Anonymous wrote:My 15 yo lost 20 pounds in 3 months and it was Crohn's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her weight is not the issue, its the weight loss and changed eating habits.
My 13 yo also weighs 80 pounds. But that is her normal weight - she gains a little each year as she grows.
+1
My 14 year old weights 87lbs and is 5'7". She has always been skinny, so this is her normal. I would worry about the emotional issues attached to the changed behaviors.
I reported this post and requested that admin call for a police welfare check. This is <1%ile well beyond the realm of normal, into extremely dangerous. I pray this comment's numbers were a typo.
If either of her numbers are slightly off - or even a minor typo (wouldn’t surprise me…who monitors their kids height and weight daily) she could be relatively fine.
My DDs close friend (freshman) is naturally super skinny and a competitive swimmer and has to drink weight gaining shakes to keep weight stable. Her mom was beside herself with worry and is working closely with the ped. Sometimes it happens…but obviously addressing it is the key factor.
Anonymous wrote:Did you weight her on the same scale both times? There is a good ten lb difference between my home scale and the doctors scale.
If she’s truly lost that much weight I would rule out other medical issues before attaching to a diagnosis. The weight and height of itself isn’t overly alarming. Some pps ate being a bit presumptuous.
Anonymous wrote:I was roughly the same height and weighed 86lbs going into my freshman year of highschool. I do not have nor have I ever had an eating disorder.
Before seeking eating disorder treatment rule out underlying health conditions and have a chat with you daughter about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her weight is not the issue, its the weight loss and changed eating habits.
My 13 yo also weighs 80 pounds. But that is her normal weight - she gains a little each year as she grows.
+1
My 14 year old weights 87lbs and is 5'7". She has always been skinny, so this is her normal. I would worry about the emotional issues attached to the changed behaviors.
I reported this post and requested that admin call for a police welfare check. This is <1%ile well beyond the realm of normal, into extremely dangerous. I pray this comment's numbers were a typo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her weight is not the issue, its the weight loss and changed eating habits.
My 13 yo also weighs 80 pounds. But that is her normal weight - she gains a little each year as she grows.
+1
My 14 year old weights 87lbs and is 5'7". She has always been skinny, so this is her normal. I would worry about the emotional issues attached to the changed behaviors.
I reported this post and requested that admin call for a police welfare check. This is <1%ile well beyond the realm of normal, into extremely dangerous. I pray this comment's numbers were a typo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her weight is not the issue, its the weight loss and changed eating habits.
My 13 yo also weighs 80 pounds. But that is her normal weight - she gains a little each year as she grows.
+1
My 14 year old weights 87lbs and is 5'7". She has always been skinny, so this is her normal. I would worry about the emotional issues attached to the changed behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her weight is not the issue, its the weight loss and changed eating habits.
My 13 yo also weighs 80 pounds. But that is her normal weight - she gains a little each year as she grows.
+1
My 14 year old weights 87lbs and is 5'7". She has always been skinny, so this is her normal. I would worry about the emotional issues attached to the changed behaviors.
This is NOT normal. 87lbs at 5’ 7”??? This would be considered scary skinny in the 90s when the insanely skinny look was considered normal and body image was insanely skewed.