Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:99.99% of children will be teased-- especially in middle school. That too will pass. Being overweight at 12 actually has lifelong consequences.
No, you stop. Do 99.99% of children request to switch schools because they are being teased? The OP didn't ask for your opinion about her child's weight. She asked about bullying.
The DCUM bullies here are treating the weight thing as a straw man. If the OP just said "my kid is being bullied" -- would it matter what the reason was? You sound like you're rationalizing the abhorrant behavior because there's a possible weight issues. Maybe a victim is transgender. Somewhere on the autism scale -- at what point is it not ok to blame the victim or the victim's concerned parent.
Whatever a "healthy weight" for this child may be is none of your business. You seriously need to STFU
Anonymous wrote:The bullying is absolutely wrong and has to stop. No question about it. However, I do find OP's attitude that it is "not her job" to tell her son to loose weight disturbing. As a parent it is her responsibility to BOTH (1) help him address the bullying issue, and (2) help him to maintain a healthy weight.
Anonymous wrote:99.99% of children will be teased-- especially in middle school. That too will pass. Being overweight at 12 actually has lifelong consequences.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Anyway, thanks for all the helpful advice. It is just kind of disheartening to come back here and see 4+ responses essentially telling me that my kids is fat and I should be doing something about it. He is a twelve year old kid, yeah he might go out and have a couple slices of pizza with some friends once and a while, he looks exactly like his dad did at that age, and his dad turned out to be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Bullying or teasing a 12-year-old about weight is NEVER okay. His size is nobody's business but the family and their pediatrician. Have we learned nothing about the damage that "teasing" can do to children??
I find this thread appalling. It's no surprise that the kids at the school are judgmental and bullying, if they're being raised by the parents on this list.
Yeah, he is a big kid and could probably lose a couple pounds of fat, but unless he actually wants to do that I don't feel like it is our (or his classmate's) job to tell him to.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for all the actual, helpful comments.
I know he isn't a skinny kid, I am not, and neither is his father. We try to eat healthy (most of the time maybe once in a while we stop at McDonalds on the way to a vacation or have some other fast food joint), we encourage exorcise (he plays on a recreation soccer team and has fun playing basketball with his friends and kids in the neighborhood), all all the rest. I am an avid back packer and hope to start taking him on short trips in high school, and my husband played football all the way through college (DS never took to it though, I think DH is a bit miffed about that), so we know the importance of a healthy lifestyle, and try to provide one for him. That excess weight is not just fat, but he is actually pretty strong for his age and does have a layer of muscle. Yeah, he is a big kid and could probably lose a couple pounds of fat, but unless he actually wants to do that I don't feel like it is our (or his classmate's) job to tell him to.
Anyway, thanks for all the helpful advice. It is just kind of disheartening to come back here and see 4+ responses essentially telling me that my kids is fat and I should be doing something about it. He is a twelve year old kid, yeah he might go out and have a couple slices of pizza with some friends once and a while, he looks exactly like his dad did at that age, and his dad turned out to be fine.