Imagine you are at the grocery store, choosing some ground beef in those 1lb packs. Now imaging 50 of those injected all over your body. Do you not see how utterly unattractive that is? Do you not care how your partner might be completely turned off by this?
It's not about how much you weigh, but how much weight you've gained while married. If you have gained more than like 20 lbs, that makes you a horrible spouse. Sorry but regardless of all the other great/nice things you do, none of that can make up for your unattractive weight gain. Control your diet and lose the weight. You can do it. This is the first move every recent divorcee makes: loses weight to attract dates. Why not do it for your current spouse? |
You spouse knows. They live with you. They know if you are actually concerned about them and their health or vain. They also know if you are neglecting York young children and family in order to workout. |
Please. All you care about is yourself and how it makes you feel. Do you think there is any possibility that your spouse doesn't know that they have gained weight? The answer is no. So save yourself the faux concern and STfU. If it bothers you that much, leave. Otherwise shut your trap. You aren't concerned about your spouse. You are just a jerk. |
You say that like it's a good thing. It's not. It's actually very unhealthy. |
So, if you know it, fix it. |
I'm not a jerk. You're overly sensitive about your weight but that doesn't make me a jerk. |
My weight is fine, thanks. You are a jerk, though. It is very clear from your posts. Your spouse likely loathes you. |
Well, speaking from experience, he would be shades of defensive and hurt, would promise to change his behavior, and then would start eating in secret for a few weeks before resuming chips on the couch and falling asleep at 9 p.m. So sexy! |
Stop already with the bullshit excuses about time for working out. You are lying to yourself about the reason you are overweight. You justify being fat as a sacrifice "for the children/family". Weight gain is all about your diet, not your workout. It take LESS time to eat less. So there: I just saved you time AND you are losing weight. |
Not PP, but it strikes me as silly to say that your options are being overweight and "neglecting" your family to work out. What about family walks? What about each spouse taking 30 minutes a day in the evening to exercise? What about gyms that offer childcare? These things just aren't neglect, although both partners may need to be involved. |
Yeah basically this. All the working out in the world isn't going to help if you keep stuffing your face. Well unless you're a professional athlete and training 8 hours a day. Just consider it would take me 45 minutes of walking to burn off a snickers bar. If you know you're busy and can't work out, you really have to watch your intake. |
I have gained more than 20 pounds since we got married. But my husband has gained much more. So long as I gain less than he has, I guess I'm ok. |
Agreed. Shame on him. But it seems maintaining weight isn't that important to you either. The big marital divide occurs when ONE spouse gains significant weight while the other maintains. Because clearly one side cares, the other doesn't. THAT is where the divorces happen. |
Knowledge |
Do you people live in a world where no one ever gets sick or disabled? I recently found out I have a genetic disorder that is literally destroying my body from the inside out. One of the things that has been destroyed is my thyroid. I take synthetic thyroid hormones, but it hasn't helped. My joints and connective tissue are also disintegrating, so I am not allowed to workout aside from no-impact aquatic therapy, and even that is becoming problematic. I also have to take medication known for causing weight gain so I don't, you know, die. So I've gained 40 lbs, going from a size 0-2 to a 10-12. I can tell just from the difference in the way my husband treats me that he no longer finds me attractive (although other people do - I'm tall, so I carry the weight well and don't have rolls or a double chin or anything). Add the strain on our relationship and finances from my having to stop working, and I'm depressed. I had to give up wine because of the meds, so now I end up indulging in a bowl of ice cream every night just to make life seem bearable for a few minutes. Glad to know all of this makes me a horrible spouse. It confirms the message I'm getting from my own spouse. I didn't ask to get sick and I'm in constant, debilitating physical pain, but I guess I should get used to the emotional abuse from my husband because after all, I brought this on myself by being a horrible spouse who isn't 29 and underweight anymore. Bait and switch, amirite? |