Sensitive issue about husband's weight

LKArgh
LKArgh Posts: 5,178 Member
edited November 29 in Motivation and Support
My husband as a child was very chubby, obese at times based on photos. He says he was teased a lot about this.
When I met him, in his early 30s, he was overweight, but not obese. Not ideal but not a problem, not something I ever asked him to change.
Fast forward almost two decades and he has gained about 15 kilos (pure fat, he would not exercise to save his life) and his dr has raised his concerns. My husband is short, this weight is a lot on him. Which again I have not commented on, other than encourage him to take care of his health. I exercise a lot, offered to see if we can do things together, he has never accepted to even try.
Fast forward to last couple of years and he has gained about 10 more kilos. Which in addition to being a health concern has made also some activities difficult.
Noticing I have a declining libido, he has asked me about 6 months ago to have an adult discussion on what we could do to improve our intimate life. I thought we were being honest, as he said we should, and mentioned him not pressuring me (he can ask about in a "whiny" way that really kills my mood), improve personal hygiene (e.g. changing underwear daily which he does not do) and that losing a bit of weight would help too.
Since then our sex life has almost ended, he even sleeps on the couch at night. After several fights about it, he said that he is very angry because I mentioned his weight and I should know how hurtful this is. I swear that all I said was "losing a bit of weight would be good" and it was something I have thought hard about first, but I truly believed he wanted honesty.
The ironic part is he has since lost this extra weight. But he claims he has not done it to improve our relationship, that he does not know if and when our relationship could recover and that what I said was so terrible it cannot be unsaid. Which BTW I am not trying to pretend I did not say it. He has also said in reply that I have become like a cow over the years and he has not once complained (I have spent 10 years pregnant, including some miscarriages, have a foot I can hardly walk with due to arthritis and yet my BMI has fluctuated between 19 and just below 23 over these years, his BMI must be currently around 30. I exercise several times per week and I am rather muscular for a woman, he does not, never).
BTW I have also been teased as a child for being chubby, and bullied and insulted a lot by a very abusive father over what I realise in retrospective was an imaginary weight problem.
Anyway, for those of you have been most of your life overweight/obese: was what I said that unacceptable? Is this reaction in anyway reasonable? I know it is ridiculous, but at this point, I think divorce is a possibility. From his side because he cannot get over what I said, from my side because I cannot wrap my head around his reaction, and the subsequent insults to me.


Replies

  • LKArgh
    LKArgh Posts: 5,178 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    LKArgh wrote: »
    My husband as a child was very chubby, obese at times based on photos. He says he was teased a lot about this.
    When I met him, in his early 30s, he was overweight, but not obese. Not ideal but not a problem, not something I ever asked him to change.
    Fast forward almost two decades and he has gained about 15 kilos (pure fat, he would not exercise to save his life) and his dr has raised his concerns. My husband is short, this weight is a lot on him. Which again I have not commented on, other than encourage him to take care of his health. I exercise a lot, offered to see if we can do things together, he has never accepted to even try.
    Fast forward to last couple of years and he has gained about 10 more kilos. Which in addition to being a health concern has made also some activities difficult.
    Noticing I have a declining libido, he has asked me about 6 months ago to have an adult discussion on what we could do to improve our intimate life. I thought we were being honest, as he said we should, and mentioned him not pressuring me (he can ask about in a "whiny" way that really kills my mood), improve personal hygiene (e.g. changing underwear daily which he does not do) and that losing a bit of weight would help too.
    Since then our sex life has almost ended, he even sleeps on the couch at night. After several fights about it, he said that he is very angry because I mentioned his weight and I should know how hurtful this is. I swear that all I said was "losing a bit of weight would be good" and it was something I have thought hard about first, but I truly believed he wanted honesty.
    The ironic part is he has since lost this extra weight. But he claims he has not done it to improve our relationship, that he does not know if and when our relationship could recover and that what I said was so terrible it cannot be unsaid. Which BTW I am not trying to pretend I did not say it. He has also said in reply that I have become like a cow over the years and he has not once complained (I have spent 10 years pregnant, including some miscarriages, have a foot I can hardly walk with due to arthritis and yet my BMI has fluctuated between 19 and just below 23 over these years, his BMI must be currently around 30. I exercise several times per week and I am rather muscular for a woman, he does not, never).
    BTW I have also been teased as a child for being chubby, and bullied and insulted a lot by a very abusive father over what I realise in retrospective was an imaginary weight problem.
    Anyway, for those of you have been most of your life overweight/obese: was what I said that unacceptable? Is this reaction in anyway reasonable? I know it is ridiculous, but at this point, I think divorce is a possibility. From his side because he cannot get over what I said, from my side because I cannot wrap my head around his reaction, and the subsequent insults to me.


    My advice... talk to a counselor, not MFP forums. Justcmy 2 cents....
    Agree, I have already an appointment, but it is in 10 days from now. I know I should just ignore the whole thing until then as thinking about it is not really productive, but it is hard :(
  • k8eekins
    k8eekins Posts: 2,264 Member
    LKArgh wrote: »
    My husband as a child was very chubby, obese at times based on photos. He says he was teased a lot about this.
    When I met him, in his early 30s, he was overweight, but not obese. Not ideal but not a problem, not something I ever asked him to change.
    Fast forward almost two decades and he has gained about 15 kilos (pure fat, he would not exercise to save his life) and his dr has raised his concerns. My husband is short, this weight is a lot on him. Which again I have not commented on, other than encourage him to take care of his health. I exercise a lot, offered to see if we can do things together, he has never accepted to even try.
    Fast forward to last couple of years and he has gained about 10 more kilos. Which in addition to being a health concern has made also some activities difficult.
    Noticing I have a declining libido, he has asked me about 6 months ago to have an adult discussion on what we could do to improve our intimate life. I thought we were being honest, as he said we should, and mentioned him not pressuring me (he can ask about in a "whiny" way that really kills my mood), improve personal hygiene (e.g. changing underwear daily which he does not do) and that losing a bit of weight would help too.
    Since then our sex life has almost ended, he even sleeps on the couch at night. After several fights about it, he said that he is very angry because I mentioned his weight and I should know how hurtful this is. I swear that all I said was "losing a bit of weight would be good" and it was something I have thought hard about first, but I truly believed he wanted honesty.
    The ironic part is he has since lost this extra weight. But he claims he has not done it to improve our relationship, that he does not know if and when our relationship could recover and that what I said was so terrible it cannot be unsaid. Which BTW I am not trying to pretend I did not say it. He has also said in reply that I have become like a cow over the years and he has not once complained (I have spent 10 years pregnant, including some miscarriages, have a foot I can hardly walk with due to arthritis and yet my BMI has fluctuated between 19 and just below 23 over these years, his BMI must be currently around 30. I exercise several times per week and I am rather muscular for a woman, he does not, never).
    BTW I have also been teased as a child for being chubby, and bullied and insulted a lot by a very abusive father over what I realise in retrospective was an imaginary weight problem.
    Anyway, for those of you have been most of your life overweight/obese: was what I said that unacceptable? Is this reaction in anyway reasonable? I know it is ridiculous, but at this point, I think divorce is a possibility. From his side because he cannot get over what I said, from my side because I cannot wrap my head around his reaction, and the subsequent insults to me.

    Separatism is rife in your marriage, where there should be cohesion. Heavy-set or being morbidly obese, never truly is a deterrent for intimacy and if he is this affected by what you'd said, then I'll hazard a guess and assume that the likely assault which hurt his feelings was your inference that he needs to change more regularly, when the solution would likely be how you can work the use of extra large wash cloths for example, before an activity, as a preface possibly, since he is clearly opposed to having regular showers. Men IMO are sensitive creatures.

    Do not give up on either of you! How quickly you both recover from this stalemate is in your court. We women need to decide. Visualise your life without him, then reassess if his loaded style of communication - uncensored, less all the filters is too destructive for you to tolerate. Do you still love him?
  • tiptoethruthetulips
    tiptoethruthetulips Posts: 3,372 Member
    He asked what could be done to improve, you were open and honest, he obviously wasn't ready to be open and honest. I am not sure what he was expecting from you when he asked.

    We are attracted to what we are attracted to...some men and women are sexually turned off when their partners put on weight, others aren't, there is no right or wrong, just what we are attracted to or not.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    It doesn't really matter if an internet forum feels you were okay. Your husband was hurt by what you said. He has to work through that. I think counseling for the two of you is the best plan to getting your relationship improved. If he won't try to understand that you love him and answered him honestly not to hurt but to help the situation even after months and calls you a cow then you probably don't have much going foward together.

    I've said things to my spouse that might have hurt at times while being honest. I trust him not to respond with anger or I could not be as honest particularly about our sex life.
  • MaggieGirl135
    MaggieGirl135 Posts: 1,033 Member
    I think counseling is a good idea, both individually and as a couple (3 separate therapists). Even if he doesn’t agree to counseling, definitely go for yourself. Rheddmobile was right that declining / poor hygiene is one symptom of depression, along with significant weight gain (or loss).
  • Bentforkx
    Bentforkx Posts: 69 Member
    The suggested three counselor model is a must!
    I would also like to suggest, your husband's "hurt" is projecting his responsibility towards the marital dysfunction onto you. And, you have clearly outlined some symptoms of your husband's clinical depression. Hoping for the best that you and your husband can find the help you need.
  • dsboohead
    dsboohead Posts: 1,899 Member
    Overweight is one thing but not showering and dirty underwear is unacceptable!
    Depression sounds like the cause of the above!
    Dirty drawers...REALLY?! And you're the bad guy????
  • ITUSGirl51
    ITUSGirl51 Posts: 191 Member
    Yea he is over reacting. I’ve been chubby, overweight or obese all my life. All of us got made fun of. I’m finally normal weight. I know when I become obese. It’s not a surprise to hear it. If my husband said “you really need to lose weight” (which he did a few times but not in a mean way) it hurt, but I would know he is right. I would not throw a fit and act like a baby week after week and try to hurt him back. That’s not love.
  • maureenkhilde
    maureenkhilde Posts: 849 Member
    Interesting to note, that at some point in time your husband let you know that when he was younger he was teased for being obese. So at some point before he lost some weight to only be overweight. Then after years with you he lets the weight creep back on to the obese state.
    Whether he agrees to go or not, you should go and speak to someone. Your husband is trying to make you the bad person, after all he did tell you he was teased, made fun of before for being obese, so how dare you do that same thing to him. He is attempting to make all of this your problem your issue, and he is blameless. And now has mostly lost the weight back to just being overweight again? Yes he may be depressed, or have a whole other agenda he is about to spring on you. I personally would never trust him again. This is not love he is showing or even respect. Is he controlling in other ways?

  • SeptemberRain81
    SeptemberRain81 Posts: 170 Member
    My husband said something to me recently that I have not been able to "get over". In hindsight, I realize it wasn't that one thing, but it was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back.

    I would hazard a guess that there are things you've probably failed to mention in regards to your marriage and perhaps, to him, that was the straw. There are three sides to every story; yours, his, and the truth. I would love to hear his side.
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