My fifteen-year-old daughter Chloe began putting on weight not long after I remarried and we all moved in under the same roof. At first, I told myself it was just the stress of change—new routines, a new home, a new dynamic. But it wasn’t just the weight. It was how she seemed to fade into herself.
She stopped wearing her favorite outfits and hid behind oversized hoodies, even when it was warm. She avoided mirrors, flinched at the lightest touch, and kept her distance from everyone. Dinner became a battle—she’d barely eat in front of us, but I’d later find wrappers hidden in her room, like she didn’t want to be seen.
One evening, I tried again. “Chloe, what’s going on?”
She kept her eyes fixed on her phone. “Nothing. I’ve just been eating more,” she muttered.
From the couch, my husband Mark chuckled. “You’re reading too much into it,” he said casually. “Teenagers go through phases.”
I didn’t like how easily he dismissed it. Like concern was something to be embarrassed about.
Still, I tried to be patient. I suggested spending time together—walks, movie nights, even therapy “just to talk.” But Chloe always brushed it off, her answers quick, almost rehearsed.