Anonymous wrote:Thank you. It's incredibly frustrating to come here and voice my concerns and be attacked for actually caring that my child is overweight. I agree that she's getting extra calories elsewhere. Teachers at school frequently give out candy as rewards, her dance studio gives out candy, her Girl Scout troop that meets immediately after school gives out a snack, and of course when she goes to friends houses there's no telling what she's eating. But that just seems to be a part of the culture that we live in.
Anonymous wrote:She is eating almost all carbs. Switch out the cereal and get rid of the granola bar. Also I'm thinking your statement that she always gets the fruit cup instead of fries is a bit of a red flag. Where does she do this? What else is she eating there. Don't deprive her of the occasional fry, but realize that when it is becoming habitual. What does she drink? What does she have for dinner? What are the portion sizes?
Anonymous wrote:No big deal. I don't even understand why you are freaking out.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean when you say pudgy? How pudgy? Most of these kids aren't starving and needing to gain weight to grown, what happened to being skinny as kids? It used to be the norm and now it is the exception. Somehow, non pudgy kids grew too. I think there is some kind of collective avoidance issue with weight problems in the US. I mean if parents are very pudgy, then it is ok for kids to be a little pudgy? Being heavy is no a status symbol like in some other countries. Here is a woman who is trying to do right by her DD and people are telling her that it is ok for her daughter to be overweight at 9 years old! What does pudgy means? Are we afraid to say overweight? And why is it ok for heavy people to judge skinny people but not vice versa?
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean when you say pudgy? How pudgy? Most of these kids aren't starving and needing to gain weight to grown, what happened to being skinny as kids? It used to be the norm and now it is the exception. Somehow, non pudgy kids grew too. I think there is some kind of collective avoidance issue with weight problems in the US. I mean if parents are very pudgy, then it is ok for kids to be a little pudgy? Being heavy is no a status symbol like in some other countries. Here is a woman who is trying to do right by her DD and people are telling her that it is ok for her daughter to be overweight at 9 years old! What does pudgy means? Are we afraid to say overweight? And why is it ok for heavy people to judge skinny people but not vice versa?
Anonymous wrote:Please don't do this to her. If she is eating well and exercising just let nature take it's course. She is going to grow up and out several times in the next few years. She could also be developing more muscle mass at this age - especially if she is dancing rigorously. Just continue help her develop good lifetime habits and eating choices and don't push your body image concerns ("I don't understand how this happened") onto her.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure she's not eating at school? Charts show that girls that age usually need about 1700 calories a day to maintain weight. If she's dancing a lot (4 nights a week seems like she's competitive), she probably needs at least 2,000. What you are showing is...
Oatmeal + skim milk + fruit = approx. 300 calories
Sandwich + granola bar + yogurt = approximately 400 calories (These estimations are generous)
So .. basically, that's 700 calories. I can't imagine dinner that you say is healthy is over 1,000 calories, plus that isn't including the activity she's getting.
Bottom line, either something is up with what you say you give her, or she's eating elsewhere. Let this be a tale of caution... I was your daughter. At around 9, I got chubby. My Mom noticed and instead of just rolling with it, she monitored everything that went into my mouth. No chips or sweets either (heaven forbid). By the time I was 13, she enrolled me in weight watchers. I lost 20 pounds (also got my period and shot up a few inches) and have had an incredibly awful time with food, weight, and my body image and self worth for the last 20 years. Therapy is just now starting to make a difference in how I view myself (I'm a size 6, so fairly average but always view myself as a COW). PLEASE, I'm begging you - roll with it. Let the doctor's figure it out if it continues to happen with no apparent cause. She will grow out of it. What she will never grow out of is how you make her feel, if you handle it wrong. And bring some chips and sweets into the house occasionally. Moderation is key. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:yet she eats healthy and takes dance class 4 nights a week. I've noticed the weight gain, but she had a doctor's appointment today, and this is how I found out. Her BMI is 87th percentile, so she is technically overweight. I am beating myself up over having let her gain this much weight, but the truth is, she really doesn't eat badly at all. I don't keep chips or sweets in the house, we don't do juice, rarely eat fast food and when we do always get the fruit cup instead of fries. No one in our family is overweight. I just don't understand how this happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No big deal. I don't even understand why you are freaking out.
Because according to her doctor, she is officially overweight. I shouldn't be concerned about having an overweight child?
I think this depends. Is this the first time she has measured as overweight? If yes, then watch and wait. She could be gaining weight for a big growth spurt. I did at that age. Not to mention, BMI isn't very accurate for children.
If she continues a trend of
being overweight for several years then you have a problem. But, does she LOOK overweight? She dances a lot - could that weight be muscle?