My 13 year old daughter is significantly over weight (somewhere between 30 and 50%, I would say--I'm not allowed to know exactly what she weighs, and I actually don't ever ask). She asks for help intermittantly. We have tried Weight Watchers (and she gained weight) and Atkins (which worked, but only for the few months that we managed to be very strict about it and then she gained it all back and more)(she is a starch addict). We have joined a gym together, but she was very resistant to going (I suspect that it embarrassed her to exercise in front of much slimmer, much older people--damn those slender 70 year olds.) I have asked her to walk and biked with me, but she always has an excuse. I must admit, we are not a very organized household, so adding "habits" is a bit of a trick.
The worst of her weight problem isn't her refusal to go shopping or swimming, her avoidance of her rail-thin friends, or the difficulty to find clothes for her; the worst of this is that she has changed from a super confident, happy, happy child into a girl who seems sad and who is constantly asking for reassurance that she is lovable. And of course, she totally is! But she is clearly unhappy with herself and I fear, she sees concern, guilt, despair in my eyes when I look at her. I would love to be able to supress my concern, but clearly she sees through that. And, of course, the culture, her friends, the mirror, all tell her that she is not "average."
I don't believe that people in general are responsive to rewards, punishment, cajoling, external influences. I don't know how to help her without impossing some kind of something on her--a diet, an exercise plan, something. I fear that this will cause new problems (and perhaps not solve the old). We do not eat junk food or have sugar, white flour, rice, potatos in the house. I really don't know why she is so large--although she does seem to take large and second servings of everything. She often eats more than her father or I do at a meal.
Thanks in advance,
The worst of her weight problem isn't her refusal to go shopping or swimming, her avoidance of her rail-thin friends, or the difficulty to find clothes for her; the worst of this is that she has changed from a super confident, happy, happy child into a girl who seems sad and who is constantly asking for reassurance that she is lovable. And of course, she totally is! But she is clearly unhappy with herself and I fear, she sees concern, guilt, despair in my eyes when I look at her. I would love to be able to supress my concern, but clearly she sees through that. And, of course, the culture, her friends, the mirror, all tell her that she is not "average."
I don't believe that people in general are responsive to rewards, punishment, cajoling, external influences. I don't know how to help her without impossing some kind of something on her--a diet, an exercise plan, something. I fear that this will cause new problems (and perhaps not solve the old). We do not eat junk food or have sugar, white flour, rice, potatos in the house. I really don't know why she is so large--although she does seem to take large and second servings of everything. She often eats more than her father or I do at a meal.
Thanks in advance,



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