Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother was overweight and throughout my entire life she fat shamed me. I was never fit enough for her. No I wasn’t skinny- I developed curves etc. but I definitely was in great shape for most of my life. But she always made me feel fat because of her own issues. When I look at photos of my younger self I’m so upset - I wasn’t fat at all. So back off is my advice.
+1 my parents also made me feel fat as a kid and always talked about what I ate - but I look at pictures now and I wasn’t even the least bit chubby.
Same same!!! And NOW, I am fat. But I look at pictures and realize I was never overweight until college. I just identified as a fat kid starting around puberty. And I freaking wasn't!!! I always wondered why I never once got made fun of for being fat. Now I know.
Another person who was not fat in middle school or high school but I was made to feel fat by the family. When I look back at photos from that
era my weight was just right and in no way was I overweight at all. I actually had a good figure.
I feel like any parent who harps on portion control and checking in on "are you sure you don't feel full" ends up with a kid who sneaks candy
Anonymous wrote:According to the BMI child calculator those stats for a child 9 1/2 years old place her squarely in the overweight category. It’s confusing that you said she has always had these percentiles but has gotten chubby in the last two years. I’m not sure which it is. In any case we seem to have a problem as a culture talking about healthy eating with children. There is far too much panic over causing an eating disorder in my opinion. I think it’s OK to tell children that healthy choices make healthy bodies and that when our bodies get too big they don’t work as well. Simple and factual and not repeated ad nauseam. It is so much more difficult to lose weight as an adult. The only answer is focusing on healthy meals as an entire family and not keeping any junk in the house. Make sure she is being active and participates in 60 minutes of physical activity every day.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. I want to clarify that she didn’t just eat a couple pieces of candy, which we definitely would not make a big deal about. My mom found 12 wrappers stuffed in the tissue box and these were those round Lindt chocolate truffle ball things. So that implies she ate 12 of those quickly at some point. She later found like 6 more jammed between couch cushions. So that means someone ate 18 fairly large chocolate balls in one day. That is why we are concerned. Sure 2-3 of them would be normal, maybe even 5. But 18?
And yes 90lbs isn’t the end of the world, but it makes her BMI fall into the obese category and our pediatrician said we need to encourage more healthy foods and less treats/processed foods. But basically according to responses it seems like we should set zero limitations and just let her eat whatever she wants. So basically damned if you do, damned if you don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother was overweight and throughout my entire life she fat shamed me. I was never fit enough for her. No I wasn’t skinny- I developed curves etc. but I definitely was in great shape for most of my life. But she always made me feel fat because of her own issues. When I look at photos of my younger self I’m so upset - I wasn’t fat at all. So back off is my advice.
+1 my parents also made me feel fat as a kid and always talked about what I ate - but I look at pictures now and I wasn’t even the least bit chubby.
Same same!!! And NOW, I am fat. But I look at pictures and realize I was never overweight until college. I just identified as a fat kid starting around puberty. And I freaking wasn't!!! I always wondered why I never once got made fun of for being fat. Now I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. I want to clarify that she didn’t just eat a couple pieces of candy, which we definitely would not make a big deal about. My mom found 12 wrappers stuffed in the tissue box and these were those round Lindt chocolate truffle ball things. So that implies she ate 12 of those quickly at some point. She later found like 6 more jammed between couch cushions. So that means someone ate 18 fairly large chocolate balls in one day. That is why we are concerned. Sure 2-3 of them would be normal, maybe even 5. But 18?
And yes 90lbs isn’t the end of the world, but it makes her BMI fall into the obese category and our pediatrician said we need to encourage more healthy foods and less treats/processed foods. But basically according to responses it seems like we should set zero limitations and just let her eat whatever she wants. So basically damned if you do, damned if you don’t.
This is the answer. And you don’t “encourage;” you just do it. Don’t buy treats and processed food at the grocery store. Then they are not hanging around the house. Don’t eat crap yourself so you set a good example. Again: Don’t talk about it; just do it!
One episode of over-eating on chocolate is insignificant. What matters is what you as a family are doing everyday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother was overweight and throughout my entire life she fat shamed me. I was never fit enough for her. No I wasn’t skinny- I developed curves etc. but I definitely was in great shape for most of my life. But she always made me feel fat because of her own issues. When I look at photos of my younger self I’m so upset - I wasn’t fat at all. So back off is my advice.
+1 my parents also made me feel fat as a kid and always talked about what I ate - but I look at pictures now and I wasn’t even the least bit chubby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s her current height and weight? Where has her growth been on the percentile charts?
She is 55 inches tall (83rd percentile) and 90 lbs (93rd percentile). This is the same growth curve she has been on for a few years. So this has always been her build.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like any parent who harps on portion control and checking in on "are you sure you don't feel full" ends up with a kid who sneaks candy
My parents did, and I have never sneaked food. I am overweight, but I am a size 10 at 5ft 8inches and after 2 children. So I am not dangerously overweight.
My 9 year old overeats. I tell her, but i am a little more "scientific: about it than my parents were. She makes healthier choices because of it, but she still overeats. She has never sneaked food. She is not overweight because she tries to make good choices( she will pick green beans over rice if she has already had a second serving of rice). She has an incredible appetite, and she gets it from me.
I have a very skinny 7 year old who would sneak candy because she loves sugar. But she is an extremely picky eater and stops eating when she is full, unless it's candy.
I think these are two separate issues( overeating and a sweet tooth), and a young child sneaking candy is not surprising or rare. The solution here is easy at this age: keep it out of sight.
The overeating in general is more complex.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. I want to clarify that she didn’t just eat a couple pieces of candy, which we definitely would not make a big deal about. My mom found 12 wrappers stuffed in the tissue box and these were those round Lindt chocolate truffle ball things. So that implies she ate 12 of those quickly at some point. She later found like 6 more jammed between couch cushions. So that means someone ate 18 fairly large chocolate balls in one day. That is why we are concerned. Sure 2-3 of them would be normal, maybe even 5. But 18?
And yes 90lbs isn’t the end of the world, but it makes her BMI fall into the obese category and our pediatrician said we need to encourage more healthy foods and less treats/processed foods. But basically according to responses it seems like we should set zero limitations and just let her eat whatever she wants. So basically damned if you do, damned if you don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. I want to clarify that she didn’t just eat a couple pieces of candy, which we definitely would not make a big deal about. My mom found 12 wrappers stuffed in the tissue box and these were those round Lindt chocolate truffle ball things. So that implies she ate 12 of those quickly at some point. She later found like 6 more jammed between couch cushions. So that means someone ate 18 fairly large chocolate balls in one day. That is why we are concerned. Sure 2-3 of them would be normal, maybe even 5. But 18?
And yes 90lbs isn’t the end of the world, but it makes her BMI fall into the obese category and our pediatrician said we need to encourage more healthy foods and less treats/processed foods. But basically according to responses it seems like we should set zero limitations and just let her eat whatever she wants. So basically damned if you do, damned if you don’t.
I don’t think you’re ready to listen to advice and are really just looking for some magic way to make your daughter eat less food. There’s clearly some food/weight shaming going on here and it’s not cool. Work on it. No excuses. Resources have been suggested. Do it now or regret it later.
I am truly open to any and all advice, but I don’t think letting her eat whatever she wants and as much as she wants is really good advice for a kid on track to becoming really heavy. There has to be something in the middle no?
Ellyn Satter is in the middle.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. I want to clarify that she didn’t just eat a couple pieces of candy, which we definitely would not make a big deal about. My mom found 12 wrappers stuffed in the tissue box and these were those round Lindt chocolate truffle ball things. So that implies she ate 12 of those quickly at some point. She later found like 6 more jammed between couch cushions. So that means someone ate 18 fairly large chocolate balls in one day. That is why we are concerned. Sure 2-3 of them would be normal, maybe even 5. But 18?
And yes 90lbs isn’t the end of the world, but it makes her BMI fall into the obese category and our pediatrician said we need to encourage more healthy foods and less treats/processed foods. But basically according to responses it seems like we should set zero limitations and just let her eat whatever she wants. So basically damned if you do, damned if you don’t.