Anonymous wrote:OP here - one more thought. If my son asked me why an Asian person looked different from us, I would say it's because he's Asian. I wouldn't be concerned that if, at school, a classmate asked why an Asian student looked different from him, that if he responded "he's Asian" he would get in trouble. But if my son asked me why an obese person looked different from us and I said "she's obese," and explained to him what that means and what the negative implications of that lifestyle are, and he then responded to a similar question at school from a classmate about an obese student by saying that the person is obese and explaining the negative health impacts, he might be labeled a bully.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't talk to my young child about being fat or skinny at all. We talk about healthy food and which foods you can only eat sometimes because they are not as healthy. If she were ever to call someone "fat" , I would tell her that it's not a kind or polite thing to say, and that people come in all shapes and sizes. Why would you tell him it's okay to say to you, but not to the person directly? So basically you're sending the message that it's okay to comment on someone's appearance behind his back?
Young kids don't have a filter, I get that. But you correct them and move on. I don't see where the confusion lies.
Is it really that hard?
Anonymous wrote:Ouch.
OK. I get it. OP totally lost me the second she started bringing "beauty" into it. At that point, we've lost the important lesson: I.e. - be healthy, and moved into some judgmental territory about beauty.
But I think there is a legitimate question buried in here that is worth discussing.
We DO have an obesity epidemic.
We also have a whole lot of girls who equate their self-value with their weight.
What are the right words to use with YOUNG kids (say, 3-7 year old range), that encourage some sense of enpowerment about health and eating choices (because for 95 percent of people who are obese, its a matter of making better choices), and yet not castigating of judging people who either make bad choices, or who really have some medical condition (or bad genes) that are going to make them pear-shaped no matter WHAT they do?
For a long while I avoided the word "fat", because I didn't want my 3-year-old (who had no filter to call someone fat. But now that he's 7, what do I say? Obese? Do I correct him when he accurately says "that person is fat" out of earshot? I usually say, "yes, that's true, but we would never want that person to hear us saying that. It's OK to say it to me, but remember that we would,'t say that to someone who was overweight."
Is that the right answer? I know I struggle to have this conversation in a way that 1) keeps it "real"; 2) encourages some measure of self-responsibility; and 3) is sympathetic to the fact that its not so easy for everyone, and it doesn't change a person's value.
It's easy to jump on the OP's back (she stepped in it), but does anyone want to have the real conversation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch.
OK. I get it. OP totally lost me the second she started bringing "beauty" into it. At that point, we've lost the important lesson: I.e. - be healthy, and moved into some judgmental territory about beauty.
But I think there is a legitimate question buried in here that is worth discussing.
We DO have an obesity epidemic.
We also have a whole lot of girls who equate their self-value with their weight.
What are the right words to use with YOUNG kids (say, 3-7 year old range), that encourage some sense of enpowerment about health and eating choices (because for 95 percent of people who are obese, its a matter of making better choices), and yet not castigating of judging people who either make bad choices, or who really have some medical condition (or bad genes) that are going to make them pear-shaped no matter WHAT they do?
For a long while I avoided the word "fat", because I didn't want my 3-year-old (who had no filter to call someone fat. But now that he's 7, what do I say? Obese? Do I correct him when he accurately says "that person is fat" out of earshot? I usually say, "yes, that's true, but we would never want that person to hear us saying that. It's OK to say it to me, but remember that we would,'t say that to someone who was overweight."
Is that the right answer? I know I struggle to have this conversation in a way that 1) keeps it "real"; 2) encourages some measure of self-responsibility; and 3) is sympathetic to the fact that its not so easy for everyone, and it doesn't change a person's value.
It's easy to jump on the OP's back (she stepped in it), but does anyone want to have the real conversation?
I don't talk to my young child about being fat or skinny at all. We talk about healthy food and which foods you can only eat sometimes because they are not as healthy. If she were ever to call someone "fat" , I would tell her that it's not a kind or polite thing to say, and that people come in all shapes and sizes. Why would you tell him it's okay to say to you, but not to the person directly? So basically you're sending the message that it's okay to comment on someone's appearance behind his back?
Young kids don't have a filter, I get that. But you correct them and move on. I don't see where the confusion lies.
Is it really that hard?
Anonymous wrote:Ouch.
OK. I get it. OP totally lost me the second she started bringing "beauty" into it. At that point, we've lost the important lesson: I.e. - be healthy, and moved into some judgmental territory about beauty.
But I think there is a legitimate question buried in here that is worth discussing.
We DO have an obesity epidemic.
We also have a whole lot of girls who equate their self-value with their weight.
What are the right words to use with YOUNG kids (say, 3-7 year old range), that encourage some sense of enpowerment about health and eating choices (because for 95 percent of people who are obese, its a matter of making better choices), and yet not castigating of judging people who either make bad choices, or who really have some medical condition (or bad genes) that are going to make them pear-shaped no matter WHAT they do?
For a long while I avoided the word "fat", because I didn't want my 3-year-old (who had no filter to call someone fat. But now that he's 7, what do I say? Obese? Do I correct him when he accurately says "that person is fat" out of earshot? I usually say, "yes, that's true, but we would never want that person to hear us saying that. It's OK to say it to me, but remember that we would,'t say that to someone who was overweight."
Is that the right answer? I know I struggle to have this conversation in a way that 1) keeps it "real"; 2) encourages some measure of self-responsibility; and 3) is sympathetic to the fact that its not so easy for everyone, and it doesn't change a person's value.
It's easy to jump on the OP's back (she stepped in it), but does anyone want to have the real conversation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well good luck because it is clear that your not so subtle attitude will trickle down to him.
It is never appropriate to comment on someone else's appearance or weight in a negative manner. Ever. This shouldn't be a hard thing to teach.
You're delusional and quite frankly your attitude is harmful. Being in the healthcare field where people are dying from obesity, it is my duty to tell them the truth to save their lives. Some people are truly clueless and save themselves a lifetime of poor health by getting to a healthy weight. It's too bad that being PC about weight and the culture of dont hurt anyone's feelings is killing Anericans. Can't wait for that mindset to change.