How to get my wife on board?

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My wife and I have been married for 3 years. We're both 26. When we were married I weighed 375lbs and she was at 300. I've been dieting off and on for our entire relationship. I finally hit my breaking point when the dr told me I was at 418lbs in Feb. I had no idea... My scale would no longer weigh me... I've seen people on tv say they didn't understand how they allowed themselves to get so big. I was that person... I had to change.

I started my lifestyle change on the 18th of Feb. I'm now down 60lbs. I've cut out most crap food... Although I still have my chinese every few weeks and eat whatever I was as long as I'm checking my portions. My wife and I go to dinner maybe twice a week and always at a place with a low calorie menu. My wife does support me to a point. She encourages me to get up and go to the gym(I try to do at least 2 miles every other day), and she does buy the food that I need to maintain my choice of lifestyle. I've pretty much taken over the cooking because I can't convince her that every meal needs a stick of butter for flavor. She usually skips breakfast, eat fast-food for lunch and dinner because she doesn't like the healthier meals. Usually it's a double quarter pounder with a Lg coke and Lg fry for both lunch and dinner. I'm not sure what her current weight it.. I just know that it's now more than I weigh.

How do I convince her that she's killing herself? If we go out to eat she usually eats more calories in the free bread than I eat in the entire meal. Every time I bring it up she becomes defensive or just ignores me. I know that I've only been at this for 99 days but I feel like I've made the commitment and am following through with what I said I would do. We both have office jobs so we sit all day. Both offices have a free gym on site. She told me the other day that her biggest fear was that I would lose a lot of weight, divorce her, and go find a skinny girl. I don't want to do that. I love my wife very much. However, I have no intentions of becoming a widower by the time we're 35. Does anyone have any ideas on how to help her get off this road she's on?
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Replies

  • 85Cardinals
    85Cardinals Posts: 733 Member
    edited May 2016
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    Good luck with that, damn. Everything I tried with my fat ex-wife didn't work. Have you seen the film Days of Wine and Roses? Sometimes you just can't help people, as much as you want to.
  • stephinator92
    stephinator92 Posts: 162 Member
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    SLLRunner wrote: »
    I try very hard to get healthy and get others on board with me, including my boyfriend. It took 3 full years to get him to set foot in a gym with me. I understand how discouraging it could be when others either aren't on board with you, drag you down, make life more difficult or just refuse to make positive changes in their lives.

    From a female perspective, the only way I could see this coming through effectively would be for you to do the following:

    1. Tell her she's beautiful. Every single day.
    2. Make her feel beautiful and get rid of any doubt she may have in your relationship.
    3. Make sure you tell her you love her every single day
    4. After a week or two of this (I hope you're already doing this stuff), sit her down and tell her how much you love her. Explain in a heartfelt, non-judgemental, unrehearsed way that you genuinely care about her and you're worried about her health. Ask her if she'd be willing to make a small change, like getting a medium instead of a large when she goes to McDonald's. If she's amenable, in another couple weeks maybe you can work on another small change. Tell her you want a long life with her and you're concerned about her best interests. Make sure you tell her that her weight does not impact the way that you feel about her and that you love her at any size. Make sure she knows that you don't care if she's overweight, but you're concerned about her being healthy.

    Obviously this isn't foolproof, but anything that comes across judgemental or as an attack will not work because she will immediately get defensive. Instead of "You don't care about your health" type of statements, talk about how YOU feel. Example: "I feel helpless because I want you to be healthy so we can have a long life together."

    I hope this helps in some way. Good luck!

    As to the bold above:

    While I can tell this is heartfelt and that you mean well, trying to change somebody else never turns out well. I suspect the more he tries to change her, the more she will resist. Another person has no business trying to convince another adult what they should or should not eat, or even how much.

    There is nothing wrong with telling someone once that you're concerned about their health, and this would include obesity issues, but anymore than that is trying to control another person, and it does come across as judgmental.

    The thing is.....it's obvious from the original post that he cares that she's obese because it's affecting her health, so saying otherwise would be a lie.

    I tried to think about it like if my boyfriend were having this conversation with me and how I would want to be spoken to. It's honestly a tricky situation, but I did my best! What I meant by "don't care if she's overweight" had to do with looks, not health. I guess maybe making a suggestion if she becomes amenable would be a better choice than forcing anything upon her.
  • SLLRunner
    SLLRunner Posts: 12,943 Member
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    SLLRunner wrote: »
    I try very hard to get healthy and get others on board with me, including my boyfriend. It took 3 full years to get him to set foot in a gym with me. I understand how discouraging it could be when others either aren't on board with you, drag you down, make life more difficult or just refuse to make positive changes in their lives.

    From a female perspective, the only way I could see this coming through effectively would be for you to do the following:

    1. Tell her she's beautiful. Every single day.
    2. Make her feel beautiful and get rid of any doubt she may have in your relationship.
    3. Make sure you tell her you love her every single day
    4. After a week or two of this (I hope you're already doing this stuff), sit her down and tell her how much you love her. Explain in a heartfelt, non-judgemental, unrehearsed way that you genuinely care about her and you're worried about her health. Ask her if she'd be willing to make a small change, like getting a medium instead of a large when she goes to McDonald's. If she's amenable, in another couple weeks maybe you can work on another small change. Tell her you want a long life with her and you're concerned about her best interests. Make sure you tell her that her weight does not impact the way that you feel about her and that you love her at any size. Make sure she knows that you don't care if she's overweight, but you're concerned about her being healthy.

    Obviously this isn't foolproof, but anything that comes across judgemental or as an attack will not work because she will immediately get defensive. Instead of "You don't care about your health" type of statements, talk about how YOU feel. Example: "I feel helpless because I want you to be healthy so we can have a long life together."

    I hope this helps in some way. Good luck!

    As to the bold above:

    While I can tell this is heartfelt and that you mean well, trying to change somebody else never turns out well. I suspect the more he tries to change her, the more she will resist. Another person has no business trying to convince another adult what they should or should not eat, or even how much.

    There is nothing wrong with telling someone once that you're concerned about their health, and this would include obesity issues, but anymore than that is trying to control another person, and it does come across as judgmental.

    The thing is.....it's obvious from the original post that he cares that she's obese because it's affecting her health, so saying otherwise would be a lie.

    I tried to think about it like if my boyfriend were having this conversation with me and how I would want to be spoken to. It's honestly a tricky situation, but I did my best! What I meant by "don't care if she's overweight" had to do with looks, not health. I guess maybe making a suggestion if she becomes amenable would be a better choice than forcing anything upon her.

    I understand. :)

  • Mikachu326
    Mikachu326 Posts: 3 Member
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    Talk to her. Sit her down and tell her you love her and appreciate the way she's been supporting you. Then gently express your concern for her health, talk about how much better and healthier you feel, and tell her that you want her to start to feel better too. If she becomes defensive, suggest she see a doctor (doctors have an objective point of view and she may not become as defensive with them).

    Include her in your fitness journey as well. Offer to go on walks with her or introduce her to a fun sport. Get her in the kitchen and see if you two can create healthier versions of her favourite takeout foods that she will enjoy.

    Ultimately though, she is an adult and will live her life as she pleases. Your views and hers may not always align, and weight loss may be one thing you and your wife will not see eye-to-eye on. The best thing you can do is focus on your own health and fitness. Best of luck!