You do you I'll do me? Is that ok or disrespectful?

I have lost abou 67 lbs and was able to keep it off for 7 years with very disciplined diet and exercise. Over the last 12 months I have started to gain a lot more body fat/ less lean muscle while putting on about 6 lbs. Please hear me loud and clear I am not blaming anyone else but, do you think it is ok or disrespectful for young adult kids and husband to eat whatever the want including take out, cookies, homemade bread, ice cream when you kindly ask to please not bake this stuff right now as I am trying to get back on track and it is so tempting having it in front of me all the time??? Hubby is nearly up to 300 lbs and although he used to eat healthy and had a major weight loss he feels it is to hard and just enjoys food to much to deprive himself...His words I don't gripe about smelling your brussel sprouts and cauliflower rice so stop complaining you smell my bread, brownies and cookies! Lol
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Replies

  • r3488
    r3488 Posts: 77 Member
    My sister has her husband hide "goodies" from her so only he knows where they are and eats them.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    mcfish618 wrote: »
    do you think it is ok or disrespectful for young adult kids and husband to eat whatever the want including take out, cookies, homemade bread, ice cream when you kindly ask to please not bake this stuff right now as I am trying to get back on track and it is so tempting having it in front of me all the time???

    Young kids, no, but you have control over what they have available in the house anyway.

    Your husband, I think -- as others have said -- that saying he can't eat certain foods or bake bread (if baking bread is something he enjoys) or so on is obviously not appropriate BUT also that he should be open to a discussion of how to make this easier for you and if he wants the foods maybe be understanding of you too. A special spot for his sweets or eating them at work. I also think that it makes sense for a family to eat meals together (dinner, at least), so if he wants take-out maybe talk about having take-out or going out once a week or something like that (and see if there are places with options that work for you).

    If he is completely not willing to adjust his actions at all, that seems kind of disrespectful, and I might wonder if he is resistant to what you are doing or feeling pressured to change his own diet or some such -- maybe worth talking about.

    That said, sometimes you don't have control (my office is my biggest source of temptation and I have no control there, although I think that's not the same). newmeadow's comments are something to think about if it is going to be a tough environment at home. I do think ignoring what others eat or thinking of things as your food and their food can be useful, if necessary.
  • TR0berts
    TR0berts Posts: 7,739 Member
    When I go on a cut, I simply ask my wife to not have the treats that I really like in the house. I have no issue with her having treats that she likes and that I can relatively easily avoid consuming. Fortunately, she takes my wishes into consideration and tries to accommodate them/me.
  • missysippy930
    missysippy930 Posts: 2,577 Member
    You realized your goals and have managed for many years.
    Keep doing what you did to reach your amazing statistic that so many fail at, keeping the weight off. You can only control what you do yourself. Just lead by example and maybe that will eventually rub off onto your family.

    I know it isn't easy, but hang in there! I am one of the statistics who lost over half of my body weight 6 years ago on MFP, gained back 60 pounds and that is why I am back, hopefully, I can get the extra pounds off and, this time, keep them off.
  • amfmmama
    amfmmama Posts: 1,420 Member
    You cannot control anyone else's actions...only how you choose to react. This is true for so many things!
  • JoRocka
    JoRocka Posts: 17,525 Member
    CSARdiver wrote: »
    You can't change anyone other than yourself. Trying to do so is an especially pointless and useless endeavor.

    Change yourself and lead by example. Your husband will either follow you or go his own way in his own time. You can either choose to accept this or not.

    ^^this is pretty much it.
  • mamabear1114
    mamabear1114 Posts: 140 Member
    Hmmm. For me it was easy because although my husband didn’t actively make a choice to pursue a healthy lifestyle with me, I happen to be the family chef and prepare all of his meals so he was forced to eat better by default LOL. But he thought it was nice and he was always supportive of me no matter what we were eating. We try to work it out together. For instance, he will ask me to make green bean casserole (a delicious, fattening, calorific nightmare for my allowance) and sometimes I will say “yeah that’s fine” and sometimes I will say “no, I don’t have enough calories for that today, let’s plan for it tomorrow” and normally he is satisfied with that. As others have said, I think talking about it and trying to make a plan together where you will both be happy and enjoy food together is the best approach. The only time it happens to bother me a lot is when his not so great habits trickle down onto our son. Again, no unreasonable expectations, but since I started this I’ve realized how important it is to teach our children nutrition and good habits. It’s become a parenting moral for me and it’s important to me that he’s on the same page about how we present diet and food to our children. But that’s another matter, and for the most part, talking with him about my feelings on that has helped. There’s a reason people say communication is invaluable in a marriage. Talk it out. Make a solution that will leave you both happy, satisfied, and successful. :)
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    I don't expect my husband to change what he eats just because I have specific weight or fitness goals.

    They have to be my goals, I don't expect him to have the will power for me.
  • PapillonNoire
    PapillonNoire Posts: 76 Member
    Ultimately, it does boil down to personal accountability. You alone are responsible for your food choices, and it's not realistic to think you'll never run into temptation.

    But, with that being said, my husband is currently trying to lose weight and improve his health. I want to be supportive of that and do what little I can to help him succeed. So even though I don't need to lose weight, I'm not going to bring foods that he has trouble moderating into the house. I'm not going to eat them in front of him. That just seems kind of mean. I can eat whatever I want at work or out with friends. If the situation were reversed, he would show me the same respect.
  • Bekah7482
    Bekah7482 Posts: 246 Member
    My fiance and I are very open about my needs and he is respectful of them. I dont tell him he can't eat pizza, I just ask him not to bring it into our home and he is respectful of that. I do not think it is disrespectful at all to express what you need from him and he should be supportive of that. You are not telling him what he cant eat and you are not telling him he needs to follow your diet, you are just expressing your trigger foods and he should respect that.
  • lulalacroix
    lulalacroix Posts: 1,082 Member
    I don't expect my husband to change what he eats just because I have specific weight or fitness goals.

    They have to be my goals, I don't expect him to have the will power for me.

    This.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
    edited February 2018
    My husband is a chip and chocolate fiend! He is kind enough to wait til i go to bed to bring out his stash... "most" times.

    I do ask him not to buy my (our) trigger foods, and he agrees not to as he he is trying to lose a few kgs at the moment, so him not buying this stuff helps me, but also himself. He now only buys a block of chocolate and 2 family size bags of chips once a month or so.
  • Maxxitt
    Maxxitt Posts: 1,281 Member
    It would be awesome to see evidence that your spouse and young adult kids are on your team. But they aren't, for whatever reason. So, yeah, you do you.