Anonymous wrote:Now if cake and “carb heavy” snack items are available (junk)- well yes I’m not surprised a teen boy would mindlessly choose those. He already has weight problems- don’t give him that option.
Anonymous wrote:As an adult, I think I’d be upset if my parents had let me become overweight and not tried to help or do anything about it. Sort of how I did NOT want braces as a kid but my parents made me…I’m certainly glad they did now. Same for vaccinations, riding me about my grades, and other things to keep me healthy and on the right track.
Your DH may not be going about it the right way, but it’s better than doing nothing. She is his daughter and he is concerned about her health. He loves her and wants what is best for her, I’m sure. Counseling or a visit to a dietician would help maybe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why you buying cake of kid has no control?
THIS
No junk food and sweets in a house with overweight people who have no self control. Just No.
+1
I don’t see how this is even a question. Why would you even have that stuff in the house? Remove that temptation, at least in the home. There are plenty of sweets and junk available outside the house. Why make it worse?
If you have no self control, you are doomed for weight problems regardless. While OP can stop buying “junk” there are surly plenty of carb heavy options for kid to overeat in the house- not just junk food. Learning moderation and controlling impulse eating are key.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t your spouse tell your overweight teen to not have a second slice of cake?
+1
This is one of the reasons why we have so much of an obesity issue in this country IMHO. Correction, advice, or setting boundaries isn’t shaming.
My tweens/teen are not overweight and I still tell them such things…I’m not going to let them sit and gorge on multiple slices of cake or eat sugary junk before dinner etc- I’ll at least say something. “Heeeey put that away! Dinner will be ready in 45min. If you are really that hungry and can’t wait, grab a piece of fruit” Isn’t that just normal parenting?
Anonymous wrote:Because sometimes people want a second slice of cake. Sometimes I want a second slice of cake. If there is cake, people can eat cake. There’s nothing inherently wrong with having a second slice of cake.
There is something wrong, however, with someone who is overweight constantly harping on what another overweight person eats. It sure seems to me that my spouse is taking his own anxieties about eating and food and weed and projecting them on to my teen, who is still growing and has an appetite.
I think everybody should get exercise and mind their own food and shut up about everybody else’s. But I am willing to reconsider if I could get professional advice. The problem is right now me and my spouse are arguing about this and we both think we are right. We need someone who is going to help us see the situation differently and help us get on the same page because I am losing my mind.
Anonymous wrote:Op seek counseling. The above poster said that you were packing the house full of sweets, did you post that? (maybe I missed it). Certainly you want to keep healthy options in the house and encourage family activities. But you also don’t want to encourage depravity. Eating cake and ice cream in moderation isn’t bad.
Anonymous wrote:My teen is overweight.
My spouse (who is also overweight) is not dealing with it well; makes frequent remarks about what teen is eating, vilifies sweets, criticizes kid for eating too much sugar, and on and on.
I’ve talked to my spouse about it on numerous occasions and he will. Not. Stop. This has been going on for years and I am losing it.
Please recommend to me some kind of professional that we can go to for counseling so that I can get us on the same page about how to respond to different scenarios, like if my child is eating a large amount of ice cream or something like that.
What I want to do is keep my mouth shut and model healthy eating. I don’t see why that should be so hard but apparently my spouse is not able to do it and I am really becoming very angry and sad and at a loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If one of you says don’t eat the cake, and one of you says nothing, why not try it with both of you saying don’t eat the cake? Better yet don’t buy the cake to start with.
Eureka!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want you teen to learn the ins and outs of healthy eating employ a dietitian and change what you purchase/stock at home. Encourage some type of physical activity.
I agree with you that what your DH is doing is hurtful and he’s projecting. I wouldn’t be able to keep my cool around it either b/c a) it’s obviously not producing results and yet he keeps at it, and b) it’s horribly hypocritical and I can’t see how your child would have any respect for him.
What OP wants to do, not talk about weight or food choices at all, is harmful but feels nicer to OP.
Actually, if you care about science (and I have no reason to think you do), the thing that "works" the least is pushing people to lose weight.
Works is in quotation marks because for the most part, fat people don't become thin people. But you can teach people about foods and exercise that support valid markers of good health, of which BMI is not one.
What actually works for dependent children is for parents to limit their access to unhealthy food and to portion control their food if they are simply eating too much.
Everyone is so afraid that they will somehow cause an eating disorder but they fail to recognize that a child eating himself into obesity is already an eating disorder.