Issues with family meal-time
MsChucktowski
Posts: 121 Member
Hi everyone! I'm 20 and live at home with my parents. This past week, my mum decided that we would make 'fancy' meals (ie, trying out recipes rather than just having veg, protein, carb every night). These have been great, but I am struggling to log these meals calorie-wise. I explained this to her last night, and she took it badly, saying that I don't like anything she cooks and scoffing when I said I want to lose more weight. Weight is a touchy issue with her, she is quite overweight, and I think seeing me lose weight so 'easily' upsets her.
Veg, protein, carb meals used to be really easy for us, because I'd take care of my own protein (vegetarian) and weigh everything. But now, my brother is a vegetarian, and he gets bored with those 'simple' meals, hence the 'fancy' dishes.
I want to just make my own meals most nights, but my mum takes that as a personal attack on her and her cooking.
Anyone have any advice?
Veg, protein, carb meals used to be really easy for us, because I'd take care of my own protein (vegetarian) and weigh everything. But now, my brother is a vegetarian, and he gets bored with those 'simple' meals, hence the 'fancy' dishes.
I want to just make my own meals most nights, but my mum takes that as a personal attack on her and her cooking.
Anyone have any advice?
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Replies
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Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?5
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I cook with recipes quite often and logging them into the recipe part of the pp is a pain--but worth it. Especilly, as I will often have the same thing for lunch! Ask your mom to make extra so you can do that too. She may respond better. And do ask her to make things you like again and again. (Once a recipe is logged in, it is easy peasy to add.)4
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shadow2soul wrote: »Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?
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I'm always pestering my wife about what's in the dinner, can I see the packages, etc. She's used to it by now, but still gets irritated at times. Truth is about half the time I eat my own thing anyway because the dinner doesn't fit my calories. She might not like it, but weight loss is a big priority for me and if I gave in just to save some feelings I'd never have lost the weight.1
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I'm always pestering my wife about what's in the dinner, can I see the packages, etc. She's used to it by now, but still gets irritated at times. Truth is about half the time I eat my own thing anyway because the dinner doesn't fit my calories. She might not like it, but weight loss is a big priority for me and if I gave in just to save some feelings I'd never have lost the weight.
Opposite in my house. My partner is trying to maintain/gain so it's me that needs to log very little thing. He just copies my meals into his diary for his portion, which is usually twice mine lol. Luckily I cook most of the time0 -
I feel for you. Your mom sounds like mine. Gets really offended when you don't eat what she makes, like it's a personal attack on her or something. I agree with poster above that said to look at the recipe and put it in the recipe builder.0
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shadow2soul wrote: »Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?
^^This.
I don't see how she can offense to this. You're happy to eat what she's cooked, you just want to know what you're eating. I don't think that's unreasonable. If she has a problem with this, then you're probably right and there's a deeper issue (i.e., the fact that she's overweight while you're losing weight).1 -
shadow2soul wrote: »Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?
This ^^^^0 -
Move out?2
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When i told my parents about the app and losing weight, I kind of forced my way in to dinner plans. I helped decide on meal plans and shopping lists and will now occasionally cook for the whole family. My mun has even downloaded the app as well.
Maybe just be honest and sincere and see if you can work something out. Help her out when cooking and get the ingredients logged as you go2 -
charlsy1691 wrote: »Move out?
Might be time0 -
Your own Mom is not on board with your goals... I would say time to move out...sigh
I echo the recipe builder.. I use it almost every day.0 -
JemPuddleduck wrote: »Help her out when cooking and get the ingredients logged as you go
^This. You can both learn something from each other by cooking together.
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You are 20 years old and living at home, I assume for free?? The least you can do is offer to take dinner preparation off mom's plate. Step up and start making dinner for the family. Or move out.3
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Why are people on here acting like 20 is old..? Lol.4
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Why are people on here acting like 20 is old..? Lol.
Generational IMO. The older you are the younger you were likely to have been when you moved out and lived on your own. I was working a full time job and had my own apartment when I was 20. And, no, it wasn't luxe by any means.3 -
I have a similar struggle. My MIL lives with us, cooks every night, and no, there's no recipe for me to input - it's all in her head and she measures nothing. Making my own meals after she'd been cooking for us would be rude and hurt her feelings, and her food is delicious! Jumping in to help isn't really an option - she's usually cooking so that dinner is ready when we walk in the door after work.
It's a good problem to have, really.
I do the best I can to guesstimate her ingredients in the recipe builder. But the best advice I can offer you is portion control. I eat carefully (even obsessively) for breakfast and lunch, the meals I have 100% control over. Then I eat her meals for dinner, but I keep my portions small and avoid the tortillas and Mexican rice. It seems mostly to have been a fairly successful plan - I've lost at approximately the rate I should be.
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JeepHair77 wrote: »I have a similar struggle. My MIL lives with us, cooks every night, and no, there's no recipe for me to input - it's all in her head and she measures nothing. Making my own meals after she'd been cooking for us would be rude and hurt her feelings, and her food is delicious! Jumping in to help isn't really an option - she's usually cooking so that dinner is ready when we walk in the door after work.
It's a good problem to have, really.
I do the best I can to guesstimate her ingredients in the recipe builder. But the best advice I can offer you is portion control. I eat carefully (even obsessively) for breakfast and lunch, the meals I have 100% control over. Then I eat her meals for dinner, but I keep my portions small and avoid the tortillas and Mexican rice. It seems mostly to have been a fairly successful plan - I've lost at approximately the rate I should be.
Agreed with that. Same thing you would do going out, portion control, stay away from eating a lot of high calorie food, try some, just don't overdo.0 -
Sounds sabotage-y to me. Not that she cooks but that she's using it to lay on the guilt. (That this is a new plan of hers points to this. If she was always this way her motivations would be easier to see.) You're just going to have to allow her to have her tantrum, tell her you love her, and take care of your own food needs.2
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charlsy1691 wrote: »Move out?
Aggressive, but so incredibly true.2 -
cerise_noir wrote: »shadow2soul wrote: »Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?
wait, what? how do we do this?0 -
charlsy1691 wrote: »Move out?
nail on the head0 -
cerise_noir wrote: »shadow2soul wrote: »Could you ask to see the recipe, plug the ingredients into the recipe builder with the servings the recipe says it will make, and then just log that as a rough estimate?Rage_Phish wrote: »wait, what? how do we do this?
Don't. The recipe importer's so-called matching algorithms are unbelievably bad. Use the old recipe builder instead. http://www.myfitnesspal.com/recipe/calculator
See http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/comment/35918357#Comment_35918357
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Why are people on here acting like 20 is old..? Lol.
Because 20 is an adult. My kids are 23 and 19. Neither live at home. My son is in college, so he will be home this summer for about 6 weeks, but starting in August he will be in an apartment full time instead of living in a dorm. I think a 20 year old who complains because her mom cooks her meals and doesn't prepare it (lo-cal) the way she wants comes off sounding very immature. If you don't like the way your mom does things then you are an adult. Move out and do it how ever you want to.5 -
Why are people on here acting like 20 is old..? Lol.
Because 20 is an adult. My kids are 23 and 19. Neither live at home. My son is in college, so he will be home this summer for about 6 weeks, but starting in August he will be in an apartment full time instead of living in a dorm. I think a 20 year old who complains because her mom cooks her meals and doesn't prepare it (lo-cal) the way she wants comes off sounding very immature. If you don't like the way your mom does things then you are an adult. Move out and do it how ever you want to.
Yes, 20 is an adult. But she doesn't need to have a tantrum and move out because people here are telling her to. My son's in college too, and my daughter is home for the last few months before she leaves for school. She's vegan, and it's a pain sometimes to cook for her because she gets tired of same simple things. So it's a juggle for your mom, I'm sure, to please everyone. Be understanding, help out. Work with her.1 -
Why are people on here acting like 20 is old..? Lol.
Because 20 is an adult. My kids are 23 and 19. Neither live at home. My son is in college, so he will be home this summer for about 6 weeks, but starting in August he will be in an apartment full time instead of living in a dorm. I think a 20 year old who complains because her mom cooks her meals and doesn't prepare it (lo-cal) the way she wants comes off sounding very immature. If you don't like the way your mom does things then you are an adult. Move out and do it how ever you want to.
Yes, 20 is an adult. But she doesn't need to have a tantrum and move out because people here are telling her to. My son's in college too, and my daughter is home for the last few months before she leaves for school. She's vegan, and it's a pain sometimes to cook for her because she gets tired of same simple things. So it's a juggle for your mom, I'm sure, to please everyone. Be understanding, help out. Work with her.
No she doesn't need to have a tantrum and move out. But even if she stays there she is an adult and can always purchase and prepare her own food. The recipe builder is a good idea for her. That way she can log what she eats. But if you are 20 years old and complaining about the way your parents do things I think the obvious option is to grow up and move out on your own as you are an adult.3 -
From the OP: "Veg, protein, carb meals used to be really easy for us, because I'd take care of my own protein (vegetarian) and weigh everything. But now, my brother is a vegetarian, and he gets bored with those 'simple' meals, hence the 'fancy' dishes."
Seems to me she's just venting about the recent change by mom to now try to accommodate the brother is making it harder to track her meals accurately. None of us know anything about her personal situation so telling her to move out and grow up isn't appropriate, IMHO. Not pertinent to what she's asking anyway.
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So your mom largely accommodated your vegetarian meals, now your brother (you didn't say how old he is) wants "fancy" vegetarian meals and your mom is accommodating that, and now you also want low calorie "fancy" vegetarian meals...
Your poor mom.
I thought my kids were picky. I'll tell you what I tell my nine year old - if you can't find something you are willing to eat from the meal I serve, go fix yourself a bowl of cereal or something. Yeesh.6
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