Monday, August 23, 2010

Mama's Boy

So, today I take Will in for his 4 year old physical (a few months late, but who's counting) and discover that he, too, may be facing his very own "Battle of the Bulge." Ok, in his defense, the dude is as active as active can be, and really... he is not overweight at all. He is just a big kid... and no, I don't mean that as an "I am big boned" excuse (although, I really think he and I both are). He weighs 52 pounds and is 3 feet 10 inches tall, so he is off the charts for height and weight. But today the doctor said that we'll have to monitor his weight.... not closely, but just watch it to make sure he becomes an healthy adult. And why the cause for concern? Because she can look right and me and say, "because you sure didn't."

Today, for the first time, I was faced with the fact that my son can suffer because of me. And not just in the "I will give you something to cry about" arena. But, because his genes are working against him. I am overweight. Mark is overweight. Poor, poor Will and Jack. Knowing that, I work pretty hard to teach them better eating habits than I have. I buy prepackaged 100 calorie snacks to ensure portion control, and I push healthy snacks like cheese sticks, yogurt and fruit. More often than not dinner comes from my Healthy Cooking magazines and always has a fruit or a vegetable as a side. Our milk is fat free and my dudes don't get soda. I still cut their juice with water, for God's sake, to try and limit sugar.

That being said... they like candy. They like sweets. And while I don't keep them in the house often, we are not a Wife Swap-bound extremist family either. Dairy Queen was had on Saturday night and while we haven't eaten them yet, we did buy ice cream sandwiches at the store the other day... just because Will wanted them. I do buy processed food and their breakfasts, in particular, are often frozen pancakes, pigs in a blanket and sugary cereals. Their lunches aren't much better in the homemade department. Jamie Oliver is probably rolling around in his organic garden at the fish sticks, frozen pizza and chicken nuggets in my freezer. We eat them each once a week, paired with fruit or veggies and a cheese stick... but still... we eat them.

So, today was the day when I see that even though I thought I was doing well... it isn't good enough. "Monitor his dairy," she said, "as it is the biggest culprit." What I heard was, "Failure, failure, failure. FAILURE!" I see it when I look in the mirror, but now I see it when I look at him, too. And despite my ever expanding waistline.... thinking about his is worse.

4 comments:

  1. It is totally generational. It's good to be thinking about. We ate pretty poorly as kids, and we still suffer the consequences. Habits that are pretty darn tough to break as adults. It blows my mind sometimes when I learn that not everyone grew up with the massive amount of junk as we did.

    And of course that's not complaining about our upbringing, just something I've noticed. But the cycle does have to break somewhere.

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  2. I do fondly remember the tupperware of frozen Little Debbie snacks... but, we were active. So, I will give that to the prior generation. Now, it is nearly impossible to tear kids away from tvs, computers, iPods, and cell phones. If I let Tabbi, she would plant herself on the sofa when she gets home from school and stay there til bedtime. So, what we have on the last generation with healthier snacks, they have on us with exercise and activity. Hey, maybe the answer is that we need an in ground swimming pool!!!

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  3. Yeah, although it's not so much the active vs. non-active at this point. It's the habits. I don't like giving up fun habits.

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  4. I have an in ground pool and I'm still fat! Wait, am I supposed to actually swim in it??

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