I was 8.5 stone when I got pregnant with DS. I was 14.5 the week before he was born. I had issues with eating as an adolescent and it wasn't until pregnant that I consciously realised that, though a normal weight again, I was reducing sensible food to compensate if I ate an ice cream or cake or whatever. Obviously you can't do that in pregnancy, and as I had horrible SPD and work was stressful I was comfort eating, too.
My mother raised it with a midwife who slapped her down sharply by saying I was doing really well with a difficult pregnancy, and weight expectations had altered since the 1970s.
I didn't diet after DS was born, but just by BF and eating normally I lost 2 stone in 3 months. I lost the rest over a year, down to 9.5 stone which I was when I got pregnant this time. At 9 weeks I think I am probably a stone heavier already as I am HUNGRY all the time! But that's an improvement on last time, when I lost weight that first trimester due to bad morning sickness. (Honestly, I think my eating so much better these days because I have to cook well and set a good example for DS is why I don't have such chronic morning sickness all day long.) I'm not going to worry about it. You know the actress, Jennifer Garner? She said she put on around 4 stone in every pregnancy, no matter what she did.
2 stone at 33 weeks is fine. Can I ask if your doctor is over say 50? Because my midwife told my mother that was very old-fashioned thinking, and these days they approach things in a far more nuanced way - that a woman who started out slim, fit and healthy and who had mobility problems, but whose blood sugar was fine, caused no concerns in gaining the weight, because my previous 34 years of living indicated I would shift it perfectly well, and I wasn't in a dangerous margin anyway. Bear in mind your baby, placenta and extra blood and fluid will be well over a stone of that weight, and the body lays in fat supplies for breastfeeding. I don't think a stone weight gain is a disaster for anyone, frankly. You're growing a human being from scratch in your body. Tell this man to try it and then get back to you on how the odd eclair is a worry. You weigh what, 10 stone at 7 months pregnant? How very dare you!
That's probably the national average weight for women these days. When not pregnant.