Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be the one person in her family that does not comment about her weight or give her suggestions on how to lose it. You don’t need to process anything except how to be kind.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Some crazy high percentage of morbidly obese people in the range of your sister have a history of sexual trauma and abuse. Be careful.
Anonymous wrote:Be the one person in her family that does not comment about her weight or give her suggestions on how to lose it. You don’t need to process anything except how to be kind.
Anonymous wrote:Wait until you can see her face to face and have a little talk with her. Maybe she will need your help.
So many people don't want to say anything to their loved ones about their weight, I think you should absolutely say something. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Be the one person in her family that does not comment about her weight or give her suggestions on how to lose it. You don’t need to process anything except how to be kind.
Anonymous wrote:Some crazy high percentage of morbidly obese people in the range of your sister have a history of sexual trauma and abuse. Be careful.
Anonymous wrote:We're pretty close, our family tends to know each other's business, and I've known other people who have had trauma. While everyone manifests this differently, I have never seen anything in her behavior that even suggests it. I gave this idea some thought after it was suggested earlier and still can't find any clues suggesting that this could be the case.
Why are you so insistent that trauma has to be an underlying factor? I don't doubt that trauma can cause weight gain, but so can a lot of other things.
Anonymous wrote:It's hard not to think of something if you are focused on not thinking it or saying it. The brain fixates on what you are trying to avoid!
Instead, find 5 or 6 other things to focus on. You can even write them down -- ask about her gardening, find out what books she is reading, ask whether she still plays the flute, share a memory about Grandpa's scary Halloween decorations, etc. That sort of thing. Go in with ideas to focus on.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks to all who shared thoughtful comments and constructive suggestions. Several other posters seem to have missed my original comment that I am NOT going to make any comments about her weight gain or try to intervene with unsolicited weight-loss “help”.
Others criticized me for not minding my own business and for making this about me. You’ve also missed the point: I care about her and want her to live a life that is not encumbered by Health problems that can just worsen. Wanting to help, but knowing there’s a limited amount I can do, is frustrating hence my interest in suggestions.
I like the suggestion to keep in touch and in general ask what she is up to. I also like the idea of suggesting that she put herself first—which can only come across as a non-intrusive suggestion if I’m really listening to her and hear any thought from her end about her being stressed etc.
just to clarify, she has not had a lifelong battle with her weight and she hasn’t had a lifelong unhealthy relationship with food. She was a healthy weight until her early 30s. However, I appreciate the comment from a PP about how much a struggle it is to lose weight. I imagine that it’s hard to stay active and have enough energy to burn more calories, and hard to cook healthy meals all the time if there is a busy household.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“It feels so preventable” but it’s really not. Preventable, yes. But not SO preventable as if it’s easy. It’s extraordinarily difficult to lose and then keep off large amounts of weight. That’s a fact. The constant vigilance, deprivation, and mental energy required to be thin or average sized when your body and mind are fighting you is just not something some people are willing or able to take on.
PP and yes. For some of us it's not that easy. I've lost about 100 pounds now and it's a daily, all day every day, struggle to stay this way. My life revolves around it in a way that's pretty exhausting and has for awhile now. It never goes away or really gets any easier. I'm determined to stay this way but it's a lot. Maybe that is something you could "process", OP, as you struggle through trying to accept that your sister is fat.
So much this. I once lost 75 pounds on Weight Watchers but, maybe thanks to genetics or what have you, losing that meant never deviating from the strictest form of the program at that time (no flex points, no eating activity points, lots of exercise). Maintaining was much harder. I could barely add in calories and was working out almost 2 1/2 hours a day. When I had kids I couldn't devote that kind of time and mental energy. I gained it all back plus some. I still exercise. I'm still relatively careful about what I eat. It sucks to be fat, but it sucks more having your life feel consumed by struggling with weight. FWIW, both of my parents were 100+ pounds overweight, as are/were all my siblings. My siblings seem to be on the same weight loss journeys.