Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does she eat at home for "full breakfast"?
My guess is there isn’t anything wrong with what she eats at home. If my kid ate a full breakfast of omelet, bacon and toast with milk, I’d bet he would still want to grab a honeybun or Froot Loops or yogurt tube at school, if it were available to him. School breakfast is usually the equivalent of sacks of sugar and corn/wheat with synthetic vitamins and artificial color added.
If that is true, what can OP do to stop her from eating the sugar breakfast at school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does she eat at home for "full breakfast"?
My guess is there isn’t anything wrong with what she eats at home. If my kid ate a full breakfast of omelet, bacon and toast with milk, I’d bet he would still want to grab a honeybun or Froot Loops or yogurt tube at school, if it were available to him. School breakfast is usually the equivalent of sacks of sugar and corn/wheat with synthetic vitamins and artificial color added.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does she eat at home for "full breakfast"?
My guess is there isn’t anything wrong with what she eats at home. If my kid ate a full breakfast of omelet, bacon and toast with milk, I’d bet he would still want to grab a honeybun or Froot Loops or yogurt tube at school, if it were available to him. School breakfast is usually the equivalent of sacks of sugar and corn/wheat with synthetic vitamins and artificial color added.
Anonymous wrote:How long has this been happening op? Since the start of summer? Since the Halloween/holidays? Or more broader Since the last pediatrician appt last year?
Fwiw, all my kids ebb& flowed with weight in like 7 or 8 month bursts. Sports or not, their bodies were doing their own thing with weight gain and growing.
Also , jc penny has a great product line for size Husky.
Ask me how I know (I'm guessing clothes are tricky to find, at least it was for me).
Anonymous wrote:What does she eat at home for "full breakfast"?
Anonymous wrote:I’d do as many meals at/from home as possible. Breakfast at home, healthy, no sugar. Lunches made at home. Absolutely no desserts unless fruit and no sugar. Remove junk from house entirely.
Anonymous wrote:This board has idea that if you just say the right things, or don’t say the right things, and if you have the right foods available but not the wrong foods except you also don’t restrict foods, that kids will naturally eat the right foods and the right amount of food for a healthy weight.
I think that idea is so, so toxic.
If everyone in my family line that I know about had suffered from serious depression, and that got worse coinciding with a huge spike in depression naturally, would I approach the problem by never talking about it? Just saying stuff like “I like to think sad thoughts in moderation?”
Obesity is like the last frontier of really hating ourselves for some reason. I guess maybe also aging? All this “magic words” or “I don’t want to cause an eating disorder” stuff is part of that bullsh!t. And it’s so hubristic. As if you and your sleeve of chips ahoy had such power.
It’s great to do lots of nutrition education. That’s important knowledge. It’s also okay to acknowledge that for some people, for reasons we don’t really understand, it is WAY WAY harder to stick to good nutrition. Your kid may be someone for whom it is harder. It’s okay for them to know that and that it is theirs to manage with as much help as you can provide, and it’s okay to talk about how you can have a happy and fulfilling life if you struggle with weight even as it’s okay to talk about the reasons why a healthy weight is a good thing to work for.
Anonymous wrote:This board has idea that if you just say the right things, or don’t say the right things, and if you have the right foods available but not the wrong foods except you also don’t restrict foods, that kids will naturally eat the right foods and the right amount of food for a healthy weight.
I think that idea is so, so toxic.
If everyone in my family line that I know about had suffered from serious depression, and that got worse coinciding with a huge spike in depression naturally, would I approach the problem by never talking about it? Just saying stuff like “I like to think sad thoughts in moderation?”
Obesity is like the last frontier of really hating ourselves for some reason. I guess maybe also aging? All this “magic words” or “I don’t want to cause an eating disorder” stuff is part of that bullsh!t. And it’s so hubristic. As if you and your sleeve of chips ahoy had such power.
It’s great to do lots of nutrition education. That’s important knowledge. It’s also okay to acknowledge that for some people, for reasons we don’t really understand, it is WAY WAY harder to stick to good nutrition. Your kid may be someone for whom it is harder. It’s okay for them to know that and that it is theirs to manage with as much help as you can provide, and it’s okay to talk about how you can have a happy and fulfilling life if you struggle with weight even as it’s okay to talk about the reasons why a healthy weight is a good thing to work for.