...I would not be very happy if I was in a program that did not notice when gymnasts were growing...developing...and gaining weight. After all...training (at the upper levels) may need to be adjusted at times when a gymnast gains/loses weight.
I think the gymnast's overall well being is the primary driver of any good coach. I know that while I care, I may not appear to care enough, or align myself to the preference of one parent or the other. I've read a number of posts that urge coaches to do nothing more than coach, and leave the parenting to the parents. I agree that parents should be making decisions for their child, or along with their child. My assumption is that happens best when the parents are informed and have a basic understanding of every side of any issue they consider. The same holds true for parents who provide the coach with information about their child to give the coach insight into developments in their child's life that may affect their training.
In that context, I think it's reasonable for a coach to meet with parents, as a group or individually and provide information about everything that affects their child's participation in the sport. It's also reasonable for parents to tell the coach what does, and what does not work for their child.
I quoted JBS because he seems to have a reasoned approach that defers to parents, yet allows for process to keep kids safe and training.
My position??? I want every child to have the best chance possible to get what they want out of the sport, and that it's up to each parent to decide the definition of possible. I hold this position because kids have their own view of the world and their role in the world. My worry is that some kids will leave this sport convinced that the world is not on their side, and that making an investment of heart is a foolish waste....... and that they fell for it and are, I don't know.... plug in what ever mistaken impression a child might have, by giving 100% to a losing cause.
In my previous post I suggested that a wise , nutritious diet would give each child the healthiest gymnastics body they could possibly have, and I think it makes sense that nutrition is one of the top priorities a gymnast's parents can have. I may not be reading correctly, but it seems that may be a pipe dream as there are a number of posts that infer the subject of food is taboo, and to let the kid eat by accident on a hit and miss basis because that will prevent the onset of an eating disorder....... the less said about it the better.
Come to think of it, that may prove to be true.
I'm sure there are some people who think it's flirting with disaster to let a child find out food plays a role in how they think, learn, and perform that goes well beyond eating a good snack before practice. The reality is that most will find out on their own, way before they hear about it from a coach (not the coach's role, right , or responsibility) or trusted adult, and may indeed start changing their diet in complete secrecy, and that's when you have a genuine problem to worry about.
So relax and don't worry, of course keep careful watch, because if you worry out of place, you may create something to worry about. I guess you could say my attitude is there are times and situations where trying to avoid being a victim is the first step to becoming a victim.