Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the responses so far. DD is borderline overweight and our pediatrician has told us we need to help her make healthy choices 80% of the time. But it’s obviously a fine line between encouraging her to eat healthy and not letting her always choose horrible foods every single meal. I really don’t think we are controlling and we rarely tell her she can’t have something, but if she wants chicken fingers or a cheeseburger and had fries the day before we will tell her to choose a different side for example, like fruit or a vegetable. We have plenty of healthy food in our house but also desserts and typical snack foods, and we regularly allow treats and all kinds of food, including pizza, pasta, Mac and cheese, etc. I am only explaining all of this for full context.
What bothers me here is that she is not simply eating a “treat” without permission, it’s that she is consuming an abnormally large amount of something (ie 2 big cupcakes, 20 pieces of Halloween candy) and feels the need to hide it.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the responses so far. DD is borderline overweight and our pediatrician has told us we need to help her make healthy choices 80% of the time. But it’s obviously a fine line between encouraging her to eat healthy and not letting her always choose horrible foods every single meal. I really don’t think we are controlling and we rarely tell her she can’t have something, but if she wants chicken fingers or a cheeseburger and had fries the day before we will tell her to choose a different side for example, like fruit or a vegetable. We have plenty of healthy food in our house but also desserts and typical snack foods, and we regularly allow treats and all kinds of food, including pizza, pasta, Mac and cheese, etc. I am only explaining all of this for full context.
What bothers me here is that she is not simply eating a “treat” without permission, it’s that she is consuming an abnormally large amount of something (ie 2 big cupcakes, 20 pieces of Halloween candy) and feels the need to hide it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the responses so far. DD is borderline overweight and our pediatrician has told us we need to help her make healthy choices 80% of the time. But it’s obviously a fine line between encouraging her to eat healthy and not letting her always choose horrible foods every single meal. I really don’t think we are controlling and we rarely tell her she can’t have something, but if she wants chicken fingers or a cheeseburger and had fries the day before we will tell her to choose a different side for example, like fruit or a vegetable. We have plenty of healthy food in our house but also desserts and typical snack foods, and we regularly allow treats and all kinds of food, including pizza, pasta, Mac and cheese, etc. I am only explaining all of this for full context.
What bothers me here is that she is not simply eating a “treat” without permission, it’s that she is consuming an abnormally large amount of something (ie 2 big cupcakes, 20 pieces of Halloween candy) and feels the need to hide it.
She is an emotional closet eater. Please take her to a therapist experienced in eating disorders to help with some cognitive behavioral therapy. I say this as someone who had the same behavior in childhood and was a morbidly obese adult for decades before finding life changing CBT.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the responses so far. DD is borderline overweight and our pediatrician has told us we need to help her make healthy choices 80% of the time. But it’s obviously a fine line between encouraging her to eat healthy and not letting her always choose horrible foods every single meal. I really don’t think we are controlling and we rarely tell her she can’t have something, but if she wants chicken fingers or a cheeseburger and had fries the day before we will tell her to choose a different side for example, like fruit or a vegetable. We have plenty of healthy food in our house but also desserts and typical snack foods, and we regularly allow treats and all kinds of food, including pizza, pasta, Mac and cheese, etc. I am only explaining all of this for full context.
What bothers me here is that she is not simply eating a “treat” without permission, it’s that she is consuming an abnormally large amount of something (ie 2 big cupcakes, 20 pieces of Halloween candy) and feels the need to hide it.
Anonymous wrote:Is she a heathy weight/BMI?
I don’t think you are causing it or rigid- I think you were just trying to accurately explain what her diet looks like, yes? Some kids are just prone to doing this. They can’t help it. If she doesn’t have a weight problem, I’d buy fewer things she is likely to feel compelled to binge on and just let her be, as with maturity this may stop on its own. If there is a weight problem developing, I’d talk to the pediatrician and possibly get a nutritionist or therapist involved.
Anonymous wrote:Kids do this when there patents are overly controlling about food. Your family members calling you to report on this is weird.