? This sounds like juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in addition to many other things. I would not be pushing her to do anything until she’s evaluated.
You scared me now. I am reading through the symptoms, I don't see anything that applies.
Her joints are not swollen and she is not feeling pain. She is not aware of her posture or her stiffness, or complaining about it. It's just something that you can see - when she was playing tennis she wasn't bending the knees (as she should have), and now, as she is walking, she is not bending them as much as she should, either.
This is odd enough that it is worth talking to her pediatrician about it.
We just had yearly exam. Nobody noticed anything.
Did you mention this to her doctor? They don’t go and look for zebras at the annual exam.
Anonymous wrote:Pickleball
seriously, my son's friends (male and female) are very good and compete
Anonymous wrote:Given the age is it perhaps more that she's growing into her suddenly longer limbs after a growth spurt? You know, looks a little like Bambi the Disney movie deer? And that awkward movement translates into looking like she's stiff?
My 12 year old looks kind of ridiculous while playing her sport right now because she clearly just doesn't know how to move her growing-an-inch-a-month body.
Anonymous wrote:DD13 is really stiff. Even since she hit puberty, she is walking like a soldier. It's like her knees don't bend. It was not always like that but she did always have a very erect posture. She is thin.
She played tennis for about 4 years. She was a fast runner and hits the ball really well. Her serve sucked, and, in any case, she doesn't want to play tennis anymore.
She has recently expressed interest in figure skating. Would this be a good sport for her? How about dance? Not looking for anything competitive, just something that she would enjoy and that would help a little with the flexibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD13 is really stiff. Even since she hit puberty, she is walking like a soldier. It's like her knees don't bend. It was not always like that but she did always have a very erect posture. She is thin.
She played tennis for about 4 years. She was a fast runner and hits the ball really well. Her serve sucked, and, in any case, she doesn't want to play tennis anymore.
She has recently expressed interest in figure skating. Would this be a good sport for her? How about dance? Not looking for anything competitive, just something that she would enjoy and that would help a little with the flexibility.
Bending one's knees is pretty much the first thing you need to do to ice skate. If she's looking for an activity to push her body a bit outside her comfort zone, then skating lessons could do that. If she's got a medical condition that needs attention in terms of joint flexibility, not sure ice skating is a good place to start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you had her evaluated? This sounds like juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in addition to many other things. I would not be pushing her to do anything until she’s evaluated.
You scared me now. I am reading through the symptoms, I don't see anything that applies.
Her joints are not swollen and she is not feeling pain. She is not aware of her posture or her stiffness, or complaining about it. It's just something that you can see - when she was playing tennis she wasn't bending the knees (as she should have), and now, as she is walking, she is not bending them as much as she should, either.
This is odd enough that it is worth talking to her pediatrician about it.
We just had yearly exam. Nobody noticed anything.