Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a similar issue with my pregnant wife. I brought it up at her doctors appointment and that seemed to help her.
Wait, what?
+2 omg hoping this isn’t real. Op, as someone whose weight fluctuates and whose body will never be as small as it once was unless I starve myself and never stop - the whole “worried” about her thing jjst.. woof. If she was eating and exercising the exact same and wasn’t gaining weight, would you be “worried” about her? Probably not. No one was worried about the health of my sister whose diet consisted of Mac and cheese, sandwiches, and plenty of Wendy’s and Taco Bell because she has my moms stellar gene pool and stayed quite skinny. But suddenly family members are very concerned about my “health” when I start to look more like my dad’s side of the family (whose gene pool I clearly pull much stronger for) even though I had a much more varied and most would say diet that include more “healthy” foods.
My point is - the vast majority of people aren’t worried about your health when they point these things out to you. They are worried about you being fat. Because it’s pretty rough in our society to be fat, totally agree, not ideal. And we very much associate weight with health even though like you said, there are a lot of factors. I would just really try to reflect on what you’re actually worried about. It’s also fair that because we all live in this society it does impact us and attraction sometimes at first when our bodies change. I get it. And also, I would say that it’s probably a good time to start accepting that almost no one remains unscathed from their body changing over time. They are meant to change. And sadly, despite huge efforts from many people, research still shows that it’s incredibly hard to keep off weight you have dieted to lose, almost no matter what you do. So you can either continue the yo-yo or try to embrace living a healthy lifestyle for yourself and not your weight.
That’s probably the most helpful thing you can do for your wife. Because shame just makes us have a harder time to actually make healthy choices.
This is such a thoughtful response. Thanks for posting!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much weight are we talking about?
OP here. The most she has gained is 40lbs but she will gain 5 or 10lbs, lose the weight with a diet, and then gains 20lbs. It’s a constant cycle the last six months.
Maybe she is just more comfortable at a higher weight.
Can you just tell her to get some clothes that fit her now, drop the dieting, and just focus on living her life? Tell her that you don’t mind the 20 lbs, but you miss her being the fun, active person that she was when she wasn’t obsessed with her weight and dieting.
OP here. She isn’t. She is the one that brings up how much weight she gained and gets mad and goes on a diet. Then she is god for a little while and starts slipping and gains the weight back.
Oh. I’m sure that has nothing to do with your implicit judgement of her.
Wow - so much pent up hate and vitriol toward the OP (who is male) in this thread. Some of you must truly hate your husbands- or is it all men you hate?
It’s all men they hate. They need men to have kids and support them but then hate them.
A lot of Hatorade drinkers in here…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woman here. I promise you, OP, if you mention lightheartedly that one of your female friends just lost a lot of weight and looks great, it'll plant a seed
But what kind of seed? If my husband did that I’d either get depressed, resentful, or think DH was being weird. Hard to be sure since he’s never do something like that.
Motivation
That was a rhetorical question lol. I’m saying that as a woman it would not motivate me to lose weight at all.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- I read what you said about what you have observed. Some advice.
First, do NOT bring up the weight fluctuations. She knows, and she's already thinking about them all the time. The most important thing you said is "I see you tormenting yourself and even when successful with your diets, you're not happy. Maybe you should see a professional to try to get at the underlying issues and who can help you with underlying strategies to cope. It makes me sad to see you unhappy."
You are NOT her dietician or exercise coach, or even her shrink. Many food issues come from a desire for control, and having someone else trying to control you just makes it worse. My DH was a saint when I went through a period of extremely disordered eating when we were dating, and he never said a thing because he knew I had to figure it out myself. The one thing he did do is realize that I was the most crazy when I was particularly starving, so he'd just say "hey, let's go out for lunch today. I feel like cheeseburgers". For some reason, if he said we should have cheeseburgers, I would eat one at the restaurant, and I would be a lot less crazy for a while because I actually had food in me. But he never said 'you're too thin, why are you doing that, just eat food, you have a disease, stop that, let me take care of this for you, etc". Because I would have doubled down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much weight are we talking about?
OP here. The most she has gained is 40lbs but she will gain 5 or 10lbs, lose the weight with a diet, and then gains 20lbs. It’s a constant cycle the last six months.
Maybe she is just more comfortable at a higher weight.
Can you just tell her to get some clothes that fit her now, drop the dieting, and just focus on living her life? Tell her that you don’t mind the 20 lbs, but you miss her being the fun, active person that she was when she wasn’t obsessed with her weight and dieting.
OP here. She isn’t. She is the one that brings up how much weight she gained and gets mad and goes on a diet. Then she is god for a little while and starts slipping and gains the weight back.
Oh. I’m sure that has nothing to do with your implicit judgement of her.
OP here. I have not said anything about her weight or late night eating. Our relationship had remained normal - still very attracted to her and we still have sex. We still show affection through cuddling and kissing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woman here. I promise you, OP, if you mention lightheartedly that one of your female friends just lost a lot of weight and looks great, it'll plant a seed
But what kind of seed? If my husband did that I’d either get depressed, resentful, or think DH was being weird. Hard to be sure since he’s never do something like that.
Motivation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woman here. I promise you, OP, if you mention lightheartedly that one of your female friends just lost a lot of weight and looks great, it'll plant a seed
But what kind of seed? If my husband did that I’d either get depressed, resentful, or think DH was being weird. Hard to be sure since he’s never do something like that.
Motivation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woman here. I promise you, OP, if you mention lightheartedly that one of your female friends just lost a lot of weight and looks great, it'll plant a seed
But what kind of seed? If my husband did that I’d either get depressed, resentful, or think DH was being weird. Hard to be sure since he’s never do something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Woman here. I promise you, OP, if you mention lightheartedly that one of your female friends just lost a lot of weight and looks great, it'll plant a seed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much weight are we talking about?
OP here. The most she has gained is 40lbs but she will gain 5 or 10lbs, lose the weight with a diet, and then gains 20lbs. It’s a constant cycle the last six months.
Maybe she is just more comfortable at a higher weight.
Can you just tell her to get some clothes that fit her now, drop the dieting, and just focus on living her life? Tell her that you don’t mind the 20 lbs, but you miss her being the fun, active person that she was when she wasn’t obsessed with her weight and dieting.
OP here. She isn’t. She is the one that brings up how much weight she gained and gets mad and goes on a diet. Then she is god for a little while and starts slipping and gains the weight back.
Oh. I’m sure that has nothing to do with your implicit judgement of her.
Wow - so much pent up hate and vitriol toward the OP (who is male) in this thread. Some of you must truly hate your husbands- or is it all men you hate?
It’s all men they hate. They need men to have kids and support them but then hate them.
Anonymous wrote:I had a similar issue with my pregnant wife. I brought it up at her doctors appointment and that seemed to help her.