Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister was overweight growing up. She handled the comments differently than I think most did at her age. When someone called her fat, she would just say yep and keep it moving. It got to the point that kids didn't get a kick out of it once they realized their words had no affect on her. She also worked hard to lose weight. She played multiple sports and used the home gym. Parents got the whole family involved, even my skinny self. Sister is 30 with high self esteem and normal weight.
Something that also works is for you to say back "that's not a nice thing to say."
Please don't tell her to say this.
While saying that would give most adults pause, saying it to 4th graders will only get her laughed at worse.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Running is the best exercise.
Talk to her teacher to stop the bullying. I think your dd should tease them back . Bullies want a target that doesn't fight back.
Running is terrible for the body - pounds your vertebrae down, hard on joints, knees, etc. Swimming is much more gentle on the body.
I'm in my 40's, and I recall having the exact same argument with my dad. Unfortunately, I was terrible at swimming, and it was torture for me. Running was one of the biggest influences in my life as a kid/young adult. I would go with what the child enjoys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would suggest OP that you watch several documentaries on Netflix about food and what exactly is in our food, processed especially. I am sorry your DD is being bullied, that is very hard to cope with. The crying right away is because she is insecure. I know you are trying your best, but you are part of the problem.
You don't know that OP is part of the problem. Not every child's success or failure is due to parenting.
A fourth grader is not driving to the grocery store and buying her own food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would suggest OP that you watch several documentaries on Netflix about food and what exactly is in our food, processed especially. I am sorry your DD is being bullied, that is very hard to cope with. The crying right away is because she is insecure. I know you are trying your best, but you are part of the problem.
You don't know that OP is part of the problem. Not every child's success or failure is due to parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister was overweight growing up. She handled the comments differently than I think most did at her age. When someone called her fat, she would just say yep and keep it moving. It got to the point that kids didn't get a kick out of it once they realized their words had no affect on her. She also worked hard to lose weight. She played multiple sports and used the home gym. Parents got the whole family involved, even my skinny self. Sister is 30 with high self esteem and normal weight.
Something that also works is for you to say back "that's not a nice thing to say."
Anonymous wrote:I would suggest OP that you watch several documentaries on Netflix about food and what exactly is in our food, processed especially. I am sorry your DD is being bullied, that is very hard to cope with. The crying right away is because she is insecure. I know you are trying your best, but you are part of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:The kids think it's bad that she's fat. Her mother thinks it's bad that she's fat.
Which do you think hurts her more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Running is the best exercise.
Talk to her teacher to stop the bullying. I think your dd should tease them back . Bullies want a target that doesn't fight back.
Running is terrible for the body - pounds your vertebrae down, hard on joints, knees, etc. Swimming is much more gentle on the body.