Stubborn husband refuses to eat healthy!

Hi all! My husband and I are both right around 50 and recently got bad blood work results. I don't need meds yet, just lifestyle changes. Husband is on statins but also got bad sugar results this time. Plus he has a kidney disease that is exacerbated by bad diet.

He has no interest in eating more healthy foods. I don't really know what to do about that. He goes as far as to order delivery or go to the restaurant down the street if I make myself something he doesn't want to eat. And he likes to cook, too, but that means steak or spam and egg sandwiches, which he just offered me. So this is really about both of us, since he tries to get me to eat badly, and I have to turn him down. He understands when I turn him down, but it's still hard.

Any tips?
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Replies

  • kardsharp
    kardsharp Posts: 516 Member
    You can lead a horse to water but, you can't make them drink. Just eat & get healthy for yourself. Perhaps if he sees you leading a more healthy lifestyle, he follow suit!
  • elsie6hickman
    elsie6hickman Posts: 3,864 Member
    At the end of the day, it is his choice to make. Take care of yourself. You might try just sending articles to him about the implications of high sugar - don't say anything, just let him choose to read or not. When my husband got the stunning news that he now has Type 2, he immediately became very interested in changing his diet and lifestyle.
  • emjay196363
    emjay196363 Posts: 37 Member
    I'm in the same boat and agree about leading by example. He's totally uninterested in changing his eating but he's paying attention to the fact that I'm exercising and losing weight (although he's pretending not to.) I'm hoping that at some point he'll decide he can't let his wife be in better shape than he is and he'll get with the program out of sheer vanity.
  • lizamann
    lizamann Posts: 4 Member
    So here I go again, trying to make different choices and solve my obesity problem (which he doesn't have by the way, although his cholesterol and triglyceride numbers are as bad as mine).

    My husband isn't overweight, either, but his number are worse than mine (I am overweight.)
  • 2baninja
    2baninja Posts: 518 Member
    I agree with most of these postings, you can lead a horse to water, but.... the only other thing I can suggest is, if you are a good cook, you can try making healthy tasty dishes, (without him know it's healthy) and if he likes it, tell him after how healthy it was. Lots of time people don't want to try eating healthy because the junk tastes better.
  • 88olds
    88olds Posts: 4,532 Member
    You can't do anything.

    Sit him down once and tell him you love him and you don't want him to die prematurely and you'll help him in any way you can, and then you just lead by example.

    This.

    Will it change anything? Doubtful. But in the event of disaster, it may keep you from feeling guilty. But that sit down is a one time deal, start nagging and he’ll dig in his heels.
  • elsie6hickman
    elsie6hickman Posts: 3,864 Member
    Have you researched low carb and diabetic recipes? Most of them are very good and there are a ton of them out there. That way you don't have to cook multiple meals. Most of them are fairly low in calories too. That is where I got started with my husband, and I change it up with spices and herbs so we don't get bored. I can imagine it is frustrating, but my husband and I are both losing weight and we're both pretty happy about that.
  • lizamann
    lizamann Posts: 4 Member
    Have you researched low carb and diabetic recipes? Most of them are very good and there are a ton of them out there.

    I was paleo for a few years, which I loved, and he liked a lot of the things I made. (Then I stopped being paleo and got fatter than ever. Which is what they say about fad diets, isn't it.)

    Then he tried keto for a couple months and cooked all sorts of stuff, but then got bored or something after he got down to his college weight. Which was 130 pounds. He is now 145, still not overweight for his height.

    But his triclycerides, cholesterol, and sugar are worse than mine.

    It's an image thing with him. Doesn't matter how it tastes, if it's not red meat and potatoes, he doesn't like it on principle. I've made chili with turkey in it that tastes fine, but if he sees the turkey package he won't eat it, even if he's already tasted it and declared it fine.

    He cooks all the time, but it's burgers, steaks, hot dogs, eggs and spam. With a side of potato chips and no veggies or salad. There are so many times he's made dinner for me and it was literally a steak on a plate. A delicious steak for sure, but nothing to go with it. He's extreme.

    More talking. I have joked with him about his term life insurance policy that runs out in 5 years. I've told him that if he's going to die early, to please do it before he turns 56 so I at least get that benefit. It makes him laugh. I think we can nudge it a bit healthier, it will just take some time.

    Thanks everyone.
  • nutmegoreo
    nutmegoreo Posts: 15,532 Member
    My husband was the same way. I couldn't force him to make a change. He changed on his own, by a happy accident. One day, I chose a Netflix show called "Fat to Finish Line" which is about a group of individuals from all over the country who come together to run a relay race. They each had lost an average of 100 pounds. It's not a dcoumentary touting a special diet or anything like that - just about some remarkable people who accomplished a remarkable goal. One of the women on the show had started divorce proceedings because her lifestyle had changed so much from her husbands and they were headed in opposite directions healthwise. Although this isn't the situation with my husband and me, he looked at me and said, I'll start going to the gym with you. Let's go now and we did. We didn't finish watching the show until a few weeks later. It turns out that the husband in the show turned his health around and they are still married. My husband has been going to the gym with me several times a week for a month now and helps choose the menu. He's discovered he likes boxing. It wasn't intended, but that show helped my husband realize that long-term health is an important part of a marriage.

    I enjoyed that show. It was quite inspiring.
  • debrakgoogins
    debrakgoogins Posts: 2,033 Member
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    I enjoyed that show. It was quite inspiring.

    It really is. I listen to it sometimes when I don't feel like getting on the treadmill. It's now my go-to for overcoming excuses.
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
    you cannot change him.
    you can tell him your concern but after saying it once, it's just nagging.
  • hipari
    hipari Posts: 1,367 Member
    Changing diet preferences takes time. I understand there is some medical urgency involved, but tastes and habits don’t change overnight.

    My live-in boyfriend and I have worked on changing to healthier eating habits for a couple of years now. We still eat things like pasta carbonara occasionally, but on the whole our meals are a lot healthier. It started with little things, like reducing animal fats and adding more veggies. We were huge pasta lovers (I’m gluten free for medical reasons now so we’re saving both money and carbs by eating pasta less often now), so we started by trying out different recipes and pasta sauces that aren’t cream-based, and adding some veggies to every sauce. Frozen diced onions and frozen chopped spinach are constant staples, you can add them to soooo many things. Then, we started experimenting with oven roasted veggies, salads and different stir frys. By different stir frys I mean we always buy a frozen stir fry veggie mix and just add whatever protein source we want. We have also been experimenting with vegetarian protein sources and foods, and the end result is this: instead of eating three different pasta, burger or tex-mex dishes this week Mon-Wed, yesterday we had a palak paneer -type vegetarian dish with loads of spinach, today we are making a tofu stir fry and tomorrow, instead of getting a creamy pasta carbonara with loads of bacon, we are making a pasta bake with halloumi cheese, a tomato based sauce, veggies (spinach, onions and cherry tomatoes) and a little bit of bacon.

    Both of us indulge in foods the other one doesn’t like when they’re not home for dinner. My boyfriend usually did chicken wings or the amount of pasta carbonara we would split in two, and eat it by himself. He still does the chicken wings sometimes, but more than once I’ve heard he did a giant stir fry with simply more spices than I can handle. His idea of rockin’ good dinner when he can choose for himself is now a gigantic plate of spicy veggies. It took a couple of years, but looking back the progress is visible.
  • missysippy930
    missysippy930 Posts: 2,577 Member
    You can only control yourself. Trying to control someone else is only going to stress you and may cause resentment in the person you want to change. Lead by example. My husband and I are in our 60’s. After about 8 months, my husband decided to go for it too. There’s always hope.
  • Panini911
    Panini911 Posts: 2,325 Member
    I agree with all the above.

    One possible idea is maybe finding meals that are not quite as "healthy". Or with swaps that make them healthier but not appear as healthy if that makes any sense. Not sure how drastic a change your healthy meals are but a big change can require too much mental commitment and turn someone off. So finding "healthiER" options/simple swaps that make previous meals "better" is a better first step?

    but ultimately it is up to him.
  • mulecanter
    mulecanter Posts: 1,792 Member
    Pretty young to be on meds with bad blood results. Maybe encouraging exercise is a better tactic. Buy him a speedo and tell him you REALLY want to see him swimming in it. ;)
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    A way my family has tried new foods in a fun way has been to get a cookbook for a particular region and try a bunch of things or have a weekly movie night and try a food that goes with something about the movie. You might do something like that to introduce eating new things.

    I would have a conversation about how he feels about his health condition, what he is doing or could be doing to manage his health and what you are doing to manage yours. The goal is health but it doesn't have to all be the same path and maybe he could come up with ways to improve his situation on his own.
    My dh got the zombies, run app and has been walking more on his own. He is taking more fruit in his lunch and has cut down on pop and ice cream. These were changes he came to on his own.

    Ultimately he is an adult and has to decide to care and make changes for himself.
  • dechowj
    dechowj Posts: 148 Member
    I understand how hard that can be. My family is in the same boat with my father and my father-in-law. (Both very very stubborn.) I have found that they both automatically shun a meal if we present it as healthy or good for you. So even when I make a healthy version of a meal I just call it something yummy sounding. The words I use make a huge difference in how it is accepted.

    Also, the three cooks (my mother, my mother-in-law, and myself) just took things slow and started making healthy changes to how we cooked. (I still made healthier things for me and my kids, but now the men's comfort food was still healthier than before.) We did things like adding veggies into favorite dishes (shredded zucchini in meatloaf or tiny cauliflower in mac and cheese), swapping out regular pasta for whole wheat pasta, having more chicken and fish meals each week than beef, using the air fryer instead of the deep fryer, using sauces or spices and stopped making gravy, using 1/3 the amount of sugar when making koolaid or lemon-aid, buying only halo ice cream, making snack dips with Greek yogurt instead of sour cream, having salad on the table ready to eat before even serving the main meal. All of the little changes over time helped a lot. My father is now even off his cholesterol meds.

    But in the end you only really have power over yourself. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink.