Anonymous wrote:This is not a guarantee but statistically speaking she'll wind up overweight. If she wasn't thin before having a child, the combination of having children, the increased stress, the reduced time, and advancing age will likely win out. Your job is to love her in spite of this.

Anonymous wrote:On average breastfeeding requires 300-500 calories a day. I ate way more than that (I'm guessing an extra 1k) and was a beanpole, just couldn't keep weight on. My clothes were falling off me.
Dropping the word "physiology" ever 5 seconds as if we're all the same is seriously annoying to me. Why does one woman get a gut when she overheats while I gain it all in my butt? Why do some women get bigger boobs post pregnancy while I'm down a cup size? "Physiology" doesn't mean we all work the same way. We are all super complex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is her height and weight? before and after?
5'1" - 150
" " - 185
And what is your expectation? To get to 150?
Anonymous
This is not a guarantee but statistically speaking she'll wind up overweight. If she wasn't thin before having a child, the combination of having children, the increased stress, the reduced time, and advancing age will likely win out. Your job is to love her in spite of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the guy is throwing away food so his wife won't eat it, then they have some serious problems that have nothing to do with who weighs how much. That sounds like abusive and controlling behavior to me. What an unpleasant place to have to live -- with people like that. What a horrible environment in which to raise a child.
Don't forget - he's weighing her, too! She was on track and losing but then started gaining again and is almost back up to pregnancy weight.
When did he throw her food away? Or weigh her? You're being weird.
I am not the PP you are responding to, but the OP had a very clear idea of his wife's weight pre- and postpartum. Which seems a bit odd to me.
That doesn't mean he weighed her. It doesn't mean he told her to weigh herself. It doesn't even mean he asked her how much she weighs. She could have shared the numbers. I know I did with DH. He knew how much I weighed prepregnancy. So if I weighed myself and said I was still 30 lbs up from before the baby, he could use thinking and figure it out.
He also knows his wife's soft serve habit. Doesn't mean he follows her or hired a private investigator to track her food consumption.
Because of the amount of work op does with the baby and around the house (notice I didn't say help-it's his responsibility too), the fact that he's not complaining about his wife's food choices or that she's still gaining weight to her, and the fact that she was 150 lbs at 5'1, I'm not reading this guy as a control freak who wants her to be skinny. I think he has valid concerns, he vented a little here, and he heard from other women about how hard it can be to lose weight while breastfeeding. He agreed that's probably the issue and backed off. He took helpful suggestions to heart. What more can he do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the guy is throwing away food so his wife won't eat it, then they have some serious problems that have nothing to do with who weighs how much. That sounds like abusive and controlling behavior to me. What an unpleasant place to have to live -- with people like that. What a horrible environment in which to raise a child.
Don't forget - he's weighing her, too! She was on track and losing but then started gaining again and is almost back up to pregnancy weight.
When did he throw her food away? Or weigh her? You're being weird.
I am not the PP you are responding to, but the OP had a very clear idea of his wife's weight pre- and postpartum. Which seems a bit odd to me.