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Overweight Children

Three mistakes parents make & what they can do about it

Most parents just feel helpless. They want the best for their kids, but in spite of everything we know about nutrition and exercise most parents hope for the best and do little about their overweight children.

Lisa Alexander's True Story: "My daughter Pari was small at birth, but quickly became a heavy baby. By the age of two, our pediatrician began intimating that Pari was putting on more weight than she needed. Until kindergarten, kids from our neighborhood, her day care or nursery school accepted Pari just as she was, and her size never came up. But when she started school, there was a whole new set of kids, and some would make comments about Pari's size. Some were innocent observations; some comments were just down right mean. In first grade she was invited to a slumber party of a new friend, and told me she would be uncomfortable changing in front of the other girls because she was fat. This was a shocking moment for me, because now I understood that she felt badly about herself, that she had been giving thought to her size, and comparing herself to other children. What could I do?"

Lisa Alexander, author of Seven Steps to Get Your Child's Weight on Track and creator of The Pari Plan says parents don't understand the pivotal role they play in the solution to a child's weight problem. As she's helped families across the country beat childhood obesity, Lisa has identified the three crucial mistakes that parents make and the key actions parents must take to get control and start their child on the path to improvement:

Mistake #1: "She's not heavy." This is plain denial. Many parents refuse to be honest with themselves about their child's weight. They see the beautiful perfection of their child and turn a blind eye to a problem that is likely causing emotional pain in their child's life lowering the child's self-esteem and getting in the way of their child achieving her true potential.

Action Plan: Learn what a healthy weight for your child should be. Compare where your child is to where your child needs to be. Acknowledge this goal openly.

Mistake #2: "He'll grow out of it." If only parents knew: Studies show that 50% of obese school-aged children will become obese adults. Children WON'T grow out of their weight problem.

Action Plan: You don't need to put your child on a crash diet, but you do need to get them on a healthy path with better food choices and exercise activities that will help them as they grow. Losing weight is not rocket science. But changing the habits and lifestyle of a family in today's busy world is difficult. Especially when the emotional well being of a fragile overweight child is at stake, parents need a plan and they need perseverance. The good news is that the easiest time to get your child on track is between the ages of 4-12 when they are growing and still totally reliant upon their parents for their food and activity.

Mistake #3: "I've tried everything." Most parents simply give up. They may try something but usually not the right things - in the right way. Then they give up.

Action Plan: The secret is that you must put it all together in the correct way and you must commit to being successful. You must acknowledge that you are the only one that can make the difference and you must rally your entire family around your child's success. You can have a healthy child but only if you decide to make it the number one priority in your life.

As a mother of an overweight child, Lisa Alexander made all these mistakes and more. She's experienced the helplessness and heartbreak a parent feels watching their child struggle with weight. She also experienced the joy of helping her daughter ? and children across the country - shed their weight and build their self-esteem.

With as many as one in three children overweight in the U.S., Lisa wrote Seven Steps to Get Your Child's Weight on Track and created The Pari Plan to help parents across the country break through these mistakes and turn their children's weight problems around. Parents relate to Lisa's inspiring story and are empowered by Lisa's proven tactics for helping overweight kids. For more information visit http://www.pariplan.com.

May 24, 2012 | 9:32 PM  
 
You will gain everything back plus more when you go off the pill. In adoitidn, many of them are dangerous for your heart they are essnetially legal speed.They artificially ramp your metabolism up, so that even with eating junk food, you still loose weight. Problem is you didnt change your diet, and the increase in metabolic rate was artifical. WHen you are no longer drugging yourself, your metabolic rate will slow down to below what it was before you artifically ramped it up, causing you to pack on weight, similar to the way you would while in starvation mode.You DO need to exercise, at a min.Where you should start depends on where you are now. Over working yourself will cause you to back track as well. If you are sedentary now, start with a daily walk short enough that you can handle it, long enough that you are actually getting exercise. Base the time on your ability currently.If you are pretty active, start with a beginners exercise vid or dvd that appeals to you.You should also consider diet modification if your diet is not healthy. You need a healthy balanced diet that should include healthy portions of all the food groups. If you arent ready to give up your junk food, concentrate on keeping proper portions. A lot of that involves behavior modification as well, simply to keep your diet in check. (diet as in, your nutrtional intake, not the 4 letter evil word that has become synonymous with starvation)I realize it sucks to hear it, but loosing weight and keeping it off really is an entire lifestyle change, and its hard. It doesnt happen over night. The few that make it happen over night are paying big bucks for trainers and nutritionists and their 40 hour work week consists of exercising as opposed to work. Its FAR easier to gain than it is to loose.
 
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