if my family is not on board, then whats the point?
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kristie8351 wrote: »So sick of trying so hard to please others, and get no support back.
Cooking 3 different meals each night is draining, I cook mine last, but then can't be bothered. So I snack or under eat?!
Feeling sad atm.. I've lost weight, and I'm craving for encouragement from my family aswell... Yet no one says anything or helps in anyway
I am SOOOO with you on this!!! I've lost a little bit of weight, by cutting down on portion control, not eating past 7pm, increasing water intake.... My wife continues to eat carbs.. the bad ones... excess pastas, potatoes... after dinner she'll have a bowl of ice cream, then she'll crave salt so she will grab potato chips... and yet complain that is overweight... I try to encourage her... but she tells me don't start with me. ... can you say FRUSTRATION
None of those carbs are "bad". Potatoes actually have good nutritional value and are a great source of potassium. Neither is ice cream. And eating after 7PM doesn't do anything bad or good. It's all about context and amount.
Nutrient timing is irrelevant. It's all calories in and calories out for weight loss and nutritious food for health. Carbs are part of the package. Don't make it harder than it has to be.
As for your wife, you can encourage but she is an adult and makes her own decisions. You do you.
OP, stop letting your family walk all over you. Find a middle ground of reasonable meal preparation that is adequate for everyone. You are the partner and mother here not Symba the slave girl. You needs should get respected here also. Sounds like your family needs a little retraining. They will not like it at first and complain. Oh well. Tough toenails for them. Fair is fair.3 -
kristie8351 wrote: »I have a partner and kids that have different tastes, I try to get them to eat what I, well we all should, but if there's no butter, cream, bacon or cheese its a no go...
At the end of my day I just want to relax and unwind,
How do we get family members involved, without it making them feeling obligated?
My parents both could cook. If they made something we didn't like there wasn't another option. At some point we could choose to cook dinner ourselves instead. I don't know your kids ages, but why can't your spouse cook?1 -
Love all the ideas coming in..... but when I work 8-10 hours a day.. and she is the one cooking dinner.... what do you do? I make request for certain foods.... and I get it about once a week maybe twice.
Cook your own dinner? I work that much and still manage my own shopping and meals.1 -
OP, I have 6 children. The only person I make special allowances for is my youngest son, who has a food allergy. I see this so much on the forums and I cannot understand why parents are becoming short order cooks. They eat what you cook. Period. Full stop. No exceptions. No complaints. The only choice you should offer is take it or leave it. If one (or more) of your kids goes to bed hungry one night - SO WHAT! No one ever died from skipping one meal out of stubbornness.11
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My guy is the one who does the cooking. When I started dieting, I told him to make what he wants. He is the cook, I wasn't going to force him to do everything healthy. How'd I cope? Doing portion control. I made sure to only take what would make me satisfied. And I made sure to get some healthy snack options if I needed anything to tide me over until the next meal.3
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My ex-girlfriend used to do that for her three kids. They all were very bright and active kids and she was constantly cooking a meal for each of them. That changed some over time.....when she got the kids involved more ad they got older. But it used to bother me. She was very very very busy and is a single mom.
Parents do 'weird' things for the kids that they might not do for anyone else.
I used to try to convey to her that "you are the cook - they eat what you cook and they all eat at the same time at the table". Did not happen when we were together. Amazing woman. But was run ragged by all the cooking. And these three kids could eat....and she was an AMAZING cook....my GAWD that woman could cook. Anyway, I digress. It was so frustrating to hear her frustration about this....but then she would not change.
Anyway, agree on all points. Hard to do in real life, though. Well, for some.1 -
I have a similar spouse , I spent 10 years saying it was his fault I was not loosing weight . I buy lean protein, veg and whole grains . he adds in hot dogs and cold cuts loads of cheese, tubs of ice cream whipped cream , chips , sugary cereals and cookies . 4 months ago I realized even though he always offers me food he was not forcing me to over eat . I decided I was tired of being overweight .
when it comes down to it you are doing this for you and your health . so how to do it , cook a meat veg and a starch put the butter on the table . add a salad , plate your food first weigh and chart as you go Put every thing out those that do not like what you made can have cereal or a PB and J .
I do it this way ,my husband can have as much butter, cheese and bread as he wants and I can have a salad , vegetable 3-4 oz of protein and just a 1/4 cup of a starch with a tsp of butter if I want . we keep regular bread peanut butter and jam for hubby I keep 40 cal bread nutzo butter, humus and Romain for me . I also make a smoothie with extra fiber to keep me full .and a few healthy bar cake recipes that are loaded with fiber and pumpkin and are only 100 cal or less for a small serving . then I tell him this is healthy you might not like it, I will wrap and freeze extra for later . but he usually finds he likes the treats I make .
for the man with the wife that cooks , you work ? buy what you want, poach some chicken breasts on Sunday and you have a week of healthy protein for salads and sandwiches . or stop and eat on your way home and she will just have less to spend on groceries .
it is harder without family support , many times family see our trying to loose weight and get healthy as a threat , I remind mine that I need to loose the weight for my health and so there is less stress on my knees and ankles , as well as I was getting re flux and higher blood pressure . when I started talking about it as fixing those health problems my husband got more cooperative . now when he offers me junk I just say no thanks honey I was craving a salad or what ever healthy thing I was planning next . Just remember family can only sabotage you if you allow it Do what you need to to make you happy even if it means you do not always eat together
I am now down 28 lbs despite hubby
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When I was growing up we always had two choices for dinner: eat.... or not7
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kristie8351 wrote: »I love that you all are so passionate about this just as much as me.
I'm not hating my family or pissed off coz I cook for them, we all are that close, I guess I expect them without asking, for them to get on board...
Ok, so while you're working on healthier food habits for yourself, I am going to strongly encourage you to work on communication about reasonable expectations/boundaries as well.
No one can reasonably expect that people are just going to 'understand' what we want them to do/feel/act without a clear explanation or direction. What I see you saying is that you feel unsupported, you feel tired, and you don't know how to keep going without support from somewhere. Everyone has given pretty reasonable suggestions as to how to go about the dinner situation, but the communication side needs to be highlighted.
Communicate with your family: explain the parameters of mealtime beginning on x date, say October 1. Will someone else be doing dinner on a rotation of nights? Will there be grocery shopping and meal planning involved? Will you be doing meal prep?
Communicate WHY you are doing this.
and then stick to it. Let them fail - they will have bad nights of burnt food and pizza will need to be ordered. We humans do not get better at something by doing it perfectly the first time; we kind of have to mess it up a few times to figure out how to do it well. Encourage them and make your boundaries work for you.
You will *only* be doing your kids - and your relationships - good by learning how to communicate your expectations.
Best of luck and tons of patience while you work through this. It is as important as your health Really.5 -
I don't cook, my husband does - we eat a lot of meat heavy meals, lashings of roasted potatoes but other veggies, especially leafy greens are an afterthought as he doesn't like them. I lose perfectly easily eating his food - all I have to do is ensure I don't eat too much.1
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I prep snacks and baked goods on the weekend. Put your meat over salad instead of the rice or pasta your family are having. Sometimes I have cereal if I can't be bothered figuring out how many cals are in their super cheesy or carby dinner. Make slight changes to family favourites and use recipe builder to calculate cals. I still eat bacon, cheese, bread.. just in amounts that fit my calorie goal1
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Productive thread! Well done for asking for help.
I just hope what provoked your opening post wasn't that you're trying to be the Perfect Crunchy Herbal Kale, Chia, & Kombucha Queen from Height-Ashbury Whole Foods.
I like to share this post to people who are struggling to "eat healthy":
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Why on earth are you cooing three meals? In my family (now and grown up) it was one meal with two types of veg for choice but that is as far as it went. That is what gets eaten. If we wanted anything else we were most welcome to get into the kitchen an cook the family meal, but it would always be the family meal for ALL3
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kristie8351 wrote: »I love that you all are so passionate about this just as much as me.
I'm not hating my family or pissed off coz I cook for them, we all are that close, I guess I expect them without asking, for them to get on board...
It's not realistic OR FAIR to have people to know what you want unless it's communicated clearly.
There's a myth out there that if someone really, really loves you he or she will magically know what to do to make you happy. It's damaging because that means if he or she does not meet those needs, obviously it is because he or she doesn't love you. Or that asking for what you want will...I dunno...kill the magical mystical bond or something.
What's much more productive is to talk like grown-ups about household tasks like this. And it's entirely reasonable to say, "Me cooking three dinners a night means I make 27 dinners a week, in addition to the increased number of pots and pans. We need to talk about how to make this workload more reasonable." And put it back to the residents of the household how to go about this. It's not about blaming and resentment (and don't come to the discussion in this mindset), but there is a problem and it's a SYSTEMS problem in which it's not all about you.
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I haven't read all the responses, but I have a very picky child and a husband that doesn't like certain things for dinner. I usually make things that we can all eat. So if we have baked chicken or pork chops, I make mac n cheese and a veggie. I portion out my protein and veggies, then I eat either a side salad or just a small amount of mac and cheese. If I make spaghetti, I make spaghetti squash for me, we all eat the same sauce and I may skip the cheese or breadstick or opt to have a side salad with mine. My point is, there are plenty of ways to lighten up a meal for you while not having to cook 3 different meals! But, I guess the dynamic is different in our family because everyone knows i will NOT be a short order cook. Either you eat what I make or have a sandwhich LOL5
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Ok so tonight, I cooked one big meal!!... I didn't ask anyone what they wanted hahaha. Chicken breast, rice with mixed veg, with a teriyaki sauce. Everyone loved it, my partner wanted more chicken, but over all this is a giant step in the right direction for my family and I... Thankyou all for the support and inspiration to push myself to take charge..
Hopefully we can keep this going, I had 2 of my children helping cook too ❤❤❤36 -
kristie8351 wrote: »Ok so tonight, I cooked one big meal!!... I didn't ask anyone what they wanted hahaha. Chicken breast, rice with mixed veg, with a teriyaki sauce. Everyone loved it, my partner wanted more chicken, but over all this is a giant step in the right direction for my family and I... Thankyou all for the support and inspiration to push myself to take charge..
Hopefully we can keep this going, I had 2 of my children helping cook too ❤❤❤
Awesome! I've found if I let my 4 year old "help" that she is more likely to want to eat it. Glad you found a meal that your entire family enjoys. [/quoth
Thanks0 -
Thankyou Mij 140
Yes there is nothing like cooking with the kids. Sitting them up on the bench getting them to taste test3 -
Wow I would never do that. I am the main cook in my family and I make one meal for dinner and we all eat it. You don't have to make anything special for yourself because you are trying to lose weight. You can eat the same things as you always did just in smaller portions. If you want to make meals lighter so it's more filling for you, do it and if they don't like it they can make Their own meals. Period. You need to stop catering to this. You're doing it to yourself. I'm sure this will lead to you using this as an excuse as to why you can't lose weight1
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I got on here to get support, and advice how others cope being the primary cook...
This was not meant to be a negative post at all, maybe I worded it wrong1 -
kristie8351 wrote: »I got on here to get support, and advice how others cope being the primary cook...
This was not meant to be a negative post at all, maybe I worded it wrong
This wasn't a negative post at all - you just resonated with the frustrations of a lot of people. You can't take responsibility for other people's reactions. Unfortunately it happens and sometimes postings sort of run away from the original point.
The age old problem of how to meet the wants and needs of multiple people in a household is a real one. And there are many ways to address it. And it can get frustrating.
It reminds me of the episode of "Friends" where something like three versions of mashed potatoes were made to try to make everybody happy for a Thanksgiving dinner, and still another person wanted a version another way--leading to the cook to get completely fed up...and quite rightly so.2 -
kenyonhaff wrote: »kristie8351 wrote: »I got on here to get support, and advice how others cope being the primary cook...
This was not meant to be a negative post at all, maybe I worded it wrong
This wasn't a negative post at all - you just resonated with the frustrations of a lot of people. You can't take responsibility for other people's reactions. Unfortunately it happens and sometimes postings sort of run away from the original point.
The age old problem of how to meet the wants and needs of multiple people in a household is a real one. And there are many ways to address it. And it can get frustrating.
It reminds me of the episode of "Friends" where something like three versions of mashed potatoes were made to try to make everybody happy for a Thanksgiving dinner, and still another person wanted a version another way--leading to the cook to get completely fed up...and quite rightly so.
Thankyou for understanding, I've used a lot of people's ideas since this post love it3
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