Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are fat, she will be fat. Just facts of genetics and environment. You have to be healthy together.
This. It is rare to see an overweight kid and thin parents.
This is OP - DH and I are in very good shape but we work hard for it because we are not naturally thin people. We eat extremely healthy 95% of the time (lean meat, fruits and veggies - rarely any carbs or starch or sugar) but do indulge when there is a reason to. DH is a marathon runner and runs 5 days a week. He constantly asks DD to go with him and I try to get her to do yoga with me but she is not interested in either. She is a fairly lazy kid so we do take walks and hikes but she complains the whole way.
Anonymous wrote:When she asks why she can’t have what her friends are having, tell her people’s bodies work differently and her body doesn’t burn up fuel the same way her friends’ bodies do. Or tell her that you are interested in her health and nutrition, and other families may not prioritize those things in exact the same way. Focus on exercise and fitness, energy and metabolism, health and strength. Not on weight and chubby was and how she looks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are fat, she will be fat. Just facts of genetics and environment. You have to be healthy together.
This. It is rare to see an overweight kid and thin parents.
This is OP - DH and I are in very good shape but we work hard for it because we are not naturally thin people. We eat extremely healthy 95% of the time (lean meat, fruits and veggies - rarely any carbs or starch or sugar) but do indulge when there is a reason to. DH is a marathon runner and runs 5 days a week. He constantly asks DD to go with him and I try to get her to do yoga with me but she is not interested in either. She is a fairly lazy kid so we do take walks and hikes but she complains the whole way.
Anonymous wrote:My dad did a pretty good job with this- he tried to teach me Self control and discipline, portion control, and pointed to exercise as a way of getting and keeping fit. He was pretty tactful and low key and while I do struggle with my weight I hear his gentle voice and feel his gentle nudges and it helps a lot
Anonymous wrote:My DD (8) has always been in the 90th+ percentiles for height and weight but she has gone from being well proportioned to kind of heavy and having a decent belly. If you calculate her BMI she qualifies as being in the overweight range. While she doesn’t eat atrociously given what I see her friends eating (who are all stick thin), she is a picky eater who favors carbs and doesn’t really eat meat. She will eat vegetables and fruit with every meal, but she eats a pretty large volume of food overall and tends to snack on things that are not very healthy - goldfish, granola bars, pirate’s booty, etc. She is currently in school (not in DC) and just wants what her friends are eating for lunch and after school for snacks. She used to eat dessert regularly but we have already cut it down to 2X per week (other nights an apple or berries is the dessert option). I think another part of the issue is that she is so much more sedentary now because in school they literally sit at their desks all day and went from having PE daily to twice per week (and that’s weather dependent).
We have talked before about the importance of eating healthy and she knows which foods are good and bad, but she is too young to really care or actively think about it. Is there some productive way I can have a discussion with her without giving her a complex or making her feel bad?
Is there anything else I can do to stop her from getting even heavier down the line? If I take away the snacks and insist she only has a very healthy lunch she gets upset she can’t have what her friends have and asks why and I don’t know how to respond.
I was a fat kid until high school and really don’t want her to experience the same. Middle school was horrendous for me and I was teased for being fat, while my parents never said or did a thing to encourage me to eat better or be active. I really don’t want DD to experience the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are fat, she will be fat. Just facts of genetics and environment. You have to be healthy together.
This. It is rare to see an overweight kid and thin parents.
This is OP - DH and I are in very good shape but we work hard for it because we are not naturally thin people. We eat extremely healthy 95% of the time (lean meat, fruits and veggies - rarely any carbs or starch or sugar) but do indulge when there is a reason to. DH is a marathon runner and runs 5 days a week. He constantly asks DD to go with him and I try to get her to do yoga with me but she is not interested in either. She is a fairly lazy kid so we do take walks and hikes but she complains the whole way.
Sign her up for a sport like soccer or basketball with a lot of running. Most kids don’t want to go running or do yoga. They want to do something fun with other kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are fat, she will be fat. Just facts of genetics and environment. You have to be healthy together.
This. It is rare to see an overweight kid and thin parents.
This is OP - DH and I are in very good shape but we work hard for it because we are not naturally thin people. We eat extremely healthy 95% of the time (lean meat, fruits and veggies - rarely any carbs or starch or sugar) but do indulge when there is a reason to. DH is a marathon runner and runs 5 days a week. He constantly asks DD to go with him and I try to get her to do yoga with me but she is not interested in either. She is a fairly lazy kid so we do take walks and hikes but she complains the whole way.