Anonymous wrote:OP again. lol why are you guys so mean? Like why call our excuses “BS” when I haven’t shared them? I’m asking an innocent, light question about how to break a tie, and you all are angrily telling me that there is no tie to be had and, besides, we suck.
I’m not mad or as defensive as I may sound; I’m just mystified by the aggression.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. lol why are you guys so mean? Like why call our excuses “BS” when I haven’t shared them? I’m asking an innocent, light question about how to break a tie, and you all are angrily telling me that there is no tie to be had and, besides, we suck.
I’m not mad or as defensive as I may sound; I’m just mystified by the aggression.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. lol why are you guys so mean? Like why call our excuses “BS” when I haven’t shared them? I’m asking an innocent, light question about how to break a tie, and you all are angrily telling me that there is no tie to be had and, besides, we suck.
I’m not mad or as defensive as I may sound; I’m just mystified by the aggression.
Anonymous wrote:90% of weight management is diet, so the argument is futile. For health purposes, exercise together. Put that baby or toddler in a carrier and go hiking at Great Falls for 15 miles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husbands premise that the couple needs to make time for him to exercise is the flaw here— if it is medically necessary he needs to make time for it in the way he would make time to take his medicine. Not be given extra free time at your expense. Whatever he does during his current free time is what goes first.
The only time I have expected my husband to make the family time for me to exercise was from 6-12 weeks postpartum when restoring core strength was a time-limited medical priority, that, if ignored, would lead to lifetime change in body. Unless your DH recently gave birth or has been told he needs to lose X lbs to qualify for a surgical intervention, I don’t see his argument.
Where are you getting this but about the “husbands premise”? Seems like you’re reading in stuff that isn’t there.
Anonymous wrote:OP, they are being harsh, but I think changing your mindset from "must exercise during set time when I have no other responsibilities" to "have a more active lifestyle and exercise for free" will benefit you both.
I'm a thin person with a thin husband. Here are things we do:
YouTube yoga video every day, sometimes the kids are there and they think it's hilarious.
Hiking as a family
Walk around the neighborhood everyday. To and from school and other errands we hit 3 miles a day this way.
Bike instead of drive.
Change your whole premise and you will start seeing results really quickly.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I were having a mild disagreement, and I wanted to see if people thought one or both of us were off base:
Suppose, in a household, there is time enough for one spouse, but not both, to exercise. The husband in this scenario is decidedly overweight and, prior to some recent weight loss, was nearing obesity. The wife is not overweight by BMI but weighs more than she would like and weighs more than in the past.
The husband thinks he should get priority because his situation is basically a medical concern; the wife’s position is that she should get priority because our society can be very harsh toward woman based on their appearance and that a husband naturally can’t appreciate how “fat women” are treated.
Who seem more right?
Anonymous wrote:Your husbands premise that the couple needs to make time for him to exercise is the flaw here— if it is medically necessary he needs to make time for it in the way he would make time to take his medicine. Not be given extra free time at your expense. Whatever he does during his current free time is what goes first.
The only time I have expected my husband to make the family time for me to exercise was from 6-12 weeks postpartum when restoring core strength was a time-limited medical priority, that, if ignored, would lead to lifetime change in body. Unless your DH recently gave birth or has been told he needs to lose X lbs to qualify for a surgical intervention, I don’t see his argument.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I rarely post on this website. It’s weird to me how harsh you all are. Anyway, thanks to the few who entertained the premise of the question.