Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am still confuse as to why this is the one area where it’s considered okay to give unsolicited advice.
If your daughter responded by telling you about a “new salon that’s really great with hair like yours, like they work miracles” or offering you the number of a plastic surgeon who is “really great with aging skin” would that be okay?
Whenever my mean immigrant mother in law critiqued my weight I wanted to respond by offering the name of a tutor or someone who tutored in remedial English.
Having an unattractive hairstyle or wrinkled skin or speaking English imperfectly doesn’t impact the functionality of your body, increase your risk for many different diseases or shorten your lifespan like obesity does. It may be a terrible idea for a mother to discuss weight gain with her daughter, but a significant weight gain does present a threat to her daughter’s health, and mothers worry about their children’s health, even if their children are adults.
Anonymous wrote:I am still confuse as to why this is the one area where it’s considered okay to give unsolicited advice.
If your daughter responded by telling you about a “new salon that’s really great with hair like yours, like they work miracles” or offering you the number of a plastic surgeon who is “really great with aging skin” would that be okay?
Whenever my mean immigrant mother in law critiqued my weight I wanted to respond by offering the name of a tutor or someone who tutored in remedial English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest, you are worried about her marriage prospects only. It's not normal to combine health and marriage prospects in the same sentence. You only added health to seem like less of an ass, but your true concerns are obvious. You don't think a man will be attracted to your fat daughter.
NP, I think “health concerns” are the new coded way we talk about weight when we really means aesthetics/looks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest, you are worried about her marriage prospects only. It's not normal to combine health and marriage prospects in the same sentence. You only added health to seem like less of an ass, but your true concerns are obvious. You don't think a man will be attracted to your fat daughter.
NP, I think “health concerns” are the new coded way we talk about weight when we really means aesthetics/looks.
Anonymous wrote:I am still confuse as to why this is the one area where it’s considered okay to give unsolicited advice.
If your daughter responded by telling you about a “new salon that’s really great with hair like yours, like they work miracles” or offering you the number of a plastic surgeon who is “really great with aging skin” would that be okay?
Whenever my mean immigrant mother in law critiqued my weight I wanted to respond by offering the name of a tutor or someone who tutored in remedial English.
Anonymous wrote:Be honest, you are worried about her marriage prospects only. It's not normal to combine health and marriage prospects in the same sentence. You only added health to seem like less of an ass, but your true concerns are obvious. You don't think a man will be attracted to your fat daughter.
Oh yeah, just the kind of casual random information I'd love for my mother to drop on me.[google]
My mom used to casually inform me that I weighed almost as much as she did when she was 9 months pregnant - loved that! She did this when I was 16 and weighed 120 pounds (we are both 5'4). I think she wanted me to be 100 pounds max. Im still the same size 35 years later and she still says this stuff.
Anyway, I digress. Leave your daughter alone, OP.
Anonymous wrote:She was always thin growing up and active. Now she works full time but is overweight. I’m worried how this will affect her health and marriage potential. Do I bring it up? Or ask if she’s visiting the doctor recently. I was thinking GLP 1 could be an option but I don’t want to push it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is she not on ozempic like other fat adults?
She may not wish to risk blindness?
That is very rare and it seems to happen primarily in people that are diabetic. The data is also not conclusive that GLP-1s are causing the blindness. Obesity is a known risk factor for cancer, heart disease, kidney failure, stroke, blindness and it increases the risk of all cause mortality. Decent data on GLP-1s indicates that they can reduce all-cause mortality by 10-15% in people that are obese or have diabetes.
If you can afford to do so and she is interested, pay for her ozempic.
Agree. If you can't help pay, even just mentioning to your daughter that prices have gone down might be helpful. Everyone's head of GLP-1's, sure, but not everyone is aware of current prices.