Not sure why friends care what you eat

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Replies

  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    I don't know...if I'm planning to go out to lunch or whatever with my friends I don't usually eat before hand...I go out to lunch with them and I eat with them.

    I may get some crap from time to time that I don't go out with them enough because I'm usually on my bike at lunch and I usually brown bag it...but when I go out to eat with them, I eat with them...I've never just ordered water.

    That said, I'm about 2.5 years into this little safari and my friends pretty much know the drill by now.
  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    kelfran1 wrote: »
    Well, I can see myself being a little put off if I made plans with a friend to go out to lunch or (worse) dinner and when we got to the restaurant, that person had already eaten and just drank water while I had a meal. Yes, it would make me feel awkward and a little annoyed that now I'm hungry and have to spend money to eat when we could have both eaten at home and then done some other activity together.

    Perhaps the next time you are invited out, you can try suggesting an alternative activity, like taking a walk in a park. That way your friend doesn't expect that you will be lunching together, only to find him/herself eating while you watch.

    I totally agree.

    I don't care what my friends eat at all. But if we have made plans to get dinner and you don't order food and I am eating alone, then what was the point of going out to dinner together? I could have saved money and we could have done something else.
  • booksandchocolate12
    booksandchocolate12 Posts: 1,741 Member
    I understand eating something small (a salad, maybe?) before you go out, so you're not famished when you get there, leading you to overeat.

    But eating a full meal and then saying that you won't be ordering anything because you already ate.....I wonder if there's a feeling of superiority that goes along with that. "Nothing for me, thanks. I just ate a wonderful, nutritious meal that I prepared myself from scratch. But by all means, you go on and eat that fat- and calorie-laden restaurant meal. I'll just sip my water".
  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    I understand eating something small (a salad, maybe?) before you go out, so you're not famished when you get there, leading you to overeat.

    But eating a full meal and then saying that you won't be ordering anything because you already ate.....I wonder if there's a feeling of superiority that goes along with that. "Nothing for me, thanks. I just ate a wonderful, nutritious meal that I prepared myself from scratch. But by all means, you go on and eat that fat- and calorie-laden restaurant meal. I'll just sip my water".

    Yep, this too. I just think it's really bizarre behavior to make plans to go out to eat and then not eat. I don't get it, unless it's too smack people in the face with your awesome diet plans.
  • AskTracyAnnK28
    AskTracyAnnK28 Posts: 2,817 Member
    Why not just fit what you want to consume when out with your friends into your calories for the day? I do it all the time and still lost at a steady rate.
  • PMA150
    PMA150 Posts: 43 Member
    Why would you go "out to eat" with someone and not eat? Why would you eat beforehand if you know you have plans to meet them? I'm going to have to agree with your friends on this one. And in their situation I'd find it odd if it happened once and rude if it happened again. I'd also stop meeting you for lunch/dinner.
  • DucklingPrincess
    DucklingPrincess Posts: 36 Member
    Yeah... I would be kind of put off if I made plans to go out to eat with a friend and they just ordered water. It'd be a bit different if we made plans to do something else and I just happened to not eat beforehand. If that was the case, I'd completely understand if they weren't hungry.
  • redheaddee
    redheaddee Posts: 2,005 Member
    I don't understand why you care that your friends care?
  • csuhar
    csuhar Posts: 779 Member
    I'd say it can depend on the situation. If they're buying or you're at their house and they're offering food, it fits in the "they're trying to be generous / hospitable" realm. That's where I'd be more likely to accept and figure out a way to fit it into my daily calories *or* I'd thank them, but let them know I've already eaten and I'm too full to eat any more.

    If they're trying to get you to buy your own food, I wouldn't say it's rude, they probably just don't want to feel like the odd one out or like they're "that guy" who's making everyone wait while they eat. In that scenario, I'd be a little more along the lines of "it's my money, it's my diet, it's my decision when I buy more food".

    Ordering something they know they won't finish could be a poorly structured offer of hospitality, until they want people to chip in, at which point it becomes awkward because they're trying to get people to chip in on the bill for food they didn't want, to begin with.

    When they say that you need the food to stay strong, etc, that usually is just an attempt at peer pressure using what they know about you.
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    DjinnMarie wrote: »
    Why would you go out to lunch with someone if you don't plan on eating?

    Um this.

    If you're hanging out with friends and they suddenly decide that they're hungry and want to eat, while you don't, then it's their issue, not yours.
  • LAWoman72
    LAWoman72 Posts: 2,846 Member
    My friends don't really comment on what I'm eating. I do eat when I go out - why shouldn't I? :) But in general they're more interested in talking, and what's on their own plates, than what's on mine!
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    Like it or not, food consumption is more than just tool for survival, it's a ritual that has certain connections, feelings and money attached to it.

    Does it make them think that you are feeling superior about the quality of the food you eat?
    Does it make them feel like it's something that you shared but no longer can?
    Does it make them feel like they are trying to do something nice for you, but you are being rude by refusing?
    Does it make them feel like you are sabotaging their plans to have a good time?
    Does it make them feel like they are wasting their money?
    ...etc

    I like to keep my personal goals and my social life separate. One does not need to interfere with the other, or I may have problems at one side or the other. If I know I'm going out with friends I keep my food intake light for the day then share a meal with them. If I'm offered some love offering that comes in the form of food, like a cookie or a piece of cake, I take it and say thank you then make up for it later. If I'm invited to some event with lots of high calorie foods I don't stand there nitpicking and looking for lower calorie options, I just indulge like everybody else and call it a day. If I make an event about me and my selfish need to be perfect every single day instead of communication, fun, and living, then I'm missing out on a lot and unnecessarily.
  • stealthq
    stealthq Posts: 4,298 Member
    edited March 2015
    PRMinx wrote: »
    kelfran1 wrote: »
    Well, I can see myself being a little put off if I made plans with a friend to go out to lunch or (worse) dinner and when we got to the restaurant, that person had already eaten and just drank water while I had a meal. Yes, it would make me feel awkward and a little annoyed that now I'm hungry and have to spend money to eat when we could have both eaten at home and then done some other activity together.

    Perhaps the next time you are invited out, you can try suggesting an alternative activity, like taking a walk in a park. That way your friend doesn't expect that you will be lunching together, only to find him/herself eating while you watch.

    I totally agree.

    I don't care what my friends eat at all. But if we have made plans to get dinner and you don't order food and I am eating alone, then what was the point of going out to dinner together? I could have saved money and we could have done something else.

    The point would be that your friend wants to socialize with you and presumably, you would have said you wanted to eat or you'd do something else. They just aren't hungry, or don't care for the food, or have a meal planned for later, who knows.

    Maybe it's just me, but that's why I go to a restaurant with a friend. Because one of us wants to eat, and I want to socialize. For me, eating is secondary. If I'm not hungry, I'll just get a drink. I've had friends do similar with me. It never even occurred to me to be bothered by it, and I'm pretty sure they weren't bothered either, or they'd have said something.
  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    stealthq wrote: »
    PRMinx wrote: »
    kelfran1 wrote: »
    Well, I can see myself being a little put off if I made plans with a friend to go out to lunch or (worse) dinner and when we got to the restaurant, that person had already eaten and just drank water while I had a meal. Yes, it would make me feel awkward and a little annoyed that now I'm hungry and have to spend money to eat when we could have both eaten at home and then done some other activity together.

    Perhaps the next time you are invited out, you can try suggesting an alternative activity, like taking a walk in a park. That way your friend doesn't expect that you will be lunching together, only to find him/herself eating while you watch.

    I totally agree.

    I don't care what my friends eat at all. But if we have made plans to get dinner and you don't order food and I am eating alone, then what was the point of going out to dinner together? I could have saved money and we could have done something else.

    The point would be that your friend wants to socialize with you and presumably, you would have said you wanted to eat or you'd do something else. They just aren't hungry, or don't care for the food, or have a meal planned for later, who knows.

    Maybe it's just me, but that's why I go to a restaurant with a friend. Because one of us wants to eat, and I want to socialize. For me, eating is secondary. If I'm not hungry, I'll just get a drink. I've had friends do similar with me. It never even occurred to me to be bothered by it, and I'm pretty sure they weren't bothered either, or they'd have said something.

    I still think it's strange to make plans to eat, to just not eat. Again, I don't care my friends eat or don't eat, but if I think we are having dinner together as the social event and then I'm eating alone, I'd be put off. And I would remember that the next time and make different plans - like a movie or coffee or drinks.

    But, then again, my friends like food as much as I do and eating out for us IS the experience we want to share.

    But, hey, you do you. If your friends don't mind, then that's all that matters.
  • mccindy72
    mccindy72 Posts: 7,001 Member
    I have literally a myriad of dietary restrictions and it's very difficult to find a restaurant where I can eat. Sometimes if everyone wants to eat someplace in particular and I can't eat there, we all go and I just get water while they eat. The socialization is what we're there for anyway. I just eat later. They all know what my restrictions are and they don't worry or judge me for for them. That's because they are good friends. If your friends are judging you, perhaps you need to reconsider your friends.
  • Whitezombiegirl
    Whitezombiegirl Posts: 1,042 Member
    The only time I ever got annoyed when eating out with a friend was when I went out with an annorexic freind (medically, not figurativley). She would order a huge amount of food (perhaps all her cravings at once) and then pick at bits and try to force it on other people- then finally waste whatever was left. Sometimes she would order a meat pie and eat the top crust and maybe one chunk of meat and then smush up and leave the rest-that was annoying when done regularly. I hate waste.

    The other thing is that my closest friend is 10 inches taller than me and proportionally built so her daily calorie allowance was much higher than mine. We'd order pizza and split it evenly and I'd be gaining weight whilst she was maintaining- so i had to start eating less than my half or make allowances elsewhere (which is hard when it's a spare of the moment after-club pizza).... that's the only time I cared about what someone else was eating .....well apart from when it's stolen off my plate- coz then it's MINE! Then I care very deeply :)
  • levitateme
    levitateme Posts: 999 Member
    I have a friend who likes to eat, a lot. She's gained about 100 lbs in the 6 years I've known her. Whenever I go out to dinner with her, she tries to strong-arm the entire table into getting something that she "just NEEDS" to eat. One time, she spent about 7 minutes trying to pressure me and another friend into getting an appetizer sampler just because she wanted mozzarella sticks. I was getting a wrap that came with fries and coleslaw, the other friend was just getting coffee and a crock of french onion soup. We weren't that hungry, neither of us were trying to lose weight at the time, it was just a ton of food for no reason. We knew we'd just end up over-eating chicken fingers and jalapeno poppers to appease her, so we held firm. She ended up getting an entire side of mozz sticks on top of her full meal (with dessert and frappe).

    Sometimes I care what other people eat because they try to push food on me when I don't want it. We don't have to gorge ourselves because "socializing = food sharing" in our culture.
  • LAWoman72
    LAWoman72 Posts: 2,846 Member
    PRMinx wrote: »
    stealthq wrote: »
    PRMinx wrote: »
    kelfran1 wrote: »
    Well, I can see myself being a little put off if I made plans with a friend to go out to lunch or (worse) dinner and when we got to the restaurant, that person had already eaten and just drank water while I had a meal. Yes, it would make me feel awkward and a little annoyed that now I'm hungry and have to spend money to eat when we could have both eaten at home and then done some other activity together.

    Perhaps the next time you are invited out, you can try suggesting an alternative activity, like taking a walk in a park. That way your friend doesn't expect that you will be lunching together, only to find him/herself eating while you watch.

    I totally agree.

    I don't care what my friends eat at all. But if we have made plans to get dinner and you don't order food and I am eating alone, then what was the point of going out to dinner together? I could have saved money and we could have done something else.

    The point would be that your friend wants to socialize with you and presumably, you would have said you wanted to eat or you'd do something else. They just aren't hungry, or don't care for the food, or have a meal planned for later, who knows.

    Maybe it's just me, but that's why I go to a restaurant with a friend. Because one of us wants to eat, and I want to socialize. For me, eating is secondary. If I'm not hungry, I'll just get a drink. I've had friends do similar with me. It never even occurred to me to be bothered by it, and I'm pretty sure they weren't bothered either, or they'd have said something.

    I still think it's strange to make plans to eat, to just not eat. Again, I don't care my friends eat or don't eat, but if I think we are having dinner together as the social event and then I'm eating alone, I'd be put off. And I would remember that the next time and make different plans - like a movie or coffee or drinks.

    But, then again, my friends like food as much as I do and eating out for us IS the experience we want to share.

    But, hey, you do you. If your friends don't mind, then that's all that matters.

    I would feel it was a bit strange too, and it's uncomfortable to just sit there and eat in front of someone who is...sitting there watching you eat.

    There are so many ways of socializing. Even non-dinners/non-lunches that include food, but don't require it. Parties, movies, whatever.

  • LAWoman72
    LAWoman72 Posts: 2,846 Member
    levitateme wrote: »
    I have a friend who likes to eat, a lot. She's gained about 100 lbs in the 6 years I've known her. Whenever I go out to dinner with her, she tries to strong-arm the entire table into getting something that she "just NEEDS" to eat. One time, she spent about 7 minutes trying to pressure me and another friend into getting an appetizer sampler just because she wanted mozzarella sticks. I was getting a wrap that came with fries and coleslaw, the other friend was just getting coffee and a crock of french onion soup. We weren't that hungry, neither of us were trying to lose weight at the time, it was just a ton of food for no reason. We knew we'd just end up over-eating chicken fingers and jalapeno poppers to appease her, so we held firm. She ended up getting an entire side of mozz sticks on top of her full meal (with dessert and frappe).

    Sometimes I care what other people eat because they try to push food on me when I don't want it. We don't have to gorge ourselves because "socializing = food sharing" in our culture.

    Well, THAT'S ridiculous.

  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    LAWoman72 wrote: »
    PRMinx wrote: »
    stealthq wrote: »
    PRMinx wrote: »
    kelfran1 wrote: »
    Well, I can see myself being a little put off if I made plans with a friend to go out to lunch or (worse) dinner and when we got to the restaurant, that person had already eaten and just drank water while I had a meal. Yes, it would make me feel awkward and a little annoyed that now I'm hungry and have to spend money to eat when we could have both eaten at home and then done some other activity together.

    Perhaps the next time you are invited out, you can try suggesting an alternative activity, like taking a walk in a park. That way your friend doesn't expect that you will be lunching together, only to find him/herself eating while you watch.

    I totally agree.

    I don't care what my friends eat at all. But if we have made plans to get dinner and you don't order food and I am eating alone, then what was the point of going out to dinner together? I could have saved money and we could have done something else.

    The point would be that your friend wants to socialize with you and presumably, you would have said you wanted to eat or you'd do something else. They just aren't hungry, or don't care for the food, or have a meal planned for later, who knows.

    Maybe it's just me, but that's why I go to a restaurant with a friend. Because one of us wants to eat, and I want to socialize. For me, eating is secondary. If I'm not hungry, I'll just get a drink. I've had friends do similar with me. It never even occurred to me to be bothered by it, and I'm pretty sure they weren't bothered either, or they'd have said something.

    I still think it's strange to make plans to eat, to just not eat. Again, I don't care my friends eat or don't eat, but if I think we are having dinner together as the social event and then I'm eating alone, I'd be put off. And I would remember that the next time and make different plans - like a movie or coffee or drinks.

    But, then again, my friends like food as much as I do and eating out for us IS the experience we want to share.

    But, hey, you do you. If your friends don't mind, then that's all that matters.

    I would feel it was a bit strange too, and it's uncomfortable to just sit there and eat in front of someone who is...sitting there watching you eat.

    There are so many ways of socializing. Even non-dinners/non-lunches that include food, but don't require it. Parties, movies, whatever.

    Yep, that's all I'm saying. Instead of having that awkwardness, why not just do something else together. Bizarre.
  • booksandchocolate12
    booksandchocolate12 Posts: 1,741 Member
    levitateme wrote: »
    Sometimes I care what other people eat because they try to push food on me when I don't want it. We don't have to gorge ourselves because "socializing = food sharing" in our culture.

    Right. We don't have to gorge ourselves. Nor do we have to sip daintily on lemon water while everyone else eats.

    Still don't see a reason to agree to go out for a meal and then not eat. There are other ways to socialize without going out to eat.

  • levitateme
    levitateme Posts: 999 Member
    LAWoman72 wrote: »
    levitateme wrote: »
    I have a friend who likes to eat, a lot. She's gained about 100 lbs in the 6 years I've known her. Whenever I go out to dinner with her, she tries to strong-arm the entire table into getting something that she "just NEEDS" to eat. One time, she spent about 7 minutes trying to pressure me and another friend into getting an appetizer sampler just because she wanted mozzarella sticks. I was getting a wrap that came with fries and coleslaw, the other friend was just getting coffee and a crock of french onion soup. We weren't that hungry, neither of us were trying to lose weight at the time, it was just a ton of food for no reason. We knew we'd just end up over-eating chicken fingers and jalapeno poppers to appease her, so we held firm. She ended up getting an entire side of mozz sticks on top of her full meal (with dessert and frappe).

    Sometimes I care what other people eat because they try to push food on me when I don't want it. We don't have to gorge ourselves because "socializing = food sharing" in our culture.

    Well, THAT'S ridiculous.

    Yes. One other time it was a cheese plate with roasted peppers and such, we didn't argue and she ate most of it herself. I don't go out to eat with her and her boyfriend much anymore, which is sad. It's less about food and more about her being a control freak, though.

  • callsitlikeiseeit
    callsitlikeiseeit Posts: 8,626 Member
    edited March 2015
    adowe wrote: »
    You need better friends then......My friends never say anything about what I eat

    mine either for the most part :/ LOL
  • callsitlikeiseeit
    callsitlikeiseeit Posts: 8,626 Member
    bgorum wrote: »
    More often I've had the opposite problem. People who know I'm tracking calories/working out will see me eating something they don't see as "diet food" and say "Are you supposed to be eating that?" or "Oh, there goes the diet, huh?" Pfffttt, they wish.

    B)

    on the other hand, i get a LOT of that.

    ummm i eat what i want. i had heath bar cake last night. i have some logged for today, and as long as i go on my walk, will have it and enjoy it tonight! - and if i DONT go on my walk, ill have it tomorrow LOL (was supposed to go to gym this afternoon but car died)
  • azulvioleta6
    azulvioleta6 Posts: 4,195 Member
    OP, I think that you need better friends. Grown ups don't do this to each other.

    There is absolutely nothing wrong with one person in a party having a cup of tea while the other(s) eat a meal. That doesn't make anybody look stupid. The conversation is the important thing. Anybody who makes a big deal about what you are or are not eating is just rude.

    People who want to pressure you, manipulate you or use you to make themselves feel better about pigging out...eh, those people might not be be very good friends.
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