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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Wife Is Too Skinny "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]What exactly is her issue? [b]Maybe her eating habits are fine but you’re just not used to them? [/b][/quote] Clearly you didn’t read Op’s post. Next time, try reading more than the thread title. [/quote] NP here, I did read the entire post, and I agree with PP that OP is uncomfortable with her habits changing. There really is not enough info to determine if the wife is too skinny, has developed an eating disorder or needs an intervention. [b]However, the post does contain enough cleverly placed buzzwords for people to feel triggered and take OP's side[/b].[/quote]m So self-diagnosing multiple food allergies is okay? [/quote] [b]It's not automatically an eating disorder. When you clean up your diet you notice your body reacts differently even to foods you previously thought were healthy. Also claiming an allergy is an easy way to get people to shut up when they insist you have one more bite or it's okay for you to cheat and have XYZ just this time[/b].[/quote] [b][i] { OP's wife has entered the chat }[/i][/b] [/quote] NP: Not necessarily. For many of us, it takes having the experience of eliminating particular foods and often experimenting with adding them back in and removing them again a few times to understand how our bodies react to foods that we may have been eating all our lives. It’s also way TMI to discuss with pretty much anyone in detail. It’s not “self-diagnosing” to cut back in things like sugar, or wheat flour, for example, even as it may be quite true to claim that your body functions better when you don’t eat those things. I think what’s key is treating this as a wellness issue more than an aesthetic one. Maybe OP and his wife could seek out nutritional guidance together — to explore changes that they might want to make as a family, even as OP makes it clear that he finds voluptuousness attractive. [/quote]
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