Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the book How to Nourish your Child through an Eating Disorder- it’s basically a basic approach to “normalizing” relationships with food. EDs can be overeating as well as anorexia etc. the main point is to serve and model healthy options, be moderated in approaches to food and essentially just focus on health and appropriate things to say not about weight but focusing on having a balanced healthy relationship with food.
I say this as a parent who had an overweight kid and then a kid with anorexia. The anorexia is a million times worse.
Wrong. Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
And PP is why girls get anorexia.
Signed,
Family member died of anorexia
Again: being overweight is way more dangerous than being anorexic.
Anonymous wrote:Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
PP didn't say "underweight"- she said she had a child with anorexia. I was only <90 pounds for a couple of years, but I was not OK healthwise. I didn't have a healthy relationship with food or with my own body for another 25 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the book How to Nourish your Child through an Eating Disorder- it’s basically a basic approach to “normalizing” relationships with food. EDs can be overeating as well as anorexia etc. the main point is to serve and model healthy options, be moderated in approaches to food and essentially just focus on health and appropriate things to say not about weight but focusing on having a balanced healthy relationship with food.
I say this as a parent who had an overweight kid and then a kid with anorexia. The anorexia is a million times worse.
Wrong. Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
And PP is why girls get anorexia.
Signed,
Family member died of anorexia
Again: being overweight is way more dangerous than being anorexic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the book How to Nourish your Child through an Eating Disorder- it’s basically a basic approach to “normalizing” relationships with food. EDs can be overeating as well as anorexia etc. the main point is to serve and model healthy options, be moderated in approaches to food and essentially just focus on health and appropriate things to say not about weight but focusing on having a balanced healthy relationship with food.
I say this as a parent who had an overweight kid and then a kid with anorexia. The anorexia is a million times worse.
Wrong. Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
And PP is why girls get anorexia.
Signed,
Family member died of anorexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+3 to the now buried rec to listen to the podcast Maintenance Mode. Also Christy Harrison’s Food Psych. I also recommend her book “Anti Diet” as OP seems to have some food fear/fat phobia. Address that first so you can help your daughter with out damaging your relationship.
I haven't listened to Maintenance Mode specifically but I do listen to other weight maintenance type podcasts. Sometimes they are a breath of fresh air in an otherwise insane landscape. Stuff that focuses on maintenance, not weight loss, is the right way to go.
Maintenance first. Don't even think about weight loss. Lean into how to support her emotionally.
OP, I would find it hard too. It's hard for heavy kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the book How to Nourish your Child through an Eating Disorder- it’s basically a basic approach to “normalizing” relationships with food. EDs can be overeating as well as anorexia etc. the main point is to serve and model healthy options, be moderated in approaches to food and essentially just focus on health and appropriate things to say not about weight but focusing on having a balanced healthy relationship with food.
I say this as a parent who had an overweight kid and then a kid with anorexia. The anorexia is a million times worse.
Wrong. Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
Being underweight is WAY better health-wise than being obese. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Read the book How to Nourish your Child through an Eating Disorder- it’s basically a basic approach to “normalizing” relationships with food. EDs can be overeating as well as anorexia etc. the main point is to serve and model healthy options, be moderated in approaches to food and essentially just focus on health and appropriate things to say not about weight but focusing on having a balanced healthy relationship with food.
I say this as a parent who had an overweight kid and then a kid with anorexia. The anorexia is a million times worse.
Anonymous wrote:+3 to the now buried rec to listen to the podcast Maintenance Mode. Also Christy Harrison’s Food Psych. I also recommend her book “Anti Diet” as OP seems to have some food fear/fat phobia. Address that first so you can help your daughter with out damaging your relationship.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Would you guys be fine with a kid who is overweight?
You're saying it wouldn't both you at all?
You wouldn't worry about the health implications?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this is very hard.
I completely understand.
But your dd will have to make the decision to lose weight on her own.
Yes, but that should not stop OP from trying to help her daughter now before she is disabled due to any number of likely serious adverse conditions that will develop.
Purposely having an insurance company send a letter that she is uninsurable isn’t helping. It won’t make her smaller. You really think that’s an effective way to encourage weight loss? Seriously?
This is funny. I'm a PP who has been overweight my entire life. This actually happened to me shortly after college...my parent said I couldn't be on their insurance anymore so I had to get my own plan. I was rejected based on my BMI. I'll give you one guess as to whether that spurred me to lose weight lol. And that was as an adult...any teenager is going to be like "Ummm, okay. Anyway. What's life insurance?" So at best it will be ineffective, at worst it will hurt the DD and the relationship because it's a f***** up thing to do to a person, making an insurance company do your dirty work.
You have independent proof of your condition. How you chose to react to that information was up to you. Because you chose to ignore the warning does not mean that OP's daughter will react in the same manner. You are an adult and it is your life. OP's daughter is a minor and in the care and custody of her parents.
Would you ignore dangerous behavior of your minor child ? Or would you try to help ? And if you try to help, would you seek independent professional advice from a qualified medical practitioner or would you coddle the minor child and act like everything is okay ?
OP hasn’t sought any healthcare (mental or physical) for her daughter at all.
OP here.
How do you seek healthcare for this (mental or physical) without conveying that it is a problem to the kid? Very curious how you would do this.
I have been very careful to not say anything to my kid. We don't talk about weight.
I mentioned my sons in one line (ONE LINE) and people are extrapolating that I love them more. I simply mentioned them because the first advice in any child weight post is always (rightfully so) "remove junk from the house."
We do remove most junk but the context of our family dynamic is that we can't fill the fridge solely with hard-boiled eggs and cheese sticks and cut-up vegetables. I have two kids who are in the midst of trying to put on
20+ pounds of muscle this winter (they are in winter conditioning for spring sports) and eat 4000-5000 calories a day. Anyway, No I don't love them more than my daughter and I don't buy a lot of things they might want out of respect for her.
I meet them all in the middle.
As to weight-she is about 5'2 and was a size 6 and now a size 12-14. So she's not obese but she's medically overweight..BMI is on the high end of the scale of "overweight" or her height. Now go ahead and jump on me for saying that my perfectly healthy daughter is not overweight.
I have to sign off now as I'm headed to an evening event.