Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how old are your children?Anonymous wrote:Over the past few years, DW has put on quite a bit of weight. Probably 30-40 pounds. At first, I tried to be understanding about it, but over time, it has caused me to start to feel resentment. It is very unappealing to me, both physically and from the standpoint that I think letting yourself go does not reflect well on a person. How do I deal with this in a gentle manner?
Kids are 4, 2.5, and 10 months. I know that breastfeeding can interfere with weight loss, but she stopped a few months ago, and if anything, she has gained weight since then.
I am an essential employee at a demanding job, so fixing her lunch and dinner isn’t really something that I can do.
I realize she can’t go to the gym right now (gym childcare is closed because of covid), but she could take the baby monitor downstairs and do a workout before the kids wake up in the morning. It’s like she doesn’t care at all.
Anonymous wrote:Stop the dogpile. Plenty of us have 3 kids those ages and haven't gained 30-40lbs. That is excessive in 4 years! 5-10lbs is more normal. If she's overwhelmed maybe being a sahm isn't working for her and you all should get more help or a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so funny to me that people say that a moo of young children has let herself go if she gains weight.
If you look at a person and how much effort she puts into various life activities before and after she has kids, chances are she is going to be putting MUCH more effort into her life after she has kids. She is probably working harder than ever before. She hasn’t let herself go. It’s just that most women simply don’t have the capacity to do everything they did before and care for kids on top of that. We are humans, not cyborgs.
OMG, this. And his solution is that she should get even less sleep than she already is, by waking up earlier so she can work out before the kids get up.
First, that's probably not going to help -- for most women, weight loss is about diet. She's exhausted, most likely, which messes with your appetite-regulating hormones, and it's likely much harder to make healthy meals because she's busy with kids.
And second, it's just so contemptuous. This is his wife and the mother of his children. And he's just mad that she's not hot anymore and thinks it's a character flaw rather than the result of, you know, having three kids under 5.
Anonymous wrote:Stop the dogpile. Plenty of us have 3 kids those ages and haven't gained 30-40lbs. That is excessive in 4 years! 5-10lbs is more normal. If she's overwhelmed maybe being a sahm isn't working for her and you all should get more help or a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Stop the dogpile. Plenty of us have 3 kids those ages and haven't gained 30-40lbs. That is excessive in 4 years! 5-10lbs is more normal. If she's overwhelmed maybe being a sahm isn't working for her and you all should get more help or a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Stop the dogpile. Plenty of us have 3 kids those ages and haven't gained 30-40lbs. That is excessive in 4 years! 5-10lbs is more normal. If she's overwhelmed maybe being a sahm isn't working for her and you all should get more help or a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:She needs time to work out, and more sleep. Arrange your schedule to give her those things. Working out yourself and leaving her to deal with the kids will only mean she has less time to work out, it will not help at all.
Anonymous wrote:Don't say anything about working out, it's 90% diet.
If it were me and my husband really had this concern. I would want him to hire a home chef to make healthy nutritious meals or a meal delivery service.
Not sure if this is in the budget for you but if it is, it's something that works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how old are your children?Anonymous wrote:Over the past few years, DW has put on quite a bit of weight. Probably 30-40 pounds. At first, I tried to be understanding about it, but over time, it has caused me to start to feel resentment. It is very unappealing to me, both physically and from the standpoint that I think letting yourself go does not reflect well on a person. How do I deal with this in a gentle manner?
Kids are 4, 2.5, and 10 months. I know that breastfeeding can interfere with weight loss, but she stopped a few months ago, and if anything, she has gained weight since then.
I am an essential employee at a demanding job, so fixing her lunch and dinner isn’t really something that I can do.
I realize she can’t go to the gym right now (gym childcare is closed because of covid), but she could take the baby monitor downstairs and do a workout before the kids wake up in the morning. It’s like she doesn’t care at all.
Yeah, OP. I'm sorry but unless your wife is getting 2 hours of time to herself each day, she cannot properly take care of herself. I can't imagine being at home with kids that age. She's also probably not sleeping nearly enough which interferes with weight loss. I think the fact that she hasn't had a complete mental breakdown proves she's winning. She probably resents that you get to be out of the house with time to take a piss on your own each day. Also, of course you could do meal prep. You are home at night, correct? You could prep some things then. You refuse to support her but you're resentful of the fact that she's put the needs of you and your three young kids above her own? Would you prefer she puts them in front of the TV all day and exercises? Do you want her to leave the house as soon as you get home for some self care? Sheesh. I'd love for you to be "on" with your kids for three days by yourself. Take some time off and try it.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so funny to me that people say that a moo of young children has let herself go if she gains weight.
If you look at a person and how much effort she puts into various life activities before and after she has kids, chances are she is going to be putting MUCH more effort into her life after she has kids. She is probably working harder than ever before. She hasn’t let herself go. It’s just that most women simply don’t have the capacity to do everything they did before and care for kids on top of that. We are humans, not cyborgs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how old are your children?Anonymous wrote:Over the past few years, DW has put on quite a bit of weight. Probably 30-40 pounds. At first, I tried to be understanding about it, but over time, it has caused me to start to feel resentment. It is very unappealing to me, both physically and from the standpoint that I think letting yourself go does not reflect well on a person. How do I deal with this in a gentle manner?
Kids are 4, 2.5, and 10 months. I know that breastfeeding can interfere with weight loss, but she stopped a few months ago, and if anything, she has gained weight since then.
I am an essential employee at a demanding job, so fixing her lunch and dinner isn’t really something that I can do.
I realize she can’t go to the gym right now (gym childcare is closed because of covid), but she could take the baby monitor downstairs and do a workout before the kids wake up in the morning. It’s like she doesn’t care at all.