What you should be doing this summer is turning your child into a fat-burning machine. A few tips
Anything more than two teaspoons of sugar a day—and more than one sweet treat per child per week—is asking for trouble. When you see your kid bouncing high enough to hit the ceiling one moment but so down the next that the only thing he’s good for is a tantrum, don’t blame him, blame yourself: It’s the standard neurological response to excess sugar.
What you should be doing this summer is turning your child into a fat-burning machine. Here a are a few things you can start doing:
There’s so much else you can do: biking trips, the zoo, treks, swimming, dancing. But it doesn’t work if you don’t do your own bit to make fat-burning look cool. The one thing you should avoid is sermons on staying fit, especially those that begin with, “When we were young....”
(A new, fortnightly column on nutrition and fitness, by the best-selling author of Don’t Lose Your Mind, Lose Your Weight)