Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solid, refers to muscle. Some babies have great muscle tone, some have low tone.
Has nothing to do with the bones, unless there is some genetic disease that causes bone deformation.
Is this just genetics?
Most my family is very solid - some more than others due to activity.
Even though I don’t work out much these days, my muscles are hard and very solid. It’s just how my muscles are. My kids were born with similar, solid muscle tone.
Some muscular body shapes are genetic. Look at a swim team sometime and you’ll see some dense, curvy women (calves, thighs, bosom).
Same with some men.
I went canyoning with a group and one guy was short and huge, and former navy and rugby. Very dense and significant muscles, and in decent cardio shape.
Other muscles density is due to one’s work outs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solid, refers to muscle. Some babies have great muscle tone, some have low tone.
Has nothing to do with the bones, unless there is some genetic disease that causes bone deformation.
Is this just genetics?
Most my family is very solid - some more than others due to activity.
Even though I don’t work out much these days, my muscles are hard and very solid. It’s just how my muscles are. My kids were born with similar, solid muscle tone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solid, refers to muscle. Some babies have great muscle tone, some have low tone.
Has nothing to do with the bones, unless there is some genetic disease that causes bone deformation.
Is this just genetics?
Most my family is very solid - some more than others due to activity.
Even though I don’t work out much these days, my muscles are hard and very solid. It’s just how my muscles are. My kids were born with similar, solid muscle tone.
Anonymous wrote:Solid, refers to muscle. Some babies have great muscle tone, some have low tone.
Has nothing to do with the bones, unless there is some genetic disease that causes bone deformation.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, bone structure affects your weight.
My DD's pediatrician discussed this with her when she was concerned about her weight. Bones can vary in weight in two ways -- the actual size of the bone, e.g. is your femur diameter larger or smaller, and the density of the bone which does vary across people.
DD has always been heavy for her size. As a baby, friends would pick her up and be shocked at her weight. And when I'd pick up a different baby it was amazing how light they were vs what I was used to carrying.
There is a lot of variation across the human species. I don't get why so many people seem to think we should all have similar weights.