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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think it’s really hard to keep a child with a large appetite an appropriate weight

180 replies

Thedownstream · 14/10/2024 22:11

I have 3 DCs. DC1 and DC2 have always had massive appetites, ate every single thing I put in front of them from the moment I weaned them, never refused anything at nursery, never lost their appetites even when sick. DC1 didn’t eat anything remotely unhealthy until she was three, but by that time was quite a chunk (99th centile BMI). DC2 we did baby led weaning with due to the health advice that babies will not overeat if they feed themselves (which we found not to be true in her case). Both DC1 and 2 started school overweight, but DC1 has turned out to have quite a talent for sport which she plays twice per day everyday and now aged 9 is a beanpole.

DC2 aged 5 however could not be more different, she’s naturally very inactive and struggles with sport (although reluctantly attends some sports clubs for exercise). She is always hungry and will eat until she is sick if allowed. She would easily eat a adult sized burger and chips at a restaurant if allowed. I think our diet is relatively healthy but she’s evidently eating too much either at home, school or both.

I think she would be fine weight wise however if there wasn’t so much crap food offered / available to her everywhere we go. I’ll give some examples:

  • birthday parties - I’m the mum hovering over DC2 as the kind birthday mum and family try to encourage her to take 10 sandwiches, 5 slices of pizza, 50 chocolate fingers and 2 cupcakes at 3 in the afternoon, when half of the other kids are too busy playing to notice the food available.
  • The kind parents on the sidelines at DC1’s sports sharing their kids’ sweets and biscuits with her.
  • The mum who brings her child over for a play date and brings doughnuts for the kids.
  • The portion size and options on kids menus at pubs which always come with an included dessert (we avoid going out for lunch as a result).
  • The grandparents who do not listen when we say we’re trying to keep things healthy and please not to bake cakes for the kids.
  • The stickers given out at school to children who finish their food. DC2 is a people pleaser who loves a sticker.

I don’t know how to navigate all this without other parents thinking I’m obsessive, or without giving DC2 food issues, but equally she can’t keep eating all this food offered to her.

In DC1’s school year so many of the children who had some puppy fat in reception are now obese (and many who were stick thin in reception are too). I don’t want that for DC2.

DC3 has a much less healthy diet than DC2 as unlike his sisters he is an incredibly fussy eater who lives off about 20 foods and usually refuses lunch entirely at nursery. He also seems to know when to stop eating even if it is a food he loves. He’s really slim (trousers always falling down) and will be one of those children who can eat all the doughnuts in the world and not put on weight (probably because he then won’t eat anything else for the rest of the day).

So AIBU to think DC2 is destined for a life of being overweight or with a complex about food given her appetite and all the unhealthy food thrown at her (by others) on a regular basis?

OP posts:
Comefromaway · 16/10/2024 15:06

jolene7 · 16/10/2024 14:43

She's probably thirsty. Let her have sugar free juice I bet it changes a lot!

Sugar free juice can increase your appetite and make you crave sugar

soupfiend · 16/10/2024 15:08

Comefromaway · 16/10/2024 15:06

Sugar free juice can increase your appetite and make you crave sugar

Absolutely this, its garbage junk, anything with artificial sweetners in.

I always spell that wrong

BlackOrangeFrog · 16/10/2024 15:38

jolene7 · 16/10/2024 14:43

She's probably thirsty. Let her have sugar free juice I bet it changes a lot!

Water would be better.

downwindofyou · 16/10/2024 20:32

BlackOrangeFrog · 14/10/2024 22:17

The child is overweight because if the food you give her.

She has at least 84 meals a month with you.

Of which... what 20 are at a school, and let's say... 10 are at ithe peoples houses, parties and at restaurants etc

Leaving 50+ meals (and snacks) on you and you alone.

What are you feeding them?

It's almost impossible for small children to be overweight eating a diet if mostly vegetables, some protein, fill fat dairy, nuts, fruit, wholemeal carbs etc.
It very easy if they eat beige crap,. sweets, cakes and crisps every day I'm varying proportions.

Oh I disagree. I brought my 3 up with very healthy foods. Not really anything in the way of cakes and biscuits as I'm coeliac so it just isn't in my mind to buy. All meals were home made. Porridge not cereal.

2 grew up slim. One is obese and has always been heavy. He craved food since infancy. He didn't eat any more than the others but was always chunky. Played rugby and dabbled in a few other sports but was naturally pretty sedentary.

Giantjuicyskittle · 16/10/2024 23:18

Sorry if this has already been mentioned but I’d recommend taking her to the gp for a blood test, just to rule out anything Health related like diabetes. You’ve had plenty of comments about diet and fitness so I won’t add to that, it’s always best to be sure and then go from there.

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