Valentine's Day chocolate if she's overweight?
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Is she paranoid ? I'm not bothered by getting chocolate while losing weight but I wouldn't think there was some message behind getting a different gift either.
Get her something she likes if you typically exchange gifts. She probably likes something other than just food. Chocolate, jewelry or flowers are okay but aren't very creative or personal gifts. I love it when my dh gets me something unique like artwork or some great book because he knows I love to read. A couple of years ago he got me a print that was done on an antique book page. One year he made a recording him reading of a special poem for me.0 -
@3dogsrunning he doesn't have to ask what she wants specifically. But he knows she's trying to lose weight, she knows she's trying to lose weight, I see no harm in asking if she wants candy or something else.0
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With Valentine's Day approaching I'm sure many guys here feel the pressure to buy your sweetheart flowers or chocolate. Should I still get her chocolate if she is struggling to lose weight? I know she loves chocolate but I think I should just get flowers and skip that part of the event.
Do you ladies mind if we don't send chocolate or is that calling you fat without saying the word?
You can skip the chocolate my dear because I don't care for it. Just bring me the flowers and a nice bottle of wine.
Seriously, my husband never buys me chocolate or sweets because he fears for his life. I really don't like the stuff. I prefer just going out to dinner the two of us and enjoying an evening together. And I do prefer the flowers to a plant, because I have too many plants and it is more work for me.0 -
Here's my 2 cents - stop the crazy consumerism around this fake holiday - forget the chocolate - sign the both of you up for dance lessons or something that you can experience together. Far more "romantic".0
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I appreciate something less cliche than flowers and chocolate ... that said, I do still eat chocolate but it's 85% dark chocolate now, not the more sugary stuff.0
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I always appreciate chocolate! I just eat smaller portions when I am trying to lose weight.0
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If it's important to her, then do it. I personally wouldn't be upset if I got no chocolate for V-Day. He did the cheesy flowers and chocolates when we were younger, nowadays we have other things to celebrate, no weird holiday needed.0
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BecomingBane wrote: »If VDay is important to her, then for the love of dog,
Love this, going to use it all the time now
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Yes I think she will read between the lines and might feel bad. You know her best after all. How about instead of a box of them, melting some and doing a little Fondu with strawberries and fruits you can dip a little in and feed them to her? Just a few - very romantic!0
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Absolutely not! If she was an alcoholic would you buy her a bottle of booze?! Personally I think chocolates as a gift are a cop-out - not much thought goes into grabbing a load of sugar-laden cr@p off the shelf. I'd go for flowers if you really can't think of anything 'special' but something a bit more thoughtful and personal to her would win you endless brownie-points. Women like to be noticed as individuals, not treated generically. Has she got a hobby? Does she wear a certain perfume? How about treating her to a nice meal out? Or a pretty item of jewellery (doesn't have to be expensive) or a pretty scarf or top in her style. Try and think of a gift that would really MEAN something, particularly if it's a valentines gift. Chocolates are the worst present imaginable, particularly if you're trying to lose a few pounds. X0
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How about some nice individually wrapped chocolates that can be eaten one at a time?0
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juggernaut1974 wrote: »Get her a head of cauliflower.
It sorta looks like a flower, has "flower" in it's name, and it's healthy!
You can thank me later
On a more serious note, I'm not a fan of the cliche flowers and chocolate for Valentine's Day. I like to get Mrs. Juggernaut romantic, but not traditional gifts - a massage gift certificate, something off her Christmas list that she didn't get, an overnight getaway, etc.
I remember back in college my friends got me a box of tomatoes for my birthday (knowing how much I love them) with all of their signatures and cute little messages written all over it, and I looked silly carrying around a box of tomatoes to remaining lectures. It was one of the best gifts I received that year, even though it was 9 broke college kids splitting a $3 gift. The fact that it showed they cared about me personally as if they were saying "we know your quirks and we love you for them" was more than enough to make me happy. So who knows, maybe a cauliflower is not as bad of an idea as it sounds for the right person.
Joking aside. You know her best, and the others have already covered the chocolate topic. Whatever you end up doing, make sure to put some thought and love into it.0 -
Quality over quantity. Buy a four piece box from a high end chocolatier like John Kelly out of LA (they ship). It's a one off shop, you can't get it anywhere else that I know of, so it shows you put some thought into it. Plus it's some of the best chocolate you'll ever have, so maybe get a second box to stash for yourself.0
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amusedmonkey wrote: »juggernaut1974 wrote: »Get her a head of cauliflower.
It sorta looks like a flower, has "flower" in it's name, and it's healthy!
You can thank me later
On a more serious note, I'm not a fan of the cliche flowers and chocolate for Valentine's Day. I like to get Mrs. Juggernaut romantic, but not traditional gifts - a massage gift certificate, something off her Christmas list that she didn't get, an overnight getaway, etc.
I remember back in college my friends got me a box of tomatoes for my birthday (knowing how much I love them) with all of their signatures and cute little messages written all over it, and I looked silly carrying around a box of tomatoes to remaining lectures. It was one of the best gifts I received that year, even though it was 9 broke college kids splitting a $3 gift. The fact that it showed they cared about me personally as if they were saying "we know your quirks and we love you for them" was more than enough to make me happy. So who knows, maybe a cauliflower is not as bad of an idea as it sounds for the right person.
Joking aside. You know her best, and the others have already covered the chocolate topic. Whatever you end up doing, make sure to put some thought and love into it.
I thought we were the only ones being weird. My husband is obsessed with tomato paste and canned tomatoes, will add it to everything, and then I end up complaining because I cannot find any when I am trying to cook and often have to modify recipes to replace tomato sauce with white sauce last minute. Plain tomato paste or tomatoes with nothing added. My gift to him one year was a box filled with his favourite cans. He definitely loved it0 -
I'm a fan of high quality chocolates, gold, and gems but I'm good with any gift. It's the thought that counts with me.0
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We don't really do Valentines Day here in NZ (although retailers still try to get our hard earned $$), but I would do something cute and a bit naughty like paint some melted chocolate on your lips and give her a chocolate kiss.
"....Honey I know you love chocolate And you love me so I thought I'd combine the two!..."
Win Win!
She gets:
* A taste of chocolate
* Romance
* No guilt for wanting chocolate but not wanting chocolate - its a tough emotion
* Not to feel embarrassed if you brought it up. She knows the score if she is struggling, let her make the decision to go get chocolate but have a small box (4) of high quality ones ready to go if she hints she really feels like chocolate.
Follow up with a walk at sunset and tell her what she means to you0 -
Quality over quantity. Buy a four piece box from a high end chocolatier like John Kelly out of LA (they ship). It's a one off shop, you can't get it anywhere else that I know of, so it shows you put some thought into it. Plus it's some of the best chocolate you'll ever have, so maybe get a second box to stash for yourself.
I was going to suggest along the same lines - a single (or very small box) very high quality chocolate over a Whitman's Sampler, you know? Something delightful and novel and a definite treat is a gift I would love way more than a generic box of chocolates, and I would appreciate that my husband was able to help me indulge without making it feel like I'm pummeled with candies that I would feel almost obligated to eat because they were a gift.0 -
Honestly, if my boyfriend gave me chocolates for Valentine's day, I would see it as the opposite message. Instead of saying "You're fat," I would interpret it as "You're not fat, so I'm not worried about giving you a few chocolates to enjoy."0
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I love chocolate. I would love a few chocolate covered strawberries...yum!0
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