Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I am not "crazy." You people are ridiculous. I locked up all the Costco snacks because of their volume -- there's a lot of them. So we only bring a few at a time upstairs.
As an idea
He eats a breakfast of milk, juice, bacon and biscuits before he walks out the door at 6:30 a.m. (egg allergies -- can't have those)
He eats a lunch (at 10:20 -- crazy school time lunch) of a water, sandwich, chips, fruit, maybe cookies. I've tried packing a second sandwich but he refuses.
He eats again as soon as he gets home at 2 ish: protein, more fruit, maybe some veggies, milk
Dinner at 6 is protein and veggies, rice.
Maybe popcorn or ice cream at 8.
I'm certainly not trying to feed him my post-menopausal diet. I was just trying to get an idea if people saw this type of weight gain over a a couple months in their kids. I have seen in from doctor's appoint to doctor's appointment over a year, but not in 8 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I am not "crazy." You people are ridiculous. I locked up all the Costco snacks because of their volume -- there's a lot of them. So we only bring a few at a time upstairs.
As an idea
He eats a breakfast of milk, juice, bacon and biscuits before he walks out the door at 6:30 a.m. (egg allergies -- can't have those)
He eats a lunch (at 10:20 -- crazy school time lunch) of a water, sandwich, chips, fruit, maybe cookies. I've tried packing a second sandwich but he refuses.
He eats again as soon as he gets home at 2 ish: protein, more fruit, maybe some veggies, milk
Dinner at 6 is protein and veggies, rice.
Maybe popcorn or ice cream at 8.
I'm certainly not trying to feed him my post-menopausal diet. I was just trying to get an idea if people saw this type of weight gain over a a couple months in their kids. I have seen in from doctor's appoint to doctor's appointment over a year, but not in 8 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The snack pantry is literally locked?
If you don't want him to go through a case of Pringles, then don't buy a case of Pringles.
Uh, no thanks. That's not the point. We basically had a spare cabinet in the basement laundry room and put all the chips we buy, cookies, things like that, down there in the locked cabinet. He hasn't even noticed it yet. But if leaves the upstairs pantry with the healthier stuff, fruit on the counter, yogurt in the fridge etc.
OK, I can see storing extras from big Costco packages in the basement but WHY is the cabinet LOCKED? That is so weird.
What is wrong with you people? I don't want him gorging on chips and cookies, but we buy them in bulk so they are cheaper for the whole family. That's why the cabinet is locked.
There's plenty of other food in the pantry upstairs, the fridge, the fruit bowl, etc.
My question was -- is it normal for a teen to put on weight that quickly? He is gaining all that weight in his waist.
Anonymous wrote:According to my handy CDC chart, the 90th percentile height/weight for a 15-year-old boy is 5'11"/160 pounds. Is this about what he is, OP? If he stays at the 85th percentile, at 18, he'll be roughly 6' and 180 pounds. That's within the normal BMI range for an adult, so perfectly fine. Please get a grip on yourself and stop harping on his weight.
Surely you know that it s perfectly normal for teenage boys to outgrow their pants?
Anonymous wrote:OP, call his doctor to talk about any concerns.