Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope she divorces you and finds some man who likes a little more cushion for the pushin
only low class guys like extra
Pierce Brosnan likes extra
Oh yes and he’s the ONLY one! Name another? I’ll wait.. ..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I couldn't live with wife + 40lbs. Kids will get over. Divorce is what I recommend.
And maybe she can’t live with your balding, Dad body. Men are always so quick to criticize women.....you do know that you all change as well when you age? I don’t care how much you work out....things change for men. And you all expect women to accept it.
Balding is 100% outside his control.
Getting fat is 100% within her control.
Understand the difference?
Here let me help.
Her fatness is like his cheating: a selfish decision.
His baldness is like her reading glasses: an age related physical change.
Anonymous wrote:Tyring to think what would get me off my tuckus to embrace change like this, with young kids.
Make doing things "together" the issue and the "things" are walking, swimming, hiking, etc. Don't go to cardio and weight lifting yet. Offer to get the kids ready, take them along, hire a sitter, or trade outdoor activity time for mommy down time.
And talk about alcohol over use.
Can you prepare snacks and leave them around? My kids will eat an apple if I cut it up, snow peas or snap peas if I wash them and leave then in a bowl, etc.
Does she see a family doctor? Can you make an appt with teh same doctor and ask for help with this? Dr. can make the focus blood pressure, diabetes, etc.
If she still won't try then you involve a marital therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous[b wrote:]I think the kindest and most effective way to do this is to set an example with your own health/fitness, and if she’s the one cooking the dinners, to ask for healthier meals.[/b] Frame any discussions about weight or health around your own “journey”, and hopefully she will either be inspired or get the hint.
This. This. This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I couldn't live with wife + 40lbs. Kids will get over. Divorce is what I recommend.
And maybe she can’t live with your balding, Dad body. Men are always so quick to criticize women.....you do know that you all change as well when you age? I don’t care how much you work out....things change for men. And you all expect women to accept it.
Balding is 100% outside his control.
Getting fat is 100% within her control.
Understand the difference?
Here let me help.
Her fatness is like his cheating: a selfish decision.
His baldness is like her reading glasses: an age related physical change.
+1000
It’s honestly easier for a man to get hair plugs than to lose 40+lbs and keep it off. Weight loss is very, very hard. If OP’s wife had a genetic tendency to gain and a sedentary job and multiple pregnancies, then if you throw in depression and perimenopause, gaining 40lbs could be very easy. If she’s on an SSRI that could add to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I couldn't live with wife + 40lbs. Kids will get over. Divorce is what I recommend.
And maybe she can’t live with your balding, Dad body. Men are always so quick to criticize women.....you do know that you all change as well when you age? I don’t care how much you work out....things change for men. And you all expect women to accept it.
Balding is 100% outside his control.
Getting fat is 100% within her control.
Understand the difference?
Here let me help.
Her fatness is like his cheating: a selfish decision.
His baldness is like her reading glasses: an age related physical change.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wife is about 40 pounds overweight and short. She’s obese. I’m not really attracted to her anymore. Weight gain mostly started 5 years after last kid—this is not kid related. She just stopped working out and started eating more and more sweets and drinking more and more wine.
She doesn’t seem to care about looking good for me. Also a terrible role mode for our kids.
But I don’t want to hurt our kids with divorce. (The rest of our relationship is ok—not amazing or terrible.)
Any suggestions *from women* about how to talk to wife?
May not be pregnancy related, but often it's kid related.
Does she have time to work out? Actual time, not "after the kids go to bed" or "she can wake up an hour earlier". Pitch in with the kids more and take over morning/evening routines so she can get a workout in.
Who cooks? Take over half of the cooking (breakfast, lunch, and dinner - not just 3 dinners a week) and make healthy food.
The wine is a coping mechanism for something. What's she stressed about?
OP here. I do more than half the cooking and she works less than me. I make the time to workout. She doesn’t and refuses.
Lazy is lazy bro. She’s addicted to food and booze. . Their ratioJust like an alcoholic you can’t tell a fat person not to eatnal brain can’t control their addiction to food[/quote]
OP, your wife does not sound like an alcoholic but you might read a couple of the Al Anon books for yourself. Basically the message is that only you can change you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She's stressed.
And while you think you're being subtle, I'm 100% sure that your "disgust" of her is obvious to her. Which doesn't help.
You need to reduce her stress. What SHE is stressed about, not what YOU think she should be stressed about. Especially about crap like inlaws that guys can be oblivious about. Guys have a way of putting stress onto women and then blaming them for being stressed.
Look, here's the thing. She may be stressed. She may be depressed. She may be any number of other things. But SHE IS IN CHARGE OF HER. Not OP. Not his inlaws. No one is responsible for the wellbeing of another adult, unless they are chained in the basement. If she's depressed, it's on her to become un-depressed by whatever means. Seek treatment. Go to the doctor. Something! I hate it when grown women blame other people for what is happening to them.
Anonymous wrote:For men, weight is more about working out. For women, it’s 90% about food. People who push working out most likely have not lost or maintained weight loss.
Changing any habit is extremely hard (read The Power of Habit). It’s going to take a big shift to change her eating habits. [/quote]
OP, who buys the groceries? If you ever buy groceries, skip the crap, skip the snacks and desserts, buy some extra fruits and some extra already chopped carrots/veggies to have around.