Hi copygirl13
I'm sorry about your son's weight problem. It must be very scary for you for him to be that weight at that age (or maybe he is really tall also?). I'm sure you have tried lots of different things already. And I'm no expert on this. My only experience in this area is that I raised a son myself. He didn't have a weight problem but we did have other issues that I had to try and change his behavior on, so maybe my past experience contains something that can help you (and maybe not). Take anything you think you can use and throw away the rest.
Obviously the idea in weight loss is to burn more calories than you take in. In terms of accomplishing this it might be helpful to know your son's personality/temperment type. For example, does your son "recharge his batteries" or "get energy" from being around people or from spending time alone? If
he gets energy from being around people and interacting with them then find a physical activity that incorporates being with a lot of other people and verbally interacting with them. Team sports or groups activities might be most helpful. Volleyball or even something like a bowling league would get him up and moving. If he is drained by being with people and interacting with them, then find a physical activity that he can do alone. Swimming is good for people who like to be alone to recharge their energy. I'm guessing if he is nine y.o. and 200 lbs. then you need to go slow and do low impact stuff at first?
Other personality characteristics to consider in choosing exercise activities is competiveness vs. cooperativeness. Does he prefer to compete with other people when playing games or mastering a new activity or does he prefer just to compete with himself? If he likes to compete with others then you will need to find a sport or activity where he can do that. If he prefers to compete with himself to improve his performance then he won't be happy with being made to compete with others.
Another thing to consider: does your son prefer things to be structured with lots of rules (is he a by the rules person) or does he like things to be open-ended, unstructured, few rules, etc. If he prefers structure then a sport or activity with lots of structure will hold his attention better. Structured activities would be things like baseball, soccer, football, martial arts, etc. Activities that are not structured are things like inline skating, skateboarding, playing hackesack, frisbee, etc.
So you need to figure out what his preferences are:
1) Activities that allow him to interact with others or activities he can do alone
2) Activities where he competes with himself or activities where he competes with others
3) Activities that are structured with lots of rules or activities that are open-ended, unstructured and have few rules or where you can make up the rules yourself
Then once you figure out what his three preferences are, find an activity (preferably several activities) that fit all three of his preferences at once. For example, my son liked activities he could do alone, liked to compete with himself and liked things to be unstructured and open-ended. He gravitated to skateboarding and that became his passion for about 5 years. It kept him fit, kept him from being bored with life throughout his adolescent years and altogether was nothing but positive for him. I tried for years to interest him in other sports; peewee football, soccer, lacrosse, etc., etc. He would play them for one season and quit. They did not interest him (even though he was quite athletic) because they were not a "good fit" for his personality.
The main thing is to get your son moving. Don't let him sit in front of a computer, TV, or video game for more than 1-2 hours a day at most. He needs to be on his feet and doing things--maybe doing them slowly and in a low impact fashion at first--but moving somehow.
Good luck copygirl
http://www.healthboards.com/ubb/bang.gif Raising children is a tough job, I hope maybe something I've shared will be a help to you.
God bless
Kim
[This message has been edited by kvanrijn (edited 02-02-2003).]