Anonymous wrote:OP you see her in relation to other girls her age. You know this isn't good for her and will actually be terribly detrimental for her mind and body to be this large at 12. Stop making excuses about her being athletic. Many girls are just as athletoc at 12. The problem will come in a few years when she isn't as active. When she has more homework or doesn't make the team or decides theater is for her. Right now her sports are keeping her weight from ballooning. You are one injury or interest shift away from a major problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are trying to justify why your 12 year old should remain obese and that is very sad. Your child is OBESE. She is therefore, not healthy. She needs less food and more movement.
You have no clue what OP's DD's body fat/body comp is, and therefore you have no ability to comment on her. It's particularly stunning that you say she needs more movement, she. OP already said her DC plays three sports, runs, and lifts heavy.
Maybe you should get some help for your own psych issues and shut the f ck up.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the PP with the muscular 11yo. No one needs a dozen cookies OP. My kid had dessert pretty lunch every day but it’s 2-3 cookies or similar. If she’s hungry she can have a healthy snack, it’s probably not gonna be carrot sticks because we generally eat veggies with meals not as a snack. It might be an apple or banana with PB though.
Anonymous wrote:Guys, maybe it is just me, but I assumed the OP was exaggerating a bit with the dozen cookies to mark the comparison to carrot sticks.
Being too literal here is missing the forest for the trees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, maybe it is just me, but I assumed the OP was exaggerating a bit with the dozen cookies to mark the comparison to carrot sticks.
Being too literal here is missing the forest for the trees.
I assumed the same but OP still didn't say what the kid is eating.
Anonymous wrote:Guys, maybe it is just me, but I assumed the OP was exaggerating a bit with the dozen cookies to mark the comparison to carrot sticks.
Being too literal here is missing the forest for the trees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks for many of the helpful and some not helpful comments. To answer some questions she’s just over 5’4” and 162 lbs so she does look heavy but is also visibly muscular. She just played two hours of basketball this morning and is in great running cardio shape, her coach rarely takes her out because she is so fast, skilled, and doesn’t get tired. She has 2 siblings who are athletes and our family plan has always been to do a ton of athletics and have lots of foods available at home that they can choose from. Her siblings are not overweight and can metabolize a lot of calories easily so I’m hesitant to say her brother can eat a dozen cookies while she get carrot sticks.
5ft 4 in and 162 lbs on a 12 year old is not muscular. Knock it off.
Right? These people are crazy. My 6’2” tall extremely athletic 13 year old BOY is all muscle and doesn’t have an ounce of fat on him… and he weighs 150…
And OP, just don’t let ANY of your kids eat a dozen cookies! It’s not good for them, either.
Lol. Your son is not “all muscle” at 6’2, 150. He is scrawny. My husband is 6’1” and 185lbs and is not “all muscle” though he is pretty muscular and in great shape. He is thin and has an high metabolism. He has to drink protein shakes after every workout and lift 5 times a week to be muscular otherwise he loses weight. He never gets below 170 (if he slacks off).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks for many of the helpful and some not helpful comments. To answer some questions she’s just over 5’4” and 162 lbs so she does look heavy but is also visibly muscular. She just played two hours of basketball this morning and is in great running cardio shape, her coach rarely takes her out because she is so fast, skilled, and doesn’t get tired. She has 2 siblings who are athletes and our family plan has always been to do a ton of athletics and have lots of foods available at home that they can choose from. Her siblings are not overweight and can metabolize a lot of calories easily so I’m hesitant to say her brother can eat a dozen cookies while she get carrot sticks.
5ft 4 in and 162 lbs on a 12 year old is not muscular. Knock it off.
Right? These people are crazy. My 6’2” tall extremely athletic 13 year old BOY is all muscle and doesn’t have an ounce of fat on him… and he weighs 150…
And OP, just don’t let ANY of your kids eat a dozen cookies! It’s not good for them, either.
Lol. Your son is not “all muscle” at 6’2, 150. He is scrawny. My husband is 6’1” and 185lbs and is not “all muscle” though he is pretty muscular and in great shape. He is thin and has an high metabolism. He has to drink protein shakes after every workout and lift 5 times a week to be muscular otherwise he loses weight. He never gets below 170 (if he slacks off).
LOL to you, ya doofus! Your husband is a grown man, and my son is a child who hasn’t even gone through puberty yet… have you ever even seen a child?
Don’t be defensive because I called you out on your scrawny son. He is almost underweight according to his bmi. “All muscle” he is not. Maybe bones.
This sounds like someone whose son filled out at 12 and they can't comprehend that other kids are different. Obtuse and narrow-minded...and not very bright.
DP, totally fine that this kid is filling out later but he’s not the example his mommy thinks he is.