Anonymous wrote:You guys are right. I went out and bought $150 of fresh food and am cooking now. I'll portion it out before refrigerating it.
He stormed out when I told him I took care of shopping and he needs to pay the sitter (half of what I spent on food). If he doesn't like it, he can suck it. I didn't actually say that last part, but it's my new motto. I owe my kid better than what she's getting now.
Thank you, everyone. I was so frustrated, but you are all right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your dd genuinely wants to lose weight -- if -- you have to do more than just offer healthy foods. Cooking should be tailored to weight loss.
She's 12. Cross-country season is in the fall. At her age, most cross country teams are open. There is no cut. Tell her that she is going out for cross country in the fall, because you are worried about her health and her weight and she needs to learn to exercise.
You can start a run-walk program with her as a mom/daughter activity in the summer to get ready for cross country in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:You guys are right. I went out and bought $150 of fresh food and am cooking now. I'll portion it out before refrigerating it.
He stormed out when I told him I took care of shopping and he needs to pay the sitter (half of what I spent on food). If he doesn't like it, he can suck it. I didn't actually say that last part, but it's my new motto. I owe my kid better than what she's getting now.
Thank you, everyone. I was so frustrated, but you are all right.
Anonymous wrote:Lord, DH is insulin-dependent? Does he want DD to be on Metformin (oral anti-glycemic)? Because that's where she's headed.
I'm a physician OP and your DH needs to get on board. Now. If she hits adolescence with these eating habits she is in for some painful teen years and health problems in her early 20's that no one deserves. I see it daily and it's heartbreaking. The fact that he knows about these health risks as an adult and is setting your DD up for the same (due to his own issues, and believe me these are his own issues) is very sad. Unless you all have failed marriage counseling, it's time to go. Good luck and good on you for advocating for your child.
Anonymous wrote:You lose, OP. Your husband is setting you up.
He's the kind dad that buys her the stuff that she likes to eat. You're the mean mom who keeps her from it. He's forming an alliance with your daughter, against you.
You need marriage counseling and family counseling. You probably won't persuade them to go, though.
Anonymous wrote:You lose, OP. Your husband is setting you up.
He's the kind dad that buys her the stuff that she likes to eat. You're the mean mom who keeps her from it. He's forming an alliance with your daughter, against you.
You need marriage counseling and family counseling. You probably won't persuade them to go, though.
Anonymous wrote:You lose, OP. Your husband is setting you up.
He's the kind dad that buys her the stuff that she likes to eat. You're the mean mom who keeps her from it. He's forming an alliance with your daughter, against you.
You need marriage counseling and family counseling. You probably won't persuade them to go, though.
Anonymous wrote:If your dd genuinely wants to lose weight -- if -- you have to do more than just offer healthy foods. Cooking should be tailored to weight loss.