Pushy co workers who give out food

24

Replies

  • hydelaa
    hydelaa Posts: 184
    There is this Greek restaurant that the owner is like a grandma to me, and she always is offering me food. Trying to loose weight I nicely said "no thank you" and she replies "is everything okay?" I laughed and said "yes, just trying to loose weight"
  • Polly758
    Polly758 Posts: 623 Member
    I often take a serving to my desk, have one bite, and throw the rest away.

    I get to try it, and as a bonus, I'm removing the junk from myself and everyone else's opportunity to eat it and regret it later.

    If someone is at your desk pushing food on you, you might even say, "I'm going to throw that in the garbage the second you leave," with a big smile.
  • Acg67
    Acg67 Posts: 12,142 Member
    Damn those evil saboteurs, they're just jealous of your healthy lifestyle
  • Why is it that they cannot just respect the fact that you don't want the donut??? I don't get it! If you had stopped smoking, do you think that they would put a *kitten* and a lighter on your desk and walk away! ha ha I work in a Sixth Form and when the students bring in birthday cake, a slice usually finds its way on my desk. They don't take no for an answer, so I have stopped refusing now. I just thank them and when no-one is around, I wrap it in kitchen towel and pop it in the bin. They are happy as they think that I have eaten it and I am happy as I know that I haven't.

    The coworkers that try to tempt you, are they all a perfect size 10 or are they needing to get fit and just don't have the will power that you have have? Just curious really as when I gave up smoking years ago, it was the smokers who tried to get me to have one!
  • rebeccap13
    rebeccap13 Posts: 754 Member
    No one can force you to eat something. Its called willpower. Say no or take it and throw it away. Making excuses and blaming other people is how you got to where you are right now in the first place.
  • haha I have this guy who insists on feeding me, brings in personal sized pies, baked goods, chinese treats he finds, chips, chocolate, you name it. I do say no, but he tells me it because I'm shy and he knows I really want it....So he brings it to my desk and leaves.
    Frustrating to say the least.
    I now say thank you, chuck it, bring it home....or taste it

    Because when a woman says no she really means yes, right? Please...
  • I'm getting kind of outspoken in my old age. ;-) Nobody has really done this to me ever, but I do have a guy who brings me granola bars every once-in-a-while and will just leave them on my desk when I'm not around. I give them to someone else or take them home to my kid.

    If someone was like insistant like that, I'd just tell them, "Fine. You can leave it there, but it's gonna sit there cuz I'm not going to eat it."
  • stefjc
    stefjc Posts: 484 Member
    Ah, but if we'd had that kind of willpower in the first place we wouldn't have an issue with workplace food.

    I was brought up with the 'clear your plate, think of the starving children' ideology. So throwing food away horrifies me. Very little at home goes in the bin - most gets composted.

    If it was just down to making excuses and blaming other people most of us would have cracked it by now. But for some of us it is a little bit more and keys into all sorts of emotions, especially guilt. For me that is certainly the case as I saw my Gran and mother go without to feed us kids. Food has always been how we show love - I still do it now, I just try to make the food more healthy!

    And on my nice days I too bake and take into work. But l leave it in a big plastic box so it isn't easily seen and tell people to help themselves - out of plain sight and not so easy to just grab as you pass by!
  • When my well meaning coworkers and family members aggressively push me to eat their offerings, even after my polite declines, I reply "This is food rape. No means no."
    It's working for me so far.
  • cramernh
    cramernh Posts: 3,335 Member
    Ah, but if we'd had that kind of willpower in the first place we wouldn't have an issue with workplace food.

    Food has always been how we show love - I still do it now, I just try to make the food more healthy!

    Its not food in the work-place - its the PEOPLE in the work-place who push the food. That is the issue.


    The real root of the problem is the fact the offering person does not accept "no thank you" for the answer the first time. People can offer all the food they want - but the real problem is their lacking ability to accept "No Thank you" on the first prompting.

    If people truly did care, regardless of relation, they will accept "no thank you" and move on - that is showing respect for one another.

    Its people who routinely and continue to push who are extremely insensitive and rude.... You definitely dont need to show love with Food.
  • Scott277
    Scott277 Posts: 63
    feel your pain!!

    It seems every bloody day is someones birthday at my work so there is cakes/donughts everywhere! and theres the people with biscuits at the desk that offer you one all the time lol.


    I have never ate a single one of those cakes and that is key. I now pride myself on the fact i don't and in my head it makes me feel so good I can resist to the point now i really am getting over it, I just think nah its fine id rather keep to my no cake record!
  • msacurrie
    msacurrie Posts: 144 Member
    Well, try to say no thank you - let them know you watch what you eat...I wouldn't suggest throwing it out because that's just a waste. If it continues let them know it makes you uncomfortable because you don't want to hurt their feelings, but you don't want to mess with your results. But remember that it's ok to give in every now and then to treat yourself!
  • dsjohndrow
    dsjohndrow Posts: 1,820 Member
    Well, here's a list of snarky come backs. You can mix and match.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/dsjohndrow/view/snarky-comebacks-to-inconsiderate-clods-163026
  • Bentley2718
    Bentley2718 Posts: 1,689 Member
    Not now, but in the past yes. I even had one coworker who gave my officemate *kitten* because she declined something that could have killed her (my officemate had very severe food allergies). She hated me, and stopped pushing food on me after a while, but before that, I would either, just set it in a public area for someone else to take, or put it back on her desk, with a polite "no thank you."
  • jen_bd6
    jen_bd6 Posts: 501 Member
    I've experienced that before... but i have coworkers now who are very supportive and actually wont LET me indulge in anything... they will even hide sweets and things from me so that I dont have to look at it. My last job wasn't like that at all... we always had SOMETHING to eat there... I guess I can say I lucked out this time.
  • 29forever
    29forever Posts: 59 Member
    I usually say no thank you. But when it is a gift from the children I teach I feel like I need to accept it. I graciously accept it then I tell them I will save it for later. Then I take it home to my children. I know it makes my children happy when I bring home treats to them and it pleases the students to give me a gift. If I can see that they really want me to try it I will take a bite in front of them to tell them how wonderful it tastes then "save the rest for later."
  • zestyzaftig
    zestyzaftig Posts: 103 Member
    If they don't accept a polite decline, then be more assertive.

    Another option: leave an apple or banana on a prominent place on your desk.

    Yet another idea: keep a box of food baggies in your drawer, and when food is left on your desk, stick it in the baggie and give it to a random homeless person you come across on your way home.
  • jennielou75
    jennielou75 Posts: 197 Member
    I am a teacher and we have a lot of treats brought into work. I had surgery and so was on pureed foods so a colleague of mine brought me in butternut squash soup when it was her birthday, another brought in a low cal chocolate mousse for her birthday. When we had international day a mum made me pureed lentil dahl again so I could join in. Maybe I have been lucky but when you make it open and clear that you are losing weight people do understand. For my birthday I couldn't bring in cakes or biscuits or any kind of food so I brought in bunches of roses and everyone took one home.
  • VogtAndrea
    VogtAndrea Posts: 236
    I just say Thankyou, that looks awesome but please take it away because my resolve just isn't really good today. Give it to someone REALLY skinny.
  • GretchenReine
    GretchenReine Posts: 1,374 Member
    Honestly...I think if someone plopped food on my desk I would walk it over to theirs and set it on their keyboard or something. Maybe then they'll get the hint!
  • (oops, can't figure out how to delete this one)
  • People don't want others to lose weight for 2 reasons: 1. They will be jealous 2. That might mean they have to change too.

    Nailed it, APresner!
  • bsix3
    bsix3 Posts: 291
    Just tell them flat-out: I am going to throw it away. Do you want to put it directly in the garbage or shall I??

    ^^^ yes, this. They're not respecting you and what you are trying to accomplish so make it know that you mean serious business. #BattleMode
  • Mzchasenpaper
    Mzchasenpaper Posts: 37 Member
    plop it right back on theirs!!!
  • Jellyphant
    Jellyphant Posts: 1,400 Member
    My coworkers will do that but if I decline, they won't push it but instead will be like, "you don't need to be watching what you eat!"
    And I'm like... I AM 70 lbs over a healthy weight, YEAH I do need to watch it! haha.
  • I have the same problem!! I get full meals pushed on me actually. There just being nice and polite, so I'm not rude back. What I do now is if it's something that someone bought individually (this happens a lot with cookies and doughnuts) I take it and say I'll eat it later, but I actually toss it later. When it's full meals (people bring extra food or make food at work) I just say that I'm weird about what I eat because I can get an upset stomach easily (which I can) so, even though I would love to eat, I can't. I have started bringing my own snacks to meetings though, because there's usually food there too. It's become less of a problem over time.
  • lorishultis
    lorishultis Posts: 95 Member
    Yeah I know what you mean... They take over the break room with stuff like that and it makes it hard (I am weak) to get to my healthier stuff.... Plus we have a lady that makes breakfast taco's... Well she makes the tortilla's from scratch and then is offended when I eat the contents and not the tortilla. I asked her to save the tortilla and start just putting some in a cup.


    I would tell them politely - when they dont have food in hand, that you have a goal and could they help you reach your goal. when they get excited your asking them to help, tell them to skip your cube next time. That if you feel like splurging that day you will come to them. Then thank them for their "support".
  • DinaLKeil
    DinaLKeil Posts: 95 Member
    I've been saying no so long that they rarely push it anymore. When people would leave stuff, i just give it to someone else or leave it on someone elses desk. Hehehe
  • MsNewBooty83
    MsNewBooty83 Posts: 985 Member
    ive got a woman at my gym that bakes broownies, cakes and cookies!!! she brings them and want to give them out to ppl in the hcangeroom after the workout! i told her she was going to sabatoge me, but took a peice of apple spice cake the 1st time she offered, ever since i have said no thank you, but then all the ladies are like `oh c`mon! u can afford to eat a little peice!` ...im like ya, but i just worked out for 2hrs nad i dont wanna kill it wiht one or 2 coookies, but thanks, lol. trying to let them know that they shouldnt do it either! lol
  • babebree
    babebree Posts: 26 Member
    Yep. We also get sweets from the drug reps that comes in. I don't understand why all the small people in the office are the ones who brings the cupcakes, cakes and other stuff. I just wrap and take it for my kids or toss it.