Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Count calories. Have her enter in the food into a food tracker including exercise. I use noom. You can see the bad foods and how high calories are. If you consume less calories, you will lose weight. She can be held accountable for her eating.
No! Don’t do this.
You are only nudging her towards an eating disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Count calories. Have her enter in the food into a food tracker including exercise. I use noom. You can see the bad foods and how high calories are. If you consume less calories, you will lose weight. She can be held accountable for her eating.
No! Don’t do this.
You are only nudging her towards an eating disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Count calories. Have her enter in the food into a food tracker including exercise. I use noom. You can see the bad foods and how high calories are. If you consume less calories, you will lose weight. She can be held accountable for her eating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Count calories. Have her enter in the food into a food tracker including exercise. I use noom. You can see the bad foods and how high calories are. If you consume less calories, you will lose weight. She can be held accountable for her eating.
No. You do this bc you want to. This is a terrible thing to impose on a daughter.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone see Jeff's recap of this thread where he says the OP is sock puppeting?
This makes me sad. We’ve gone from trolling grown women about their weight to trolling teenagers. Did he say anything about the teen on ozempic thread?
And you all jumped right into it, didn’t you? Perhaps the OP did you a service by holding up the mirror so you could see what you really value.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone see Jeff's recap of this thread where he says the OP is sock puppeting?
This makes me sad. We’ve gone from trolling grown women about their weight to trolling teenagers. Did he say anything about the teen on ozempic thread?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend who has a chubby 10 year old son has eliminated all junk food from their house. You could start with that.
I was just with some friends who are middle aged and trying to lose weight. They keep calories under 1200 per day and exercise daily. I would encourage exercise whether it is running, biking, yoga, dance, etc.
Off-topic, but 1200 is a recipe for disaster.
Totally unsustainable in the long-term. And the best exercises for weight loss involve a dumbbell. Weight training, HIIT, and then mixed in with slow steady state cardio.
1200 per day + running?!?! they won't last more 3 weeks on that routine
Anonymous wrote:She does not need to be at that school.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone see Jeff's recap of this thread where he says the OP is sock puppeting?
Anonymous wrote:My friend who has a chubby 10 year old son has eliminated all junk food from their house. You could start with that.
I was just with some friends who are middle aged and trying to lose weight. They keep calories under 1200 per day and exercise daily. I would encourage exercise whether it is running, biking, yoga, dance, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Protein.
I have been overweight my entire life. Finally losing. Always thought I ate relatively healthy. Nope. Too many (lower nutrition) carbs and not enough protein. Not saying keto level of rigidity. Just prioritizing protein at meals.
And then just make sure she's moving each day. Take walks together after dinner. Tell her you are doing it for you..but would love the company if she's up for it. Also a great time to just chat about life.
My lean boys are trying to gain weight and eat more protein. I’m not sure this is the answer.
Make sure your boys know they should be eating protein to help build *muscle*, but they need to be in a caloric surplus in order to do so, and for that they need to be eating lots and lots of carbs.
Protein is the most satiating macro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Protein.
I have been overweight my entire life. Finally losing. Always thought I ate relatively healthy. Nope. Too many (lower nutrition) carbs and not enough protein. Not saying keto level of rigidity. Just prioritizing protein at meals.
And then just make sure she's moving each day. Take walks together after dinner. Tell her you are doing it for you..but would love the company if she's up for it. Also a great time to just chat about life.
My lean boys are trying to gain weight and eat more protein. I’m not sure this is the answer.
Anonymous wrote:Count calories. Have her enter in the food into a food tracker including exercise. I use noom. You can see the bad foods and how high calories are. If you consume less calories, you will lose weight. She can be held accountable for her eating.