Anonymous wrote:Your DD is old enough for you to talk to candidly about this.
She knows she is fat. She knows it is unhealthy and she knows she is making unhealthy choices. Ask her if she wants your help in getting help. Don't go to a nutritionist - you are wasting your time - your DD knows what to eat.
Consider a shrink for meds - depression, anxiety or ADD (poor impulse control so very difficult to stop oneself from eating the wrong things) or a therapist and/or both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have not heard any posters talk about physical activity or sports. My DD is in middle school but I notice the girls in middle and high school who are chunky or overweight do not play sports. One way I keep my DD from grazing in the fridge, which she will do if she is bored or home all day, is to be out of the house and playing year round competitive sports -- volleyball in Fall, basketball in winter, softball or track & field in spring, and swimming in the summer. She likes junk and I let her eat her share along with healthy foods but the exercise is key for her staying fit. There is no other option for her because I can't make her substitute vegetables and fruit instead of fries and ice cream. It doesn't work for her and I don't want to fight with her on a daily basis or make her feel bad about herself. She has a nice athletic body and has a good body image.
Exercise is important but staying a healthy weight in the long run has much more to do with diet than it does exercise.I know a ton of former high school athletes that became overweight adults because they never learned to eat properly.
Anonymous wrote:I have not heard any posters talk about physical activity or sports. My DD is in middle school but I notice the girls in middle and high school who are chunky or overweight do not play sports. One way I keep my DD from grazing in the fridge, which she will do if she is bored or home all day, is to be out of the house and playing year round competitive sports -- volleyball in Fall, basketball in winter, softball or track & field in spring, and swimming in the summer. She likes junk and I let her eat her share along with healthy foods but the exercise is key for her staying fit. There is no other option for her because I can't make her substitute vegetables and fruit instead of fries and ice cream. It doesn't work for her and I don't want to fight with her on a daily basis or make her feel bad about herself. She has a nice athletic body and has a good body image.
Looking back, i realize my mom bought the Slim-Fast for me and she was not interested in it for herself. I have never ever known my mom to diet. She probably chose Slim-fast because she knew that I loved sweets/chocolate, so i would jump all over the opportunity to drink 2 chocolate shakes every day! LOL! I'm not promoting or suggesting Slim-Fast, just saying that maybe you can subtly suggest something you both can try. maybe start using My Fitness Pal and see if she shows an interest if you talk it up. Anonymous wrote:Yes. I talk very matter of factly with my daughter about weight and health. It is not healthy to be overweight (like I am) and I acknowledge that and tell her I hope to give her a better foundation than I was given. She had definitely been getting heavier going into middle school. Her doctor, a woman, told us at her last appointment that she had gained 20 pounds in a year and that was too much. She said not to focus on losing weight, but on not gaining at that rate. She was very matter of fact about it. We took her advice to heart and made some tweaks.
I do all our family grocery shopping. I cook at home for dinner 5 to 6 nights per week now instead of 3 to 5. Dinners are a lean protein and a vegetable. I eliminated extra starch with dinner. She eats breakfast at home and eats a packed lunch each day. Her lunch is typically a sandwich, a piece of fruit, and a bag of carrots. I do not buy cookies, baked goods, or candy of any kind and bring it into the house. Daughter and husband like ice cream so we have one container of ice cream at a time and dessert is a serving of ice cream with a teaspoon of fun sprinkles measured with a fun heart shaped measuring spoon. I have one "junk" snack food at a time and those things are pretzels, pop chips, popcorn, or something similar. I buy no soda that she or I will drink. I do have some diet soda for my husband for his lunches. I love soda. Love it. So I only drink it when we go out to eat and I am really trying hard to eliminate that -- need willpower. Daughter is choosing water at restaurant meals now so that is an improvement as well.
We increased her exercise and opportunities for exercise exponentially. She plays a fall sport at school and gets 2 hours of practice time 4 to 5 days per week. We joined a gym as a family so after school when her sport is over she goes to work out at the gym with me. We also paid for a couple sessions with a personal trainer who works her out until she is sopping with sweat. This has made a *huge* difference for her because she is really proud of what she can do and how much she has improved. Her summer activities are all active. Sleep away camp that is non stop all day long -- sports, swimming, climbing walls, river tubing, etc. Outdoor day camp with swimming and on no camp weeks pool time with swimming, diving, lots of sharks and minnows, etc. When she wants to invite friends over, we go do something so there is no sitting around.
We have been making these efforts for less than a year. I had to take her to the doctor for an earache earlier in the summer and she had grown 2 inches and lost 4 pounds.
Anonymous wrote:If you're defining "successful" as "resulted in child losing weight," sure. It happens. And frequently, the kid has a screwed-up relationship with food and exercise forever after and a bad relationship with parents, too.
Sometimes the kid doesn't lose weight but gets the bad relationship with food and parents anyway.
Read "Fat Politics" and read about Health at Every Size. Then apologize to your daughter, sincerely, and work on being supportive. Let her be who she is and weigh what she weighs, and don't assume that she couldn't possibly be happy because of her weight. If her behavior indicates unhappiness -- if she lacks connections and interests -- ask her about that, neutrally. But never ever ever mention her weight.
Anonymous wrote:
NP. These are great snack ideas but what if your teen won't eat them? My 12 year old is not overweight but if there is no junk food in the house to eat, she will find the white sugar and eat it plain (!). Or eat slice after slice of bread with butter or cream cheese. She has started to chunk up and I would love to help her now instead of during or after puberty.
Anonymous wrote:Where does she get the unhealthy food or is it portion control as well? One thing I've done is really stock the house with healthy choices. We don't have pizza, chips or ice cream here. We may order a pizza for a fun Friday dinner with salad or go out for ice cream on occasion but the temptation isn't here in the house. Instead snacks are yogurt,
PB&J, cheese sticks, apple with pb, carrots and hummus. But 17 is older and I imagine she has a lot more freedom to buy her own foods than my younger ones do. It's such a sensitive subject, I would try to lead by example but it sounds like that is what you've already done.