Nope, it’s not impossible. Make dad spend more time away from home so the kid has more “mommy and me time”. Take the kid to harvest fruit, shop for fruits and vegetables, play “colorful fruits and veggies” games, etc. if you have a garden or a balcony, start planting seasonal vegetables in containers. Make a mommy and me growing food team. You need to get creative. |
This was my thought. It's the same old Parent A and Parent B have very different opinions and actions regarding X. It could be screens, video games, bed time, sports, school, etc. Separate the issue so it's not just one big ball of frustration. 1) The way your husband eats grosses you out and makes you feel unwanted and unappreciated. 2) You want your child to have a healthy diet and good eating habits. Your only option for change is #2. You're not going to change a grown adult who has been eating like this since before you met (you married him knowing all this, BTW). Sit down and have the come to jesus talk about how important it is to you that your child develop healthy eating habits. That includes a role model who doesn't say "Healthy food sucks!" and then scarfs down fast food and soda. Or swings between a keto diet and binging cake. You can't change your DH's choices but you can ask that he eats the fast food at the restaurant instead of bringing it in the house, and that he doesn't undermine your efforts to get your child healthy eating habits. At the least, he should respect you enough to take this topic seriously. But you need to respect that he isn't going to change. +1 for making sure he has life insurance before he develops issues that will drive up the premium. |
| You can’t control how he eats, nor should you want to. I don’t cook for my spouse because we enjoy very different foods. Sometimes the kids eat fast food with him, sometimes they eat what I make with a few adjustments. It’s not all or nothing. I would get out of the mindset that poor diet is necessarily going to create poor outcomes for your husband, because honestly cholesterol is very much genetics based. I’m vegan and I have high cholesterol also. |
| Maybe you really suck at cooking? |
| Why are you coming after bean burritos from Taco Bell? It's great your toddler likes not meat based protein |
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Seconding the lol to Chipotle and Panda Express being not junk????
You waste a lot of money on food, wow |
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The amount of eating out you mention is crazy high.
You and your husband should sit down in the weekend and make a meal plan for the week ahead. Talk about what recipes each of you will like, who cooks which meal, etc. Agree that the meal plan meal is what will be served and eaten by all three of you on those nights….his opportunity to change it isn’t after you cooked, but while you are both making the meal plan. That meal is also what will be served to your toddler, so when making the meal plan make sure it includes one item he likes as part of the whole meal. Include one night a week of “take out”, but not 2 or 3 nights a week. |
+1 |
It doesn’t matter. If Dad comes home with McD, son will bail on his homegrown green beans the second Dad walks through the door. |
Never said those places were not junk but if I needed something quick and wasn’t cooking, those are the less unhealthy fast food options. So when hubby wants to get takeout we compromise on those options |
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"I’m not a good cook but I’d rather eat something that is healthy for sustenance than something that is delicious but unhealthy."
Well that's your problem. You aren't a good cook, and would rather eat something that tastes like garbage than delicious. No wonder no one likes your food! I think it would be unreasonable to expect someone to eat food that they a) hate and b) is acknowledged that isn't very tasty. If my DH was a terrible cook and insisted on making things I didn't like, I'd probably opt out as well. There is a huge amount of compromise available here. Can you guys pick out recipes and cook together? I like pps ideas of making similar things at home, like chipotle bowls or thai food. Maybe he can help make the meal plan. It doesn't sound like you're working, so it's falling on you, but there is no point in buying all this expensive protein and veggies if no one eats it, it goes to waste, and he ends up getting take out anyways. |
OP, I think a lot of the problem is in your presentation. You've used every negative word to describe his diet (it disgusts you), his family's habits, his "addiction" to unhealthy food. Frankly, he's probably digging his heels in just to p*ss you off at this point. Also, from what you've described being OK with eating, I wouldn't call you a 'health nut' either. Certainly healthier than his diet, but most of what you've described seems not too far outside the bounds of normal. If you want success, change how you come at this. In your own head and how you talk to yourself, stop thinking your diet is so healthy and his is disgusting. Reframe it for yourself stopping with the dramatic overwrought language, then you can do the same in your conversations with him and you might have better luck. |
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OP, there is SO MUCH good food that you all can eat based on what you’ve posted. Cheese, butter, and olive oil? And ribeyes? Hello steak Alfredo. With whole wheat noodles, natch. What about burger salads? Tex Mex at home? Meatloaf with orzo and roasted veggies? Roasted chicken (season it LIBERALLY- there is so much out there that isn’t salt), sweet potatoes, and sautéed spinach.
Ok. As I type this out…y’all definitely have a relationship problem. |
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I think you have a marriage problem, not a food problem, OP. I get it because we are in a similar situation. My DH cannot cook, literally ate out every meal before he met me; I was a vegetarian for a long time, love to cook and bake everything. We have three boys. Our way to deal with this is that we eat healthy on weekdays (home cooked dinner, pack lunch for school, no restaurants, no desserts) but we eat whatever we want on the weekends.
DH has yearly blood work and his cholesterol has dropped MAJORLY since we got married. We get our yearly blood work done at the same and compete.
But I’ll add one more thing, my DH has very good manners. Whatever I make, everyone eats with very limited modifications. (5 year old DS doesn’t like food touching, or 3 year old DS might get some blueberries added to his dinner) Our family rule is that I prepare the dinner and everyone can eat however much they want with no comment. So if DS5 only eats the rice, whatever. If DS3 picks out all the chicken, okay. My DH always models politeness to the boys by saying thank you for cooking, etc. I have one memory of one kid making a fuss about not liking something and DH made him leave the table and apologize upon return. |
Maybe you could hire a personal chef? It sounds like you just aren't a great cook and do not have a lot of time/inclination to learn to improve. My children and spouse always ate the same meal. It wasn't a big production. We usually used staff or on occasion I would cook. |