goofy's friends
<font color=limegreen>**POOF**<br><font color=purp
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2005
- Messages
- 2,464
Caradana said:It's different for kids because the parents have so much input and control over what they do and what they eat. I was always a heavy kid, as far back as my memory spans. I agonized - AGONIZED - over it. When I was in 7th grade, my mother started forcing me to run the track. I mean it, she drove the entire family to the high school track and said she wasn't leaving until everyone in the family did 4 laps, but we all knew that this was for my benefit. She switched my dinnertime milk to water. She started hiding her M&M stash a heck of a lot better than she had been, and she left apples out in the kitchen. She forced me to go outside and move around. ALL I WANTED TO DO was stay in my room and read.
Was I peeved? SO ANGRY. It was embarrassing, humiliating, my sister and brother got to drink milk at dinner, what kind of screwed-up mother forces kids to run the track, etc ... but a year later, I was among the most athletic kids in my class. And 11 high school varsity letters later, I had grant $ to college. So - snapping me into shape was the best thing she could've done for me. It set off a chain reaction of events that set the course of my life.
If I have a kid who struggles with weight - and genetically, that will probably be a reality for me - guess where you will find us? The high school track, running in circles. There but for the grace of God go I.
Great story!!! You'll be the inspiration to your offspring
