Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the elimination of carbs/sweets from the house, the shame you’ve associated with eating, and the fact that she sneaks “bad” foods when she can… she’s at high risk for developing bulimia. Ask me how I know.
Not really, unless they read about it online as a “solution.” Here it isnt about image as much as no self control.
Many adhd or asd kids overeat or impulse eat addictive foods like sweets or junk food if they’re in the house.
Glp-1 for adults is literally for untreated ADHD food noise or diabetes.
Anonymous wrote:With the elimination of carbs/sweets from the house, the shame you’ve associated with eating, and the fact that she sneaks “bad” foods when she can… she’s at high risk for developing bulimia. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Is she on ADHD medication?
If not that’s my first stop. Inattentive type adhd tends to be moody and depressed and it’s usually due to low dopamine. Low motivation, slow on uptake, poor social follow through. Often low dose meds work really really well for this. Once she’s more capable of motivation you can work on building better habits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My read is that the kid laments her "fat body" and OP focuses on losing weight, which reinforces her feeling that she is, in fact, fat and ugly. And OP restricts carbs, won't let her bake, and frames eating a bagel after school as "sneaking." I think that's totally the wrong approach, especially for a kid entering puberty. Find some non-sport activities that she's interested in. Art is great. My 12yo loved tap dance. Go hiking as a family and get some fresh air. If she likes baking, have her make healthier snacks, and have her help plan and cook meals that she likes. Cutting down on screen time is good, but otherwise, you need to reframe your approach here.
Lol, tell us you never parented a neuroatypical kid without telling us you never parented a neurotypical kid.
Op, get the testing updated on her and get professional help with the Dx and Rx.
Right now you are sandwiched between a husband and tween with the same symptoms. Find a support group as well.
Anonymous wrote:My read is that the kid laments her "fat body" and OP focuses on losing weight, which reinforces her feeling that she is, in fact, fat and ugly. And OP restricts carbs, won't let her bake, and frames eating a bagel after school as "sneaking." I think that's totally the wrong approach, especially for a kid entering puberty. Find some non-sport activities that she's interested in. Art is great. My 12yo loved tap dance. Go hiking as a family and get some fresh air. If she likes baking, have her make healthier snacks, and have her help plan and cook meals that she likes. Cutting down on screen time is good, but otherwise, you need to reframe your approach here.
Anonymous wrote:The other thing I'd add that I don't see here, OP, is that you should take steps to build in lots, lots more positive interactions with your kid that are deeply rooted in empathy.
She is having a really, really hard time - she needs you to be a safe place and to hear from you that you are sorry she is struggling, that things can and will get better, and that you will help her navigate that path.
What you are describing is not mild anxiety and depression - it's a kid in the throes of hormones and puberty who is miserable. She does not want to feel like that. It's your job to help her.