Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assumed a 12 year and 6 month boy at 5' 3" and weighing 124 pounds.
Your results
The information you provided gives a BMI of 22.
This puts your child in the 88th percentile, which means your child is overweight. An ideal BMI for your child's gender and age is between 15.2 and 21.4.
Your child is not skinny. In fact, your child is classified as overweight. That is not necessarily a problem and BMI is not perfect, but it is a data point for you to consider. I would be sure to focus on healthy, whole foods and increase activity. Hopefully he will even out as he goes through puberty, but right now is the time to teach healthy habits and food as fuel.
OP’s kid is top of the growth chart for height/weight. BMI is notoriously wrong for tall, muscular boys.
And why do you think that OP's son is muscular?
One-third of kids in the US are overweight or obese. We should not be helping this problem continue to grow by saying that this is "normal" and "there is nothing to worry about."
OP, I would take your son to his doctor and ask for their opinion and advice.
Anonymous wrote:When I read the OP I had three thoughts:
- Someone will calculate the child's BMI and write a condescending post aimed at OP
- someone will suggest the child would need to lost 30 or 40 pounds to be skinny
- others will compete to see who, in fact, has the skinniest child.
OP, 12 year old boys and girls eat a lot. It's normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP Something you may not realize is that school lunches for middle school students are not very big portions. What you listed sounds like he does not eat as much as 12 year olds I know. Also for my own son he has periods where he eats a ton and periods where he doesn't eat much. It happens with growth spurts.
This. I’m a ms teacher and the students constantly complain.
Anonymous wrote:OP Something you may not realize is that school lunches for middle school students are not very big portions. What you listed sounds like he does not eat as much as 12 year olds I know. Also for my own son he has periods where he eats a ton and periods where he doesn't eat much. It happens with growth spurts.
Anonymous wrote:When I read the OP I had three thoughts:
- Someone will calculate the child's BMI and write a condescending post aimed at OP
- someone will suggest the child would need to lost 30 or 40 pounds to be skinny
- others will compete to see who, in fact, has the skinniest child.
OP, 12 year old boys and girls eat a lot. It's normal.
There's always a couple outliers who come on these threads "most 12 year olds are 70 pounds, not sure what you're asking?!"Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assumed a 12 year and 6 month boy at 5' 3" and weighing 124 pounds.
Your results
The information you provided gives a BMI of 22.
This puts your child in the 88th percentile, which means your child is overweight. An ideal BMI for your child's gender and age is between 15.2 and 21.4.
Your child is not skinny. In fact, your child is classified as overweight. That is not necessarily a problem and BMI is not perfect, but it is a data point for you to consider. I would be sure to focus on healthy, whole foods and increase activity. Hopefully he will even out as he goes through puberty, but right now is the time to teach healthy habits and food as fuel.
OP’s kid is top of the growth chart for height/weight. BMI is notoriously wrong for tall, muscular boys.
Anonymous wrote:I assumed a 12 year and 6 month boy at 5' 3" and weighing 124 pounds.
Your results
The information you provided gives a BMI of 22.
This puts your child in the 88th percentile, which means your child is overweight. An ideal BMI for your child's gender and age is between 15.2 and 21.4.
Your child is not skinny. In fact, your child is classified as overweight. That is not necessarily a problem and BMI is not perfect, but it is a data point for you to consider. I would be sure to focus on healthy, whole foods and increase activity. Hopefully he will even out as he goes through puberty, but right now is the time to teach healthy habits and food as fuel.
Anonymous wrote:My son had the same stats at his age and had a six pack. He was in no way fat but he was built.
Yes, he eats all the time. Multiple dinners each night.
Anonymous wrote:NORMAL
Anonymous wrote:This is an example of how we all perceive thin, regular weight, and overweight differently. A 5'3" 12-year-old boy who is 125 lbs is not thin in my book.
As an example my shorter at 12 years old son, weight almost half of what OPs child weighs.
. He’s still growing slowly but not eating the massive amounts he did a few years ago, several packed meals each day. Your son isn’t even eating that much.