Married coworkers want me but I'm to heavy for hubby

Anonymous
After post pregnancy complications. What's wrong with you. I said diet and exercise - as permanent life changes.
Anonymous
I am sorry but how could you be turned on by a man who weighs 135 pounds? Is he short?

Get to the gym and watch what you eat. You need to do this for yourself. Get hot and then divorce your hubby.

Don't pick up guys at work. That is weird and it will not help you in the long run.

Good luck!
Anonymous
The conflict on this thread is caused by two different approaches: you have those who believe the answer is to gently cajole the person into lifestyle changes. I see this all the time on threads that have to do with people who are overweight. There are allegations of fat-shaming, medical issues, eating disorders, need for counseling and so on.

Then there are those who believe that much more is achieved by just confronting the reality: most people who are overweight eat too much, eat the wrong type of food and refrain from physical activity.

I tend to belong to the latter school. It is really not helpful to be enablers - under the guise of being sensitive - to someone who is fat. It does not help the person who needs to lose weight. Most people who are overweight know why they are that way.

I was overweight and one of the things I did was to avoid eating out as much as possible while I was working to lose the weight. Just about any food in restaurants is laden with calories and it is well nigh impossible to lose weight if one eats out a lot. Combine eating sensibly at home with exercise and most people will lose weight.
Anonymous
Even if I was OP and lost the weight, my marriage would be over after DH proved to be so shallow.
Anonymous
It's not all just the simple math of (calories in through food) - (calories burned through exercise). I've watched my wife eat far less than me while exercising far more than me (as in, among other things, training for and running a marathon) and still struggle with her weight. So, if you believe it's that simple, then you're either stupid, naive, or willfully ignorant.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It's not all just the simple math of (calories in through food) - (calories burned through exercise). I've watched my wife eat far less than me while exercising far more than me (as in, among other things, training for and running a marathon) and still struggle with her weight. So, if you believe it's that simple, then you're either stupid, naive, or willfully ignorant.


Sounds to me like you are ignorant.

Going for a walk around the block is not "Exercise".

Eating less isn't the only solution. Eating healthy is.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So, I was 150 lbs when 135lb hubby and I got together, I was 170 lbs for awhile after having a baby (5' 10''), but now I'm 190. Several coworkers express sexual interest. I hate that my husband doesn't. I'm still hot, just a few pounds over my normal weight. Plus, I had a baby and complications afterwards. What do you do when you can't seem to loose the weight?


Different people find different things attractive. You'll never be pleasing to everyone, and regardless - the level of sexual interest that others have in you shouldn't define anything for you. Are YOU happy with your body and current weight? If not, then decide to lose weight - but decide to do it for yourself, not for anyone else. You're unlikely to be successful long-term if you're making changes for others.

You asked "What do you do when you can't seem to lose the weight?" What are you doing to try to lose weight?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The conflict on this thread is caused by two different approaches: you have those who believe the answer is to gently cajole the person into lifestyle changes. I see this all the time on threads that have to do with people who are overweight. There are allegations of fat-shaming, medical issues, eating disorders, need for counseling and so on.

Then there are those who believe that much more is achieved by just confronting the reality: most people who are overweight eat too much, eat the wrong type of food and refrain from physical activity.

I tend to belong to the latter school. It is really not helpful to be enablers - under the guise of being sensitive - to someone who is fat. It does not help the person who needs to lose weight. Most people who are overweight know why they are that way.

I was overweight and one of the things I did was to avoid eating out as much as possible while I was working to lose the weight. Just about any food in restaurants is laden with calories and it is well nigh impossible to lose weight if one eats out a lot. Combine eating sensibly at home with exercise and most people will lose weight.


Your opinion as to the best approach is based on your anecdotal experience. As is mine - and my approach is pretty much the opposite of yours. I used to be morbidly obese, and now I'm a normal weight. Rather than harshly "confronting the reality", I think sensitive, supportive encouragement is more likely to be effective over the long-term. While I agree that most people who are overweight know why, I think they often don't know how to make sustainable changes (or the idea of doing so is overwhelming), and I think the simplistic "you're at fault, and you need to eat less and move more" approach leads people to fad diets, yo-yo dieting, self-hatred and a variety of other things that don't help most people lose weight and keep it off. I don't think that empowering people, without shaming them, is at all the same thing as enabling.

Also anecdotal: I eat out often, and did while I was losing weight as well. Different things can work for different people.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DH doesn't need to do anything. 135 may be healthy for him. If she doesn't like him at 135, then she obviously wouldn't have married him.

Sorry, OP, but 190 is a bit heavy. Your coworkers are either humoring you, or they are assuming that you will be an easy, undemanding lay ("fat chicks try harder," etc.).

Try to avoid falling into the trap of becoming resentful and letting yourself off the hook and insisting that he just be attracted to you even if he isn't. Just accept that you gained weight, for reasons that may be totally understandable, and that your skinny husband probably doesn't like it. Don't be ashamed; just go on a diet and hit the gym. A mountain is moved one stone at a time.



DH absolutely does. Unless he is a midget, 135 is way too little for a grown man.



As far as I know, his height has never been mentioned. If he's 6 feet, then yeah that's a little thin. If he's 5'8", it's fine.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:190 is obese. I feel sorry for both you and your DH. You are physically mismatched.

OP, you need to lose weight and your DH needs to bulk up. Maybe you both need to hit the gym.


Not obese, pleasantly plump, given the height.
Anonymous
Stop talking about her H
He weighed 135 when they got married
So obviously she was attracted to him at 135
She has no grounds to now complain that he's too small


On the other hand, she was 40 pounds lighter when they married. Yes this DOES entitle him to be less attracted to bed now.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It's not all just the simple math of (calories in through food) - (calories burned through exercise). I've watched my wife eat far less than me while exercising far more than me (as in, among other things, training for and running a marathon) and still struggle with her weight. So, if you believe it's that simple, then you're either stupid, naive, or willfully ignorant.


This. Anyone can starve themselves. Keeping it off is the problem. If it were that easy then no one would be overweight. Come on people no one WANTS to be fat especially in cases like this considering all the rejection that comes with it. I have a 2.5 year old and an 8 month old. If my husband treated me like this after having his kids I'd be pissed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The conflict on this thread is caused by two different approaches: you have those who believe the answer is to gently cajole the person into lifestyle changes. I see this all the time on threads that have to do with people who are overweight. There are allegations of fat-shaming, medical issues, eating disorders, need for counseling and so on.

Then there are those who believe that much more is achieved by just confronting the reality: most people who are overweight eat too much, eat the wrong type of food and refrain from physical activity.

I tend to belong to the latter school. It is really not helpful to be enablers - under the guise of being sensitive - to someone who is fat. It does not help the person who needs to lose weight. Most people who are overweight know why they are that way.

I was overweight and one of the things I did was to avoid eating out as much as possible while I was working to lose the weight. Just about any food in restaurants is laden with calories and it is well nigh impossible to lose weight if one eats out a lot. Combine eating sensibly at home with exercise and most people will lose weight.


Your opinion as to the best approach is based on your anecdotal experience. As is mine - and my approach is pretty much the opposite of yours. I used to be morbidly obese, and now I'm a normal weight. Rather than harshly "confronting the reality", I think sensitive, supportive encouragement is more likely to be effective over the long-term. While I agree that most people who are overweight know why, I think they often don't know how to make sustainable changes (or the idea of doing so is overwhelming), and I think the simplistic "you're at fault, and you need to eat less and move more" approach leads people to fad diets, yo-yo dieting, self-hatred and a variety of other things that don't help most people lose weight and keep it off. I don't think that empowering people, without shaming them, is at all the same thing as enabling.

Also anecdotal: I eat out often, and did while I was losing weight as well. Different things can work for different people.


Fat shaming comes up again! Telling someone that they need to get things under control through lifestyle changes is not fat shaming. It is facing reality.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The conflict on this thread is caused by two different approaches: you have those who believe the answer is to gently cajole the person into lifestyle changes. I see this all the time on threads that have to do with people who are overweight. There are allegations of fat-shaming, medical issues, eating disorders, need for counseling and so on.

Then there are those who believe that much more is achieved by just confronting the reality: most people who are overweight eat too much, eat the wrong type of food and refrain from physical activity.

I tend to belong to the latter school. It is really not helpful to be enablers - under the guise of being sensitive - to someone who is fat. It does not help the person who needs to lose weight. Most people who are overweight know why they are that way.

I was overweight and one of the things I did was to avoid eating out as much as possible while I was working to lose the weight. Just about any food in restaurants is laden with calories and it is well nigh impossible to lose weight if one eats out a lot. Combine eating sensibly at home with exercise and most people will lose weight.


Your opinion as to the best approach is based on your anecdotal experience. As is mine - and my approach is pretty much the opposite of yours. I used to be morbidly obese, and now I'm a normal weight. Rather than harshly "confronting the reality", I think sensitive, supportive encouragement is more likely to be effective over the long-term. While I agree that most people who are overweight know why, I think they often don't know how to make sustainable changes (or the idea of doing so is overwhelming), and I think the simplistic "you're at fault, and you need to eat less and move more" approach leads people to fad diets, yo-yo dieting, self-hatred and a variety of other things that don't help most people lose weight and keep it off. I don't think that empowering people, without shaming them, is at all the same thing as enabling.

Also anecdotal: I eat out often, and did while I was losing weight as well. Different things can work for different people.


Fat shaming comes up again! Telling someone that they need to get things under control through lifestyle changes is not fat shaming. It is facing reality.


Gosh, in everything I posted, you managed to read just a single word: "shaming". I actually HATE the phrase "fat-shaming", never use it, and used the word "shaming" in my post rather as a shortcut. I didn't say that telling someone the reality is "fat-shaming". I said that's it's simplistic approach that is unlikely to be effective for many.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:DH doesn't need to do anything. 135 may be healthy for him. If she doesn't like him at 135, then she obviously wouldn't have married him.

Sorry, OP, but 190 is a bit heavy. Your coworkers are either humoring you, or they are assuming that you will be an easy, undemanding lay ("fat chicks try harder," etc.).

Try to avoid falling into the trap of becoming resentful and letting yourself off the hook and insisting that he just be attracted to you even if he isn't. Just accept that you gained weight, for reasons that may be totally understandable, and that your skinny husband probably doesn't like it. Don't be ashamed; just go on a diet and hit the gym. A mountain is moved one stone at a time.



She has no hook to let herself off.
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