Anonymous wrote:Good for mom for getting what she wants to eat after multiple deployments and all that hard work. OP, were you ever active duty? You are benefitting from her service so stop complaining.
P.S. this is fake.
Anonymous wrote:And have you seen the food outlets they have on bases? It’s mostly crap. That pizza they serve at the gas stations on base is the worst.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DW retired from the military and is now staying at home with our two kids -1 and 4yo. I work the night shift at my job so I’m not home for dinner. Instead of cooking at home, she will take the trouble of driving to McDonalds or BK and get fast food instead. If she does cook, it’s Mac and cheese or spaghetti with pasta sauce. No variation and it’s not healthy for our kids. She isn’t healthy either, being in her early 40s and suffering from sleep apnea due to obesity. She says “I don’t know what to cook” so I bought her a cookbook weeks ago but she is visiting the drive-thru as I post this. She grew up on a farm in the Midwest and yet doesn’t like vegetables. She refuses to learn how to use the instantpot and takes the trouble of ordering fries, burgers, and nuggets when she could be cooking real food at home. I’m shaking my head. If you’ve faced this at home, how did you manage?
Who is obese in the military? I call troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work nights and was home for dinner daily. How are you not home for dinner? Eat dinner at 530
Why won't OP reply to this? Troll
OP here. I wish I was a troll. I have to commute an hour to work so eating dinner at 5.30pm isn't going to work for me. I have tried many of the suggestions here but my wife tends to conveniently forget when I'm the one who does the cooking and still gets takeout or fast food.
Anonymous wrote:DW retired from the military and is now staying at home with our two kids -1 and 4yo. I work the night shift at my job so I’m not home for dinner. Instead of cooking at home, she will take the trouble of driving to McDonalds or BK and get fast food instead. If she does cook, it’s Mac and cheese or spaghetti with pasta sauce. No variation and it’s not healthy for our kids. She isn’t healthy either, being in her early 40s and suffering from sleep apnea due to obesity. She says “I don’t know what to cook” so I bought her a cookbook weeks ago but she is visiting the drive-thru as I post this. She grew up on a farm in the Midwest and yet doesn’t like vegetables. She refuses to learn how to use the instantpot and takes the trouble of ordering fries, burgers, and nuggets when she could be cooking real food at home. I’m shaking my head. If you’ve faced this at home, how did you manage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are pasta meals with vegetables included in the frozen food section. Might not be as intimidating as cooking from scratch for her.
Can you make big batch meals and leave them for her to reheat?
+1 start with easy but healthier-than-fast-food options. And YOU do the shopping and plan out which meal for which day. Then all she has to do is microwave it and throw it on some rice or pasta.
Start with that and see how it goes, and then maybe do a meal kit one day a week with BOTH of you there. Then if she gets the hang of it, graduate to one night cooking alone and one night cooking together.
And I think OP is right to be concerned. The eating habits his kids form now will stick with them.
About being concerned: I agree that he is right to be concerned, but he’s going about it the wrong way. He needs to have a better attitude both toward his wife’s approach to feeding her kids as well toward his wife as a person. He’s going to get nowhere if he just continues with “it’s your job so do it.” And divorce won’t help since presumably his wife would still be in charge of feeding the kids, at least part of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are pasta meals with vegetables included in the frozen food section. Might not be as intimidating as cooking from scratch for her.
Can you make big batch meals and leave them for her to reheat?
+1 start with easy but healthier-than-fast-food options. And YOU do the shopping and plan out which meal for which day. Then all she has to do is microwave it and throw it on some rice or pasta.
Start with that and see how it goes, and then maybe do a meal kit one day a week with BOTH of you there. Then if she gets the hang of it, graduate to one night cooking alone and one night cooking together.
And I think OP is right to be concerned. The eating habits his kids form now will stick with them.
About being concerned: I agree that he is right to be concerned, but he’s going about it the wrong way. He needs to have a better attitude both toward his wife’s approach to feeding her kids as well toward his wife as a person. He’s going to get nowhere if he just continues with “it’s your job so do it.” And divorce won’t help since presumably his wife would still be in charge of feeding the kids, at least part of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are pasta meals with vegetables included in the frozen food section. Might not be as intimidating as cooking from scratch for her.
Can you make big batch meals and leave them for her to reheat?
+1 start with easy but healthier-than-fast-food options. And YOU do the shopping and plan out which meal for which day. Then all she has to do is microwave it and throw it on some rice or pasta.
Start with that and see how it goes, and then maybe do a meal kit one day a week with BOTH of you there. Then if she gets the hang of it, graduate to one night cooking alone and one night cooking together.
And I think OP is right to be concerned. The eating habits his kids form now will stick with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are pasta meals with vegetables included in the frozen food section. Might not be as intimidating as cooking from scratch for her.
Can you make big batch meals and leave them for her to reheat?
+1 start with easy but healthier-than-fast-food options. And YOU do the shopping and plan out which meal for which day. Then all she has to do is microwave it and throw it on some rice or pasta.
Start with that and see how it goes, and then maybe do a meal kit one day a week with BOTH of you there. Then if she gets the hang of it, graduate to one night cooking alone and one night cooking together.
And I think OP is right to be concerned. The eating habits his kids form now will stick with them.
Anonymous wrote:There are pasta meals with vegetables included in the frozen food section. Might not be as intimidating as cooking from scratch for her.
Can you make big batch meals and leave them for her to reheat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you not communicate with her at all? You say she conveniently forgets what you’ve made to eat. If so, call her or email or text and mention that dinner is made and you’ll be home by x-time. (This is different than her knowing you’re coming home and have dinner already made and just going out. You said she forgets conveniently. She can’t if you’re texting a few times ahead of time about it.)
Meal plan with her. See what she likes.
- get a crock pot and make it ahead of time
- have easy, ready food for “appetizers” to snack on while waiting for you: carrots and humus, cut up veggies, nuts, cheese, etc.
- grocery shop together
- buy ready made foods that are simple to create into a meal (on days we are rushing from sports, I’ll have frozen chicken breasts from a bag thawed and baked. When I get home, I’ll quickly make a rice packet dish, add the chicken, ginger, peanuts/peanut butter and we have a Thai-like dish in 8 minutes. I also will have that night’s veggie in a small pot ready to add water to and cook the second I get home. Maybe broccoli, asparagus, cauliflower, etc. you could also do those salads in a bag. Point is that you can have the cooking done yourself in 10 min or less from when you enter the door.
- hire someone to make food in the afternoons or weekends
- make food yourself on afternoons and weekends
- get the kids invested in making food - picking recipes, shopping, cooking - and then make a huge deal how we are having Larla’s lasagne that evening. Call larla at 5:30 and remind her to put it in the oven!
All good suggestions but this is a person who prefers not to cook. So having ready made stuff isn’t helpful. She needs to learn or get a divorce.