Tuesday, February 27, 2007

At the age of 8



The mother of a seven-year-old boy who already weighs 15-and-a-half stone has said she fears he will suffer from bullying and ill-health due to his size.

Connor McCreaddie is four times the weight of an average seven-year-old.

His mum, Nicola McKeown, says he now has to sleep on the floor because he has broken so many beds.

Ms McKeown said Connor was in five-year-olds' clothes when he was 18-months-old. When he was five he was nine stone, she said.

And this year alone he has put on three stone.

"I try to be strict with him and limit what he eats but some days I just think, 'my God, you have had so much today'," Ms KcKeown, 35, from Wallsend, North Tyneside, told the Sunday Sun.

"I know it's going to get worse and his heart and lifespan will be affected.

"He has already been bullied at school. The teachers handled it well and sorted it out, but he is always going to get bullied because of his size."

She said Connor does not go to school any more because he struggles with the five-minute walk. Before that the family could not find a school uniform to fit the 5ft youngster.



Cant believe this...

Fat Tuesday, or Mardi Gras for those of you who parlez
francais. Fat Tuesday is the end of Carnival and
the beginning of Lent. It is also an opportunity for
people, whether they're Catholic or not, to eat and drink
themselves senseless, so I hope you took precautions and
stayed safe.

I was just reading a story about how New Orleans, the U.S.
city most famously associated with Mardi Gras, has one of
the highest murder rates in the country so far for 2007.
27 murders in the last seven weeks.

One example the story cited was the recent shooting of a
teenage boy. It seems after a 17-year-old was beaten up,
his mother gave him a gun and told him to get revenge, and
he killed the boy he fought with.

When police went to his home to investigate, they found the
mother with cocaine and a family photo on display of the
son with a gun in one hand and a fistful of cash in the
other. Obviously not a lot of fear of the police any more
in New Orleans.

But despite this the streets were still full for Mardi Gras.
Mayor Ray Nagin urged tourists to spend money. "We need the
tax revenue bad," he said encouragingly.
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