Anonymous wrote:I think your options are basically accept it or don't accept it.
I'm the wife in our case. I love exercising - I do it a couple hours every day. If my husband never got off the couch again, he'd be happy.
We've talked about it every which way and at the end of the day, it's just not up to me. He is his own person with his own body, and even if he'd be healthier - and would feel better about himself, and all those things - he's just not interested in exercising more. Or at all.
I don't know what else there is to do about it. You don't get to make someone else be who you want them to be, even if you sure do know what's good for them.
My advice for you and your wife is - just accept that she is who she is, and it's not the person who wants to exercise a lot. If you can't accept that, then - well, you know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make space for them to engage in self care. Set a good example without being preachy. Engage in healthy living and activities that encourage fitness together, even if it’s walking every night after dinner.
And stop comparing how awesome you are compared to them. They feel that, and it may actually be demotivating.
This. The "healthy" one often is completely blind to how much time they spend on their own self-care and how much slack the other spouse is picking up in that regard. After I had a baby my DH made some comment about how we never spend any time together when I started going back to the gym and I was so furious - he spent about 15 hours a week in various sports "training" regimens while I was exhausted and recovering. I told him flat out that his health was being prioritized at the expense of my own and he was being insanely selfish, and he's been really good about being cognizant of that ever since. As soon as DD could sit in a jogging stroller he started taking her with him on his long runs on the weekend, which is guaranteed uninterrupted time for me to get a workout in, stuff like that. But I know for a fact that he just thought that I didn't care about my fitness. It's so myopic and IME people who speak in terms of their elevated "fitness levels" are doing it on the backs of their SO's unpaid/unappreciated labor. While you're trying to PR somebody is keeping the family together behind your back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make space for them to engage in self care. Set a good example without being preachy. Engage in healthy living and activities that encourage fitness together, even if it’s walking every night after dinner.
And stop comparing how awesome you are compared to them. They feel that, and it may actually be demotivating.
OP here. I have actually tried the "walking after dinner" approach as something we could do together because I felt any other activity might be intimidating. But it ended up always being me that had to suggest it. And I felt like that came across as being obvious as to what I was really getting at so I dropped it.
And I never make comparisons. In fact, I will actively downplay any comment from my spouse that suggests that I am somehow "better" in that way. I make it a point not to mention any fitness accomplishments.
Anonymous wrote:Make space for them to engage in self care. Set a good example without being preachy. Engage in healthy living and activities that encourage fitness together, even if it’s walking every night after dinner.
And stop comparing how awesome you are compared to them. They feel that, and it may actually be demotivating.
Anonymous wrote:Make space for them to engage in self care. Set a good example without being preachy. Engage in healthy living and activities that encourage fitness together, even if it’s walking every night after dinner.
And stop comparing how awesome you are compared to them. They feel that, and it may actually be demotivating.
Anonymous wrote:Make space for them to engage in self care. Set a good example without being preachy. Engage in healthy living and activities that encourage fitness together, even if it’s walking every night after dinner.
And stop comparing how awesome you are compared to them. They feel that, and it may actually be demotivating.