Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bottom line, OP, is that if your wife doesn't have "time" to exercise -- between her commute, job and new baby -- she is not adjusting as well to motherhood as you think she is.
I agree with you; this is a problem and it's only going to get worse. It sounds like she is stress eating at this point, perhaps an subconscious attempt to feel better about pressure she is feeling that she is not discussing with you. You sound very vested in the point that your baby is so easy, she bounced back and you all adjusted so well. Maybe not so much for her.
I think you need to have a serious talk with her. Her health and weight is more important than her job. It sounds like her priorities (yours too?) are out of whack. Something has to give when you have a new baby. I wonder if you two are just trying to go forward with your lives as though nothing changed.
Exercise won't make her skinny. It's her poor eating habit that is making her fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He buys the ice cream to keep in the freezer and then takes her out for ice cream 1x a week. That is enabling. They need to find something else fun to do besides going to the ice cream shop.
I'm the OP and you can't read: I said I do the shopping and I do not keep ice cream in the house. We do plenty of other things (went on a 5 mile hike in the SNP on Saturday before the dinner out and gelato) aside from going to the shop.
Anonymous wrote:He buys the ice cream to keep in the freezer and then takes her out for ice cream 1x a week. That is enabling. They need to find something else fun to do besides going to the ice cream shop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are going to get absolutely slaughtered here, so brace yourself.
Oh, I knew this was going to happen. I am just venting...I don't really care.
Anonymous wrote:Is your wife in any way experiencing PP depression?
No, not a bit. And she bounced back pretty quickly really. A few tears and times when she missed him after she went back to work, but she's actually doing really well.
Anonymous wrote:I'm assuming this is your first child. How is life with the baby and the adjustment going, in general? Is your wife back to work or staying home?
We both took leave (she for 2 months, me for one), and I do more of the daily child-related stuff, and most of the household chores (laundry, shopping, cooking). The baby is easy, sleeps through the night (for since the 2 month mark) and we're actually adjusting shockingly well. Most people I know with small children are envious and snarky about it.
Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, I agree with you. She does need to start dropping the weight, but I'm trying to understand if there are other, more pressing factors getting in the way.
Time is the big issue - between job and commute, she just doesn't have time for the gym. I don't think the gym is the main issue though. I've shifted the cooking and meals, but the lunchtime fast food and ice cream for between meals snacks is packing it on.
For those who say "you're not allowed to judge" - it's not "judging" (I don't say a word to her about what she's eating or her weight), it's just that I can't help but seeing that she is getting bigger, and it's not baby. And when you say "for a year" - you realize, the longer it's on, the harder it will be to get off - and it will probably never come off.
Anonymous wrote:
5 months post-partum?
Come back in two years, OP.
I am ALL for direct communication between spouse: "My dear, you're getting fat and I'm worried about your health and looks." Both DH and I have said this to each other, and acted on it.
But not 5 months after a baby, OP. No, no, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to come up with a better date night plan than eating a zillion calories of ice cream. Especially if ice cream is her one true weakness. You are sort of enabling that ice cream habit. Why?
I'm sorry, this is just ridiculous. Going out for a single serving 1x a week is not enabling; keeping a couple of quarts in the freezer at all times is enabling.
Anonymous wrote:You need to come up with a better date night plan than eating a zillion calories of ice cream. Especially if ice cream is her one true weakness. You are sort of enabling that ice cream habit. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breastfeeding made me ravenous, OP. I mean, total sweet tooth, wanted to eat burgers all the time. I would give it another few months before you broach this sensitive subject. In the meantime, just keep buying and cooking healthy food and doing what you can to ensure she gets enough sleep and time to herself.
Yeah, I'm coming around to see it this way...and I'm ok with that. I took her out for ice cream last weekend at the Moo-Thru and for Gelato this weekend (on our child-free date night). It not so much the occasional treats as the regular pattern (daily), but this (and the excellent Oreo story) may be what's going on, and that's fine.
Unless there is an accident with the IUD, we're not getting pregnant again for at least a few years, if ever, so when the BFing winds down over the next couple of months (that's the plan) maybe things will start to revert.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the 10:29 poster and I agree that only a salad is not the way to go while breastfeeding - I breastfed my child for 3 years, no formula. She needs to eat low carb, lots of good fats and protein.
Anonymous wrote:Breastfeeding made me ravenous, OP. I mean, total sweet tooth, wanted to eat burgers all the time. I would give it another few months before you broach this sensitive subject. In the meantime, just keep buying and cooking healthy food and doing what you can to ensure she gets enough sleep and time to herself.