64 answers

A Parent Called My 7 Year Old Daughter Fat at School!!

Hello Moms!! I am so emotional about this situation that I need advice on what to do. My daughter is 7 years old, 4'7" and 73 lbs. she is tall and solid, NOT fat!! A little girl in her class said to her "My mom thinks you are fat" my daughter replied with "well, I am not worried about what your mom thinks, I only care about what God thinks" I am so proud of her for the way she handled it, however, it won't always be that way I am sure. I do not want her to have a bad body image at all, she is beautiful and although not small, not fat either. If anything she has a very athletic body style. I don't know if I should approach this mother or not. I don't want to say anything I don't mean out of anger for her ignorance. I spoke to her teacher and she said that she has had problems with this family before and she is going to talk with the mom and read a few books to her class about how everyone should love eachother and that even though we may look different, we are all the same on the inside! What would you do? My biggest concern is the future, I don't want my daughter to be so caught up in her appearance that she ends up with an eating disorder. I am trying to teach my children to be kind and say kind things to people and so far it has worked! Any advice that you have would be great!! Should I leave it alone and only help my daughter understand that even adults make bad choices or should I approach this mom??
Thanks for any insight that you might have!!
W.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Hello Everyone, WOW, thank you so much for all of your responses. I am overwhelmed with the love and support that I received. What an emotional situation, I wish I could have responded to each of you personally, but so many people supported me on this that I ran out of time. My daughter's teacher did talk to this mom and expressed to her how her words do not only affect the child she said it about, but her own child as well. The mom basically had an attitude of "I am entitled to my opinion" the teacher ended the conversation by asking the parent to please keep her opinions to herself in the future and not allow them to come in to her classroom. I am so thankful that the teacher was wonderful and I know the mom might not change from it, but it made me feel better to know the teacher was on my daughters side and looking out for her best interest. I have not approached the mom as of today, my daughter let go of it and I don't want to bring it up and make her think I believe it and make a big deal out of it. I have spoken to all 3 of my daughters their whole lives about the importance of eating right and taking good care of their bodies for health reasons and they do make good choices most the time.

AGAIN... THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!! It was wonderful to have the support of so many other moms and so many good ideas to talk with my daughter's about. So many of you gave some great ways to bring up conversations with my daughter's about eating disorders, living in the OC I do try very hard to keep them balanced so that their future is a healthy one physically and mentally.

God bless each of you and thank you for your kindness!!!
W. S.

Featured Answers

I can totally relate.....my daughter is 9 and I wouldn't call her fat but I know that if she keeps growing outward instead of taller....she'll get there. She is active with ballet and tap dancing and such. She is self-aware and has been bothered by other peoople's comments. She does not need to go on a diet....she is a kid. I have told some people that it is not appropriate to call her fat.

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Chill W.!! I know our first instinct is to defend our kids and try to protect them from emotional pain, but I think you are overreacting. Your info is second hand from the classmate. You don't know what the mom actually said. You are taking the word of a 7 yr old who may have attributed the remark to her mom to be mean and hurtful to your daughter. My mom would never get involved in our kids quarrels. I resented it at the time, but now I'm glad. Remarks from other kids always blew over and we usually ended up friends and I learned to stand up for myself. You clearly have a wonderful daughter who has a solid sense of values and self worth. If you continue to make a huge deal of this she will begin to wonder if the reason is that she really is fat and unattractive. She handled it admirably. Tell her so and be proud and let it go.

M.

1 mom found this helpful

Wow, W., you are doing a TERRIFIC job! I am so impressed that your daughter has been given the strength to stand up for herself as she did, and that you have already set her on the road to a good, positive body image. Believe it or not, the roots of anorexia can actually begin between ages 7 to 9. Keep up with what you're doing, and you're not likely to see problems down the road. If you ever need good "shock" treatment, though, read "Stick Figure" by Lori Gottlieb with your daughter when she's older (around 11 or 12). You can get it through the library.

Now, as for the other child, I would be very concerned. It is clear that her mother is already feeding her the types of negative comments that can cause a negative self image overall (not just body image). If your school has a counselor, it would be a kindness to the child if you can mention your concerns for her to that person or the administration.

I would be careful about approaching the mom. Many people do not respond well to any kind of criticism, even if it's intended to be constructive and generated from a position of genuine concern.

Good Luck with this!

R.

1 mom found this helpful

How appauling of this mother to say such a thing about a child!!! So far I think you have handled this very well. And you are lucky your daughter has a great teacher who is going to work on the issue in class!! From what the teacher says, sounds like this mother may not be very educated and certainly has poor judgement. I don't recommend talking to the mother about this. I forsee a screaming match which would not be good. Insted continue to focus on building your daughter's self esteem. Seems like so far you are doing great (love her response!). try to find female role models who are of a similar body type, most likely pro-athletes or with the summer olympics coming up an olympian! try to stear away from the pop culture icons (they are all way way too skinny). focus on telling her she is healthy and is beautiful all the time. the more positive reinforcement the better! if you start now with building her self image, she is more likely as a pre-teen and teen to be less effected by negativity. good luck! and keep loving your beautiful girl!!

Just like that other girl is following her mother's lead, so too will your daughter follow YOUR lead. It already says a lot of what you have been teaching your daughter for her to respond to that. I think it would be a big mistake for you to go off on that other mom right now. Remember - your daughter is watching you to see how you react. It's great that you talked to the teacher and it's great that you have plans to talk to the mom about it, but don't let it consume you and especially don't let your daughter see you being consumed by someone else's comment. For your daughter, you should continue to raise her to be the strong person that she already is. Unfortunately, there are mean-spirited people out there and your kids will have to know how to handle criticisms - true or not.

Don't you just wonder about people sometimes? It's hard to believe that an adult would say such a hateful thing about a child. I guess some people just weren't raised right.

I would say definitely do not approach this other mom. She is clearly an imbecile and will not take anything you tell her to heart. Let the teacher handle it with the class. Hopefully your daughter and the teacher can at least get through to this other child that what her mother said was hurtful and completely inappropriate.

You must be bursting with pride over your daughter's reaction. Kudos to both of you! The world needs more moms like you - keep up the great work!

When it comes to children, particularly girls, the way a mother reacts to certain situations are ways they learn now to react. If you don't personally have a body image problem, why would your daughter? The biggest influence in your daughter's life is YOU and not what everyone else is doing or saying.

Yes, as a mom your instinct is to protect your little girl and fight back. You want your daughter to do exactly what she did in response to what was said to her. This goes to show you are already at a great start in raising her!

Hi W.,
You answered your own question in the end of your post. It is more important to try to teach your daughter what is important and when to pay attention to the comments of others, than to try and teach this ignorant adult that what she said was hurtful.

If the teacher has stated she had probelms with this family before, than just consider the source and let this be part of lifes lessons to your daughter. Unfortunately she will have to learn people can be very rude.

I have never responded, but thought this one was worth it! Do not waste your time talking to an ADULT with a small mind. Continue to teach your beautiful daughter how to grow up positive inside and out. It is apparent that the mother that would do this kind of negative to a child is not one worth the bad energy. Keep up the good upraising and just stay with a positive home life and your daughter will know that good is good and bad is bad!

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