juicygooseface
♥juicy♥
was gonna say the same thing about weighing outside! you made me LOL!! xxIt's ok, I found a square foot of level floor in the end!
(plus I weigh naked so maybe not!!)
was gonna say the same thing about weighing outside! you made me LOL!! xxIt's ok, I found a square foot of level floor in the end!
(plus I weigh naked so maybe not!!)
Dyjhiw your weight has been creeping up and up since thurs.
Also, dyjhiw Darcy Bussell won't stop saying 'yah' after every sentence on strictly! Shut up!
*Emsie* said:What does your daughter eat?
babybuffy84 said:X factor returns I can't stand the programme and my Facebook fills up with status updates on X factor !!!!! Hate this Time off year for all the rubbish reality shows !!!
Limited fruit & veg, quorn, pasta inc. tinned spaghetti, cheese spread, cereal & bread products (crumpets, bread)
Rest is rubbish - pizza, sausage rolls, chips, crisps, sweets, chocolate etc
I've even tried to take her to dr & all he said was that he would rather her crisps to keep her weight up than not eat at all - something she feels the need to tell me constantly
jezzi999 said:How old is she?
Is it possible to sit her down and have an (age appropriate) conversation about how you feel? That you were in her position at her age, that you've spent x years trying to sort things out, that it's an ongoing battle? Explaining why you care about it?
It's what I wish my mum had done for me. She clearly had food demons and our childhood was shaped by what diets she was on and her moods ruled by whether she had "won" or "lost" each week, but she never really talked honestly about it all. Instead she wavered between feeding us whatever we wanted, and then when we gained put us on to diets she had devised. Her heart was in the right place, but we ended up inheriting her demons, and both developed eating disorders. Not because of her, but because we also invented our own demons and issues.
I know it's a really hard convo to have but maybe worth considering?
(sorry may be a bit of a controversial suggestion but just my 2p)
jezzi999 said:Could you talk to your C about free2go to kids version of SW... Just talk to her and see how you feel. Maybe she can give you a booklet to read and you can work out if it's age appropriate.
jezzi999 said:Oh minimum age is 11 but discuss with your C she might still be able to give you a booklet, or just some advice. She's probably been asked before xx
She wants to come to SW with me on Monday? She's nearly 7 so I don't know what to do... Don't want her to get obsessive about food but I do think SW way of eating will help her loads... Been a parent is hard when you can't just wave a wand & make things better
Thanks for listening - damn hormones!!
M Louise H said:What a minefield, my DD is talking way too much about her weight too (she's just 7). It's the one thing I didn't want to pass on to her, my body/food issues.
Anyway, what I wanted to say was that my Mum took me along to my first slimming club at 9 years old - something I now wish she had never done. To be fair things were different then, it was a strict calorie regime, nothing like a SW plan.
How about getting the info from your C and implementing it the best you can with her, even planning things together at home. And as you say you definitely need OH on board.
Good luck x x x x x x x
That's actually quite typical, I don't think they want anyone to go to post op appointments!
I didn't go to mine post hysterectomy.
Similar situation with my OH, he was discharged from hospital almost 2 weeks ago, referred to out-patients.......in bloody December!!!!! What use is that??!!!!!
gettingfit said:DYJHIW you want to start knitting your next hooded scarf but too tired from walking to even pick up a needle.