Anonymous wrote:What is her height and weight? before and after?
]Anonymous wrote:I'm going through this right now, but as the wife had twins this winter. I've always been thin. Gained soooo much weight during pregnancy. I've never felt that kind of hunger before and I lost all control. That wasn't even my first pregnancy. Always bounced right back to normal weight with previous pregnancies. This time I didn't. Lost some weight bfing but gained it back.
I don't know what to tell you. If DH said anything about my weight, I'd be crushed. I think I'd emotionally eat to deal with it while he's at work. However, it's a real problem, and if I don't get a handle on it soon, it's only going to be harder to solve.
Maybe you could suggest some healthy activities to do together. Like a family walk after dinner or something.
Anonymous wrote:Other things to consider:
1. Do you regularly watch the child in the evening so that she can go for a walk? to the gym?
2. If you do watch the child so that she can go to the gym, is the gym the only place she is ever allowed to go without the child? (That was my case at one point: Hubby would watch the baby so I could go to the gym, but it never occurred to him that I might at some point want to have a cup of coffee, go to a movie without the baby, etc. Going to the gym started to feel a bit like being let out on parole.)
3. How much time do you watch the baby on the weekend so that she can go for a nice walk and enjoy the fall weather, etc?
4. It's really hard to lose weight when your body isn't getting enough sleep. Are you waking up with the baby at least half the time?
5. You mentioned ice cream. It sounds like maybe she's too tired and beat at the end of the day to make herself a healthy treat. Do you ever buy the groceries? Do you ever prepare food? Why don't you help by buying nice fresh fruit and slicing it up so it's available in the refrigerator for all of you to eat? Go on pinterest and read about how to make packages of frozen fruit so all you need to do is throw it in the blender to make a smoothie.
6. Offer to help more -- with laundry, cleaning, etc. I ate a lot when I was angry and resentful because I got no help with the new baby. If your wife is eating her feelings, you need to stop and consider what those feelings might be.

Anonymous wrote:OP, you are going to get absolutely slaughtered here, so brace yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Is your wife in any way experiencing PP depression?
Anonymous wrote:I'm assuming this is your first child. How is life with the baby and the adjustment going, in general? Is your wife back to work or staying home?
Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, I agree with you. She does need to start dropping the weight, but I'm trying to understand if there are other, more pressing factors getting in the way.
Anonymous wrote:We are 5 months post-partum...
No. WE aren't.
5 months... REALLY?
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure there is really anything to do - this is mostly just venting.
We are 5 months post-partum and while DW was actually dropping weight for a while (breast feeding was helping) but she's still close to her birth weight and has started gaining again. The maternity pants came back out. The ice cream diet hasn't slowed down at all. I love her, and we're actually having sex again, and I still think she's got a beautiful face, but the fat is starting to be a problem. She was never a skinny person and I'm OK with that, but instead of leveraging the breast feeding weight loss advantage, she's just chowing down. The pregnancy was complicated so we didn't have sex then (bummed me out because I have a little pregnancy fetish), and now I'm not sure we will get back in the groove because I'm just not really attracted. She's nearly a foot shorter than I am but has like 20 lb advantage on me. I love her and our family, but I just don't think I can gin up a fat fetish.![]()