Anonymous wrote:MIL and FIL were having a stressful conversation which I wasn't suppose to hear. FIL unhappy MIL hadn't bought enough sliced ham. But it was apparently my doing as I took 4 slices instead of the anticipated 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have had guests who seem to want to eat all the time. I can't help but wonder how the OP's ILs would tell this story. I always have a ton of food in the house and people are welcome to get whatever they want from the kitchen. But I will admit that I judge. No one needs three big meals a day. I also hate when people hyper focus on food. Don't ask me about dinner at 10am.
You're kidding, right? ESPECIALLY if you're not letting people eat lots of smaller meals throughout the day ('grazing' which you'll call 'eating all the time') then everyone needs three big meals a day.
NP. And, no. Not everyone needs three "big" meals a day. Three meals a day, sure. But they don't need to be big, that thought process is why the entire country's fat as hell. Moderate meals are fine and, also no, there's no reason for most people to be eating several small meals or grazing non-stop (see, "fat as hell") above. That is something that came out of body-building because they DO need to be eating constantly for muscle mass, and does not apply to average sedentary Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:np: When relatives visit us, I hate dishing out every meal for them but I do it. Then they hurt my feelings by going out to eat, implying my meals weren't satisfying. When we visit relatives, we have to bring all our own food because we keep kosher. They live where there are no kosher restaurants. It's hard.
No offense, but I'm Jewish & I HATE kosher.
Anonymous wrote:Who's in there?
Hey, it's me.
What's going on?
I'm making a snack.
What do you need?
Food. I'm hungry. Don't worry though, I'm making it myself.
Are you eating again?
Of course, I haven't eaten since 9am. Why aren't you eating? Should I be worried about you? Do you have an eating disorder? I know someone with an eating disorder and she didn't eat for 8 hours at a time either... maybe I could ask for a recommendation for an eating disorder therapist? I'm sure she'd know someone good around here... (etc)
I just can't take the judgment/scrutiny.
She's the one with an issue. Not you. Put the judgement back on her.
And if she says anything beyond the above, just say that food is necessary for life, and if it's not possible to eat the way normal people eat while you're in her house then you guys will have to decline visits in future. And maybe you guys can all just meet for a visit at the museum or something where people don't have to eat and so her eating disorder won't be an issue.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't have a great solution for you, but my approach has been: to realize this will be an issues so I try to focus on the other parts of the visit and not think about food too much, use it as an opportunity to lose some weight,
Anonymous wrote:np: When relatives visit us, I hate dishing out every meal for them but I do it. Then they hurt my feelings by going out to eat, implying my meals weren't satisfying. When we visit relatives, we have to bring all our own food because we keep kosher. They live where there are no kosher restaurants. It's hard.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have the exact same problem. This time I packed food in my suitcase and have been secretly eating upstairs. Tomorrow, I am sneaking the evidence out (i.e. wrappers).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised that no one has mentioned that older people, in general, eat less than younger people. Both my parents and my ILs serve the pithiest little meals and we are also always hungry when we visit them. We just use the kids as an excuse and do a grocery trip when we visit either set of parents.
This is so true. Older people eat so much less and forget that this is not how they used to eat. I am also surprised by all the posters that have no problem going into a MIL's kitchen, stocking it with extra food and helping themselves, etc. I think that is a pretty rude houseguest.
I am very sympathetic to the poster, my mother is the same way. She has completely forgotten how much more kids and younger adults eat. She is no longer accustomed to cooking for more than two people or having people in her kitchen. She is definitely a control freak, but I also understand how difficult it is for some older people to shift gears. Every rattling of a wrapper, every time you open the fridge to look for something, she is in the kitchen in a flash to "help".
I don't have a great solution for you, but my approach has been: to realize this will be an issues so I try to focus on the other parts of the visit and not think about food too much, use it as an opportunity to lose some weight, feed the kids snacks on outings outside of the house, offer to take them out for dinner at least once a trip, offer to do more of the cooking so the portions are more appropriate. That combination gets us through, but meals and food in general are definitely not a highlight of the visit.
And we stay with her because she really wants us to.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised that no one has mentioned that older people, in general, eat less than younger people. Both my parents and my ILs serve the pithiest little meals and we are also always hungry when we visit them. We just use the kids as an excuse and do a grocery trip when we visit either set of parents.
Anonymous wrote: Elderly inactive people can have such slow metabolisms that they really don't need much in the way of food, but perhaps they are also trying to make you eat less?
Anonymous wrote:
Older people really do not need a lot of food and food often cause stomach distress.
Anonymous wrote:Old people eat so much less.