Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, does your wife have an hour per day to herself? An hour that she chooses? Not just 6am or 8pm when she exhausted? If not, make that happen however you can. She may be too emotionally drained to use it for exercise right off the bat, she may just need a few weeks of time alone to recharge before she tackles a self improvement project. Also, diet counts for more than exercise. Can you take over the meal planning, shopping, and cooking more?
She has a good bit of time to herself during the day. As I said, she works from home but has a fairly light work load most of the time. She watches a lot of Netflix during the day, so I don't really think it's a matter of free time. She does most of the shopping simply because she's able to do it during the day outside of peak traffic times, but we split meal planning and cooking pretty evenly. She goes on and off of good diets, but she struggles to stick with it. I cook my own lunches for the week on Sundays because I prefer to eat home-cooked food rather than eating out, so I usually offer to cook more so she'll have some for her lunch but she usually declines because she doesn't like leftovers very often.
I think that I'll just continue to suggest activities we can do together that are active but not completely based on fitness. She admits she felt tired much less often back when she was more active, so I want her to feel good about herself again.
Do you have kids?
I am not sure if you are deliberately not mentioning them or what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, does your wife have an hour per day to herself? An hour that she chooses? Not just 6am or 8pm when she exhausted? If not, make that happen however you can. She may be too emotionally drained to use it for exercise right off the bat, she may just need a few weeks of time alone to recharge before she tackles a self improvement project. Also, diet counts for more than exercise. Can you take over the meal planning, shopping, and cooking more?
She has a good bit of time to herself during the day. As I said, she works from home but has a fairly light work load most of the time. She watches a lot of Netflix during the day, so I don't really think it's a matter of free time. She does most of the shopping simply because she's able to do it during the day outside of peak traffic times, but we split meal planning and cooking pretty evenly. She goes on and off of good diets, but she struggles to stick with it. I cook my own lunches for the week on Sundays because I prefer to eat home-cooked food rather than eating out, so I usually offer to cook more so she'll have some for her lunch but she usually declines because she doesn't like leftovers very often.
I think that I'll just continue to suggest activities we can do together that are active but not completely based on fitness. She admits she felt tired much less often back when she was more active, so I want her to feel good about herself again.
Anonymous wrote:I have been struggling with an issue for the past couple of years: my spouse and I are at completely different fitness levels. While this has always been the case, the disparity has never been this great. I've always been more fit, but since our engagement/wedding, I've gotten more fit and my spouse has gone the opposite direction. I love my spouse all the same, but I can't pretend that there hasn't been a drop off in physical attraction because of it.
I feel like I'm the only one making a good effort to remain physically attractive (although it is as much for myself as my spouse). I am also concerned for my spouse as there are numerous health issues to think about when we get older. I don't know how to bring this up in a way that doesn't hurt my spouse's feelings. But I find myself less frequently wanting to have sex, which makes me feel guilty, but doesn't change that fact.
Has anyone else been able to successfully broach this subject with minimal fallout?
Anonymous wrote:OP, does your wife have an hour per day to herself? An hour that she chooses? Not just 6am or 8pm when she exhausted? If not, make that happen however you can. She may be too emotionally drained to use it for exercise right off the bat, she may just need a few weeks of time alone to recharge before she tackles a self improvement project. Also, diet counts for more than exercise. Can you take over the meal planning, shopping, and cooking more?
Anonymous wrote:OP, does your wife have an hour per day to herself? An hour that she chooses? Not just 6am or 8pm when she exhausted? If not, make that happen however you can. She may be too emotionally drained to use it for exercise right off the bat, she may just need a few weeks of time alone to recharge before she tackles a self improvement project. Also, diet counts for more than exercise. Can you take over the meal planning, shopping, and cooking more?
Anonymous wrote:Buy a peloton. Women love it!
Anonymous wrote:OP, does your wife have an hour per day to herself? An hour that she chooses? Not just 6am or 8pm when she exhausted? If not, make that happen however you can. She may be too emotionally drained to use it for exercise right off the bat, she may just need a few weeks of time alone to recharge before she tackles a self improvement project. Also, diet counts for more than exercise. Can you take over the meal planning, shopping, and cooking more?
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:OP here. I am a DH, so I was talking about DW. I have racked my brain to think of fun physical activities she'd enjoy, not just ones we would do together just because I enjoyed them. It's been a struggle to find something she'd be self-motivated to do. I'm not expecting anything to the level I take it because I'm just an active person by nature.
And to the PP who said that men who are in shape are self-centered, I'm the guy who never brings up any of my fitness achievements in conversation. DW will frequently do so, but I generally change the subject fairly quickly. So no, I am not self-centered thank you.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I'm a planner by trade, and we always run "no-build" scenarios for any improvement we consider. I am aware that this might very well be such a case and I might have to accept it and move forward. But I thought it would be productive to at least try. I am not going to divorce over something like this, I know what battles to fight and which ones to concede.