Not-so-helpful S/O

2»

Replies

  • jeepinshawn
    jeepinshawn Posts: 642 Member
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.
  • cbihatt
    cbihatt Posts: 319 Member
    Avoiding temptation can be tough. I suggest figuring out what foods are the most difficult for you to avoid and sweetly demand that he keep those foods out of the house. He can eat them when you are not around. For those less tempting foods, you can learn to say no by practicing. It does get easier. Personally, I cannot handle cookies. I will eat them until they are gone. So, I don't allow them in the house. But, we do buy ice cream and chips that I do not eat because I am committed enough to say no.

    As for the grocery shopping, buy what you like. One night, make extra portions of something he likes. The following night, make your salmon or whatever, and he can eat leftovers or fend for himself.

    There has never been a woman who can eat like her man and exercise enough to still lose weight. It just isn't gonna happen.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    ilex70 wrote: »
    Any chance you share your monthly meal plan somewhere? Because it sounds like you are all over this. Very much like my life, except I hate meal planning.

    Here-> https://lounmoun.wordpress.com/2016/02/29/meal-plan-end-of-feb-end-of-march/
  • jemhh
    jemhh Posts: 14,261 Member
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?
  • Nuke_64
    Nuke_64 Posts: 406 Member
    He's fit because he works out a lot, but he has terrible eating habits. He doesn't understand that my body doesn't work that way and insists that if I just work out more, I can eat as unhealthily as he does and still lose weight.

    This is basically true. You can eat the same way as him, but less calories, and work out more and you will lose weight. To your point, that's not what you want to do.

    Or to better summarise what I think your position should be is: "I have found the best way for me to lose weight and be healthy is eat salmon and .... and not eat a lot of ice cream and ... while doing this amount and type of exercise that I like to do." He has a different way.

    I will say before we had kids and still had a social life, I found when my SO was excluding highly caloric food, I found myself feeling (although incorrectly) that she was not enjoying what we did, generally hanging out with friends at bars/restaurants. So he may be similar, thinking you are changing something about your relationship. As others said, tell him what you need and he should support you. If he doesn't, then I think you know the answer.
  • krisalexine
    krisalexine Posts: 78 Member
    My boyfriend "didn't like" broccoli or turkey the same way your SO doesn't like veggies or salmon.

    I do the grocery shopping and the cooking. If he "doesn't like" what I cook, he can starve. Or go shopping himself and cook his own food.

    He eats broccoli and turkey all the time now.
  • aliciamariaq
    aliciamariaq Posts: 272 Member
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    Yeah but that goes both ways doesn't it? So using your logic, she should show him the door....
  • puffbrat
    puffbrat Posts: 2,806 Member
    OP - My husband doesn't push the temptation the way you say your SO does, but he does similarly believe that everything can be solved with exercise. We have had a couple conversations in which I made it clear that his continued assertions all my problems will melt away with more exercise are unhelpful, and sometimes blatantly untrue.

    I agree with jeepinshawn that part of a loving relationship is support. He doesn't have to like the changes you are making to your lifestyle, he doesn't have to change his own eating habits, but he should be expected to be supportive of the changes you are making for yourself. The next time he starts pushing with "just take one bite, just share with me, etc." you need to shut him down. Make it very clear that you are not telling him he can't eat those foods, but he needs to stop encouraging you to do so. I also like the suggestion of showing him your daily caloric allotment and how certain foods do or don't fit.

    If cooking for both of you while accommodating his picky eating is keeping you from eating foods you enjoy that also help you stay within your calories, then it is time your SO either start cooking for himself or expand the range of options. In my marriage, I'm the picky eater, but I have learned to at least try new foods, or foods prepared in different ways. I have also learned to distinguish between foods I can't stand, those I don't prefer, and those I like. I generally only ask my husband to avoid the foods I can't stand (we both cook and eat the same dinners), and maybe chop the ones I don't prefer larger or smaller (depending on the dish) so I can pick around them or don't notice them as much.
  • Gisel2015
    Gisel2015 Posts: 4,186 Member
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.
  • ashesfromfire
    ashesfromfire Posts: 867 Member
    His he's bringing you home treats, it's a shows he wants to do nice things for you and make you happy. At its core, the intention is good. Do some thinking about "treats" that git into your health plan, and ask for those things instead. That's what I do. Sometimes my SO buys me ingredients for meals I really want to make but would be pricey, or a box of raspberries that I really want, but can't bring myself to spend $5 on. There are tons of healthy foods that are super deliocious, let him treat you with those things, then you'll both be happy.
    Cooking can be the hard one, my SO is so darn picky. What works for me is incorporating the overall flavors he likes, and he's more open to my meals. I know if I make food spicy he'll be into it, or if I make anything that pairs well with mashed potatoes (and then just eat a reasonable serving myself) he's down. It's all about Balance and comprises.
  • kgirlhart
    kgirlhart Posts: 5,165 Member
    I can understand all the arguments that he's an adult and he can eat what she cooks or cook his own. And she can chose not to eat the snacks that he has. But it seems to me that the problem is not that he has snacks that he eats, but that he brings snack for her and gets annoyed if she doesn't eat them. My husband is a very picky eater and it annoys the hell out of me. But I do love him and I don't force him to eat stuff that he doesn't like the way his mother always did. There are meals where we don't eat the same thing and that is ok. But sometimes he gets annoyed when he is eating something and he tries to feed me a bite ("one bite is not going to hurt anything") and I won't eat it. My advice to the OP is to figure out if he is really trying to sabotage your weight loss or if he is just doing it out of habit. My husband is getting better about it although I sometimes think that it annoys him that I weigh everything. But he is tall, he has never been overweight and he has a very active job and he just doesn't understand how much harder it is for me, a short person with a very sedentary job to keep my weight under control. Hang in there OP. Just tell him, thanks but no thanks and hopefully he will stop trying to tempt you with stuff you don't want to eat.
  • MABMomma
    MABMomma Posts: 36 Member
    My husband is your boyfriend's twin! He's naturally thin & can eat all day long without gaining an ounce. He kept bringing home junk for me until I started saying "I'd love to eat that but the way my goals are set up..." It only took him a few days to notice that I was serious & he jumped on the support-me-or-get-the-eff-out-of-the-way wagon shortly after.
  • jemhh
    jemhh Posts: 14,261 Member
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.

    I don't think you understand what I mean. We cook one meal at our house. It generally consists of a main mean dish, mashed potatoes/rice/or-couscous, and vegetables. I eat meat and vegetables. My husband eats meat and the "starchy" side. Our daughter eats any combination of that stuff. One meal, each of us eating slightly differently.

    My takeaway from jeepinshawn's comment--"that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*"--is that thorsmom's comment that adults can pick their own foods and ZeroDelta's comment that if there's food in the house that isn't compatible with his meal plan he doesn't it, is objectionable. I was asking if jeepinshawn and his wife eat exactly the same thing at each meal--he eats mashed potatoes, she must eat mashed potatoes. She eats salad with croutons and balsamic vinaigrette, he must eat salad with balsamic vinaigrettte. Surely that is over the top?
  • Nuke_64
    Nuke_64 Posts: 406 Member
    MABMomma wrote: »
    My husband is your boyfriend's twin! He's naturally thin & can eat all day long without gaining an ounce.

    No, he's taller than you and is a man and has more lean body mass so he needs more calories. He cannot defy the laws of thermodynamics--if he eats too much he will gain weight.

  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Thanks everyone. I definitely don't expect him to eliminate what he likes to eat just because it's tempting to me. I guess it's the "have a bite, aw come on just one, split it with me" day in day out that's wears down my resistance haha. It is up to me though and I will just have to be better with self control and explaining to him how important is it to me to eat healthier, so although it's nice to want to share, I'd rather he not offer, especially if I've already said no.

    Chimaerandi, thank you for the tips on cooking meals. I also do most of the cooking and feel guilty making something I know he won't eat, but I like the idea of setting up the foods I agree not to cook, maybe it could be his top three most hated or I can learn different ways to cook certain veggies so he may like them more.

    Sounds like we just need to focus on being more independent with our meals since we have different goals!

    I would find that very annoying. However, when you give in, you are sending him the message that he should keep bringing home treats for you. If you tell him to not, yet eat it anyway, he'll chose to listen to the message from your actions, not your words.

    My OH got with the program after I kept repeating "I don't have the calories." He know that if he wants pizza, he has to give me notice so I can eat less and exercise more earlier.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Good lord. Is it possible he wouldn't appreciate you posting these pics and saying what you're saying on the interwebs? Couples get out of sync with each other but talking to him, rather than the ether, is probably a really good start.

    Yes, my OH would have been really upset with me had I done either of these things. In previous relationships, not so much.
  • Shenvalleygurl
    Shenvalleygurl Posts: 27 Member
    That sucks. Been there. It's really hard. :-(

    My first suggestion is make him prepare his own meals/food. I am able to stay away from my trigger foods only by not seeing or smelling or touching them. If I had to prepare something for my junk-addicted BF to eat and then sat down to a hot delicious bowl of lettuce (mmm mmm good), I'd end up saying, "Look behind you! Saskwatch!" and then shove a few bits of his food in my mouth when he wasn't looking.

    Second suggestion: I love to show this video to idiots who say (sorry, he's an idiot for saying), "Just workout more!"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQbuzsY_34Q

    Also, you could say, "Awww hun, if I'm spending all my time exercising off the pizza, nachos, burgers, etc. you THINK I should be able to eat, when will I have time to have s*x with you???" Blink your eyes alluringly while you say it.

    Finally, you could point out that he's obviously not much of an actual "bodybuilder" because there isn't a SINGLE male (or female) authority on the subject who does not advocate eating clean for optimal body composition. Tell him to find you ONE source, one teeny tiny itty bitty source, that gives the advice he's giving you and you will follow it.
  • Gisel2015
    Gisel2015 Posts: 4,186 Member
    edited February 2016
    jemhh wrote: »
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.

    I don't think you understand what I mean. We cook one meal at our house. It generally consists of a main mean dish, mashed potatoes/rice/or-couscous, and vegetables. I eat meat and vegetables. My husband eats meat and the "starchy" side. Our daughter eats any combination of that stuff. One meal, each of us eating slightly differently.

    My takeaway from jeepinshawn's comment--"that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*"--is that thorsmom's comment that adults can pick their own foods and ZeroDelta's comment that if there's food in the house that isn't compatible with his meal plan he doesn't it, is objectionable. I was asking if jeepinshawn and his wife eat exactly the same thing at each meal--he eats mashed potatoes, she must eat mashed potatoes. She eats salad with croutons and balsamic vinaigrette, he must eat salad with balsamic vinaigrettte. Surely that is over the top?

    I understood your post, however what I was trying to say is that yes we eat the same things and no, I don't make mashed potatoes for my husband but I eat something else; no, I don't do that, I run the kitchen in my house I am not a short order cook.

    If I make a starch we will both eat it, he eats what ever vegetables and protein dishes I make; his portion will be a little bigger than mine, that's all. I don't cook anything extra for him and if he is still hungry, he will get a piece of whole wheat bread, put some butter on it and eat it to his heart content.

    Edited to add, that it was not my intention to start a debate about your topic; it was just a clarification that in some households (at least in mine), husband and wife do eat the same thing.
  • jeepinshawn
    jeepinshawn Posts: 642 Member
    jemhh wrote: »
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.

    I don't think you understand what I mean. We cook one meal at our house. It generally consists of a main mean dish, mashed potatoes/rice/or-couscous, and vegetables. I eat meat and vegetables. My husband eats meat and the "starchy" side. Our daughter eats any combination of that stuff. One meal, each of us eating slightly differently.

    My takeaway from jeepinshawn's comment--"that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*"--is that thorsmom's comment that adults can pick their own foods and ZeroDelta's comment that if there's food in the house that isn't compatible with his meal plan he doesn't it, is objectionable. I was asking if jeepinshawn and his wife eat exactly the same thing at each meal--he eats mashed potatoes, she must eat mashed potatoes. She eats salad with croutons and balsamic vinaigrette, he must eat salad with balsamic vinaigrettte. Surely that is over the top?

    Let me provide you with an example. During the last 2 pregnancies my wife developed gestational diabetes. So the last 6 months of both of those pregnancies the entire house lived a low carb lifestyle. We brought no soda into the house, no ice cream etc. If I needed some junk food I ate it at work, it seemed cruel to sit and eat a pizza or a package of starbursts in front of my wife.

    When I started to get healthy and lose weight my wife did the same for me. We figured out a menu and she 100% supported me, junk food was kept to limited quantities and it certainly wasn't rubbed in my face like some have described here.

    We are on our own for breakfast and lunch in my house, I make breakfast for myself and the kids. Lunches are also on our own. For dinner we make 1 meal, we plan a week in advance, and of course we can choose what quantities we want on all the side dishes and main course.

    It seems very uncool and very uncaring to know your spouse is doing his/her best to lose weight and get healthy, and then to bring home piles of their favorite junk food, much less push them to eat it, thats not loving or supportive. That is the equivalent of being married to a reformed alcoholic and constantly drinking beer or wine in front of them. I guess if that works for you and your relationship, I don't understand how though, then more power to you.
  • puffbrat
    puffbrat Posts: 2,806 Member
    edited February 2016
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.

    I don't think you understand what I mean. We cook one meal at our house. It generally consists of a main mean dish, mashed potatoes/rice/or-couscous, and vegetables. I eat meat and vegetables. My husband eats meat and the "starchy" side. Our daughter eats any combination of that stuff. One meal, each of us eating slightly differently.

    My takeaway from jeepinshawn's comment--"that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*"--is that thorsmom's comment that adults can pick their own foods and ZeroDelta's comment that if there's food in the house that isn't compatible with his meal plan he doesn't it, is objectionable. I was asking if jeepinshawn and his wife eat exactly the same thing at each meal--he eats mashed potatoes, she must eat mashed potatoes. She eats salad with croutons and balsamic vinaigrette, he must eat salad with balsamic vinaigrettte. Surely that is over the top?

    I understood your post, however what I was trying to say is that yes we eat the same things and no, I don't make mashed potatoes for my husband but I eat something else; no, I don't do that, I run the kitchen in my house I am not a short order cook.

    If I make a starch we will both eat it, he eats what ever vegetables and protein dishes I make; his portion will be a little bigger than mine, that's all. I don't cook anything extra for him and if he is still hungry, he will get a piece of whole wheat bread, put some butter on it and eat it to his heart content.

    Edited to add, that it was not my intention to start a debate about your topic; it was just a clarification that in some households (at least in mine), husband and wife do eat the same thing.

    My husband and I are the same way - we both eat the same thing for dinner just different sized portions. Both of us at least some of every component prepared. I don't understand why that is considered over the top. This is only for dinner and Sunday breakfast. For all other breakfasts and lunches, we do our own thing.

    As this relates to the OP, she stated that accommodating her SO's picky eating meant she felt she could not eat foods she enjoys that help her stay within her daily calorie allotment. Some people were suggesting different meals or components and others of us stated that we have found ways to compromise with our SOs so separate meals don't have to be prepared and everybody gets what they need.
  • cross2bear
    cross2bear Posts: 1,106 Member
    I dont know if someone has suggested this, maybe have a conversation at some point about what to have for dinner for the week - that way you can incorporate the food he likes and you control the cooking. It may reduce his frequency of bringing home treats if he can predict what will be wating at home for him, and will show him how serious you are about retaining some control over your eating habits. If, as someone suggested earlier, he wants to shower you with treats to show you how much he cares and thinks about you, suggest he bring even grocery store flowers instead of a half litre of ice cream!!

    And PS - my husband and I eat the same thing. I like to try new recipes, but if he says he doesnt like something I have tried, then unless I absolutely loved it, I wont make it again. I always try to make one of his favourites during the week, and when I do that, I only make enough for him, and then I can opt for a little treat for myself, like a super spicy something or other, which would send him off to fast food (or the hospital!) if it was the only option.
  • jeepinshawn
    jeepinshawn Posts: 642 Member

    Yeah but that goes both ways doesn't it? So using your logic, she should show him the door....

    No it is called common courtesy. If you know your spouse is trying to become a more healthy, why on earth would you bring home a bunch of junk and try to get them to eat it? When you love and care for someone you find a way to compromise, eat your junk food at work, on the way home from work, whatever you don't need to rub it someones face.

    How is it any different then plopping a nice fat piece of cake down in front of a diabetic or a beer down in front of an alcoholic?
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    jemhh wrote: »
    Gisel2015 wrote: »
    jemhh wrote: »
    thorsmom01 wrote: »
    ZeroDelta wrote: »

    Does anyone else deal with a significant other who is picky or insists on having unhealthy foods around in spite of your efforts, and do you have any tips for dealing with this situation??

    If there's food in the house that's not compatible with my menu plan I simply don't eat it. It's my weight loss journey, not my SO's. If she makes something for a meal that's not on my plan, I cook my own meal. We have differing nutrition goals. That's fine.

    Same here. Grown adults can pick their own foods . support of a spouse isn't needed . sure it would be easier if each spouse picked the same foods but that is not realistic. All people have different likes and dislikes .

    Sorry that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*. When one gets married you do it for love, part of loving someone is supporting them and helping them make healthy decisions.

    What? You and your wife eat the exact same thing at every meal? You never have a meal where one of you eats one side dish and the other eats a different dish?

    I know that your response was directed to @jeepinshawn posting, but I will like to chime in and let you that there are some couples that do eat "the same thing at every meal." I am the cook in the house and I serve what ever I decide to make. If my husband doesn't like it, well he can open the fridge and eat something else. But that never happened because he is very respectful, not at picky eater, and above all he doesn't know how to cook. On the other hand, when we go out to eat he picks what ever he wants.

    I don't think you understand what I mean. We cook one meal at our house. It generally consists of a main mean dish, mashed potatoes/rice/or-couscous, and vegetables. I eat meat and vegetables. My husband eats meat and the "starchy" side. Our daughter eats any combination of that stuff. One meal, each of us eating slightly differently.

    My takeaway from jeepinshawn's comment--"that's a piss poor attitude and if my wife had that she'd be out on her *kitten*"--is that thorsmom's comment that adults can pick their own foods and ZeroDelta's comment that if there's food in the house that isn't compatible with his meal plan he doesn't it, is objectionable. I was asking if jeepinshawn and his wife eat exactly the same thing at each meal--he eats mashed potatoes, she must eat mashed potatoes. She eats salad with croutons and balsamic vinaigrette, he must eat salad with balsamic vinaigrettte. Surely that is over the top?

    Let me provide you with an example. During the last 2 pregnancies my wife developed gestational diabetes. So the last 6 months of both of those pregnancies the entire house lived a low carb lifestyle. We brought no soda into the house, no ice cream etc. If I needed some junk food I ate it at work, it seemed cruel to sit and eat a pizza or a package of starbursts in front of my wife.

    When I started to get healthy and lose weight my wife did the same for me. We figured out a menu and she 100% supported me, junk food was kept to limited quantities and it certainly wasn't rubbed in my face like some have described here.

    We are on our own for breakfast and lunch in my house, I make breakfast for myself and the kids. Lunches are also on our own. For dinner we make 1 meal, we plan a week in advance, and of course we can choose what quantities we want on all the side dishes and main course.

    It seems very uncool and very uncaring to know your spouse is doing his/her best to lose weight and get healthy, and then to bring home piles of their favorite junk food, much less push them to eat it, thats not loving or supportive. That is the equivalent of being married to a reformed alcoholic and constantly drinking beer or wine in front of them. I guess if that works for you and your relationship, I don't understand how though, then more power to you.

    Agreed. Minimally keep it out of sight and don't push it.
  • concordancia
    concordancia Posts: 5,320 Member
    You need to change the dynamic. If he won't eat veggies, he can make his own meals. If you have the space, you might even store your food separately.

    The only concession I ever make for my SO is to add bread or potatoes. Usually, he just eats twice as much and then gets a snack.
  • RuNaRoUnDaFiEld
    RuNaRoUnDaFiEld Posts: 5,864 Member
    Is he scared of you losing weight?
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,093 Member
    scolaris wrote: »
    Trust me, from the 'married twenty seven years after dating & traveling together for five years' side of things: there are a lot of ways to be a couple... food doesn't have to be one of them! Focus on eating what you want & need to eat when you want & need to eat it. Period. He will figure out if he wants to eat what you're eating or fend for himself. Refuse to split an item you wouldn't eat otherwise. Absent yourself from the food & it will all be fine.

    Great post!
  • ilex70
    ilex70 Posts: 727 Member
    Lounmoun wrote: »
    ilex70 wrote: »
    Any chance you share your monthly meal plan somewhere? Because it sounds like you are all over this. Very much like my life, except I hate meal planning.

    Here-> https://lounmoun.wordpress.com/2016/02/29/meal-plan-end-of-feb-end-of-march/

    Thanks! :)
  • michaeltermini
    michaeltermini Posts: 17 Member
    Looks like a swimsuit outfit to me. Does a woman need to ask for approval to go to the beach? Anyway, I'm shocked someone even has an opinion about should she post pictures of herself, did you get approval, you wouldn't post pictures without approval etc... The earth spins easier when people mind their own business. It really takes away from what this site is intended for. Good luck @slong12041989