When I say "I'm fat" or anything at all about how unhappy I am with my weight (& it certainly isn't coming off as fast as I would like!) - I appreciate that my husband simplifies my whine without necessarily going there. "I love YOU, no matter what! - you're beautiful!" etc. He never comments on my weight one way or the other. Damn that's a smart man right there!
My husband is a chunky boy - he didn't use to be! - he used to be quite fit - he was in the army when I met him, and all that running & soldiering-type stuff kept him at a good healthy weight. But thru the years... (18th anniversary coming up this weekend!!!) he has gotten lazier & less caring about his body. While I love him at any rate, I have been concerned about him health wise (heart problems run in his family) and we've spoken about his "diet" or rather, lack thereof...and he recently turned 40, which is a "pressure age" for most people. He never thought about or mentioned his weight gain in the past few years, but recently, he's said that he "caught a glimpse of himself naked in the mirror & had a HOLY-COW! moment" about it.
He has agreed that he wants to be healthier, and he has taken some small steps toward that goal. But he remains "Buddah-Bellied" (as he calls it). And that is the worst kind of fat (visceral) that a person can endure, health-wise. So, with all the dieting knowledge I've gained in the past 22 years of weight loss, I'm trying to help him with his eating habits & exercise. First I asked him if he WANTED my help. He said yes. Then, I ASKED HIM WHAT COULD I DO/SAY TO HELP HIM. His response?
"Remind me to "shut my pie hole" when I'm reaching for 2nd helpings, and poke me like the Pillsbury dough boy when I am being lazy on the couch."
So that's what I do. Except I don't do it quite as bluntly as that! I say
"Honey, are you really hungry enough for a 2nd helping? Why not give it 10 or 15 minutes to see if you're still hungry." or I'll say
"Do you feel like going for a bike ride/walk with me?" Same thing, different words.
The point is, I think it's important to ASK SOMEONE what kind of response they want you to give them. And then act accordingly. 