Anonymous wrote:I would just bring her own food everywhere. Pp is right that people understand that kids have peanut allergies and milk allergies or are being raised vegan or xyz.
If she is going to a birthday party, send her her own special meal and treat. She will probably not be the only kid there in this situation. Saying that she can have one cupcake but not two is confusing to everyone. When you are there, or when she is older and can manage these nuances on her own, then she can have a little of what everyone else is having. For right now, she has her own food packed by you, and nothing else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell people she’s diabetic.
It's true that sometimes you need to medicalize a condition in terms folks will understand. In this case, I imagine that your explanation leaves people thinking that you are restricting calories out of your own projected vanity. And this is entirely unfair.
People will understand diabetes. Is it true? No. Will it help you get the results you want? Yes.
So, she has diabetes until you sort this thing out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell people she’s diabetic.
It's true that sometimes you need to medicalize a condition in terms folks will understand. In this case, I imagine that your explanation leaves people thinking that you are restricting calories out of your own projected vanity. And this is entirely unfair.
People will understand diabetes. Is it true? No. Will it help you get the results you want? Yes.
So, she has diabetes until you sort this thing out.
Anonymous wrote:Tell people she’s diabetic.
Anonymous wrote:I’m bordering on crazy control freak mom. What’s a nice way to handle this in advance?
DD is 4 and has a metabolic disorder. One side effect is increased appetite which causes rapid weight gain. She doesn’t quite understand but we are working with doctors, child psychologist, dietitian and a plan to manage the weight while they get medical condition under control. We caught it early so with (a lot of) work, DD can have normal quality of life and get ahead of complications.
Our dietitian has a plan that allows for normal kid things like a cupcake at a birthday party, work around snack at preschool etc. The goal is to feel normal and not restricted but manage everything else.
That said -she’s still 4. Other parents, grandparents etc are making this 1000X harder. Giving her extra cake when we aren’t looking, offering lollipops, juice, huge portions and treating her like their kids who are stringbeans that subsist on chicken nuggets and goldfish.
What’s a nice way to say: I know you mean well, but Larla has a medical condition please don’t give her extra cake or please ask me first.
The dietitian said to make it sound like a life or death allergy.
I went crazy the other day. Not my finest hour... I’m going to therapy for it too..
Anonymous wrote:Have you apologized to the person you blew up at? Similar situation happened in a mom group I am and that mom pretty much got shunned by a lot of people because of it. You don't want this to be you. Plus, I noticed people discounted her because of her ridiculous behavior. I'm glad you're in therapy.
Anonymous wrote:I think you need to be direct, yet neutral and not worry about nice. This is a health and behavioral issue, not just a preference, though I think those should be respected too.
Anonymous wrote:How about you say: "I know you mean well, but Larla has a medical condition please don’t give her extra cake or please ask me first. "
Except maybe say "extra food"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Is your goal to kill her?"
"Can you explain why you keep choosing to harm our child?"
I'd tell her to go to Hell if she spoke to me like this and she has not told me about her child's condition!
OP, get some professional help for yourself immediately because you are going to do serious emotional and mental harm to your DD!