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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Help - my husband is morbidly obese

125 replies

BigFellaThanks · 24/09/2013 20:19

I don't know what to do about my husband's weight anymore.

He's been a very big bloke ever since we met. We're talking close to 30 stone.

I have always loved and fancied him, so this is NOT about any kind of vanity thing or me being shallow in any way. I feel disloyal enough posting this so please do not flame me - I just really need help.

I am very concerned about his health, and I think it's also starting to affect our relationship.

There have been various things during our marriage that I thought/hoped he would lose weight for, like our wedding, our children coming along and so on. We've talked about how he wishes he could run around with our boys, and about how he hates the idea that they'll get teased about the way their dad looks. He's never done it though - and to be honest I find it quite hard that he can't even do it for our kids.

He lost about 4 stone a few years back but then when it dropped off a bit he gave up and put it all back on again, and hasn't lost much since. He'll occasionally drop a stone and then put it back on again, but most of the time he really doesn't try very hard and makes lots of excuses.

I'm not unsympathetic - I have three children (two his, one from a previous marriage) and I gained masses of weight with each and slogged to lose it again, so I know how hard it is - but I also know that I did it.

I've tried taking over his diet completely - (at his request) - ie basically putting him on a diet plan and then doing all his meals, but a) this is massive pressure on me with three kids to look after and b) it's very, very bad for our marriage as I will be getting up early to make him breakfast and pack a lunch for him and then find out he's eaten cake at work that day, and then it feels really personal, you know? Like he's stomped on MY efforts as well as his own. Or I'll be serving up a healthy meal I've cooked and he'll come into the kitchen and start buttering bread for a snack and I feel like crying.

Our sex life is good - but we are quite restricted in what we can do, position wise, and I would enjoy a bit more variety. I also have to say - since there's no point in not being completely honest here - that I sometimes feel really taken for granted, that he doesn't want to lose weight for me, when I am very conscious of still wanting him to fancy me and my post-baby body issues and all that, and work quite hard to overcome these things (exercise etc). I do feel a little embarrassed at times when I introduce him to people for the first time, as I know they are thinking things about the way he looks and will talk about it later. He's a very big man. I would love to go out for a meal with him and not worry that people are looking at us, and not worry about whether the chairs in the restaurant are strong enough for him (which is not always the case... )

His problem is that he seems to have very little self control when it comes to food. It's like an addiction. He also eats huge portions of everything, and really enjoys food.

Finally, he has seen a doctor and tried diet pills twice which didn't work as they give you the shits if you eat too much fat, so in the end he didn't take them if he'd had a 'bad food day' and they wouldn't prescribe more in the end. He's seen a nutritionist who told him that he knows what he should be doing and she can't really help him anymore as he is just not doing it, and it's really up to him! We've also talked about surgery but I am very, very anxious at the idea of him going under the knife at his weight. Essentially I have a husband walking around today and although the worry of the heart attack etc is there (I keep asprin on me at all times), he's still here. I feel terrified that he'll go under for surgery and have complications and die, and I'll think that it was all unnecessary as his health (blood pressure, cholesterol etc) is actually surprisingly normal.

Finally finally - he is the loveliest man on earth. I am so, so in love with him and he is my soulmate. I've tried talking to friends and family but nobody really knows what to do, so that is why I'm turning to you for advice. I just want to make sure my lovely husband is around for a long and happy life with me and our beautiful children.

What do I do?

OP posts:
GuybrushThreepwoodMP · 24/09/2013 21:17

Yogii have you even read the OP? It's not about changing him for fuck's same. If you haven't got anything useful to say, why bother?
OP I agree with the others. Your post is lovely, carrying and honest. What is highlights most of all is that you love him as he is and as such, you desperately want him to be around as long as possible.
But it's not going to be easy. As you know, losing weight is a bitch. I certainly have a tendency to fall off the wagon because I do stupid strict diets that work in the long term but are not sustainable. Weight loss needs to be through a plan for life which allows for treats so he can stick to it long term. He needs to learn that he can fall off the wagon and if he does, it's not the end. Just because he has one biscuit doesn't mean he might as well eat the whole packet.
Can you just talk honestly about how to do it that he might be able to stick to?
I'm sorry you are so worried about someone you love, that must be so hard. But what you wrote is truly very moving.

maypoledancer · 24/09/2013 21:18

he'll use NHS cash getting an op to cure his love of food and lack of self control, thereby starving the system of funds for those who find themselves in the unfortunate position of suffering from diseases

Shitty thing to say. Lots of things the NHS spends its money on are in a way 'self inflicted' but it doesn't make them less deserving of NHS care. You can't restrict care to 'ideal' patients, whatever they are.

Where would you draw the line? No care for smokers? No care for drinkers? No care for a teenage cyclist who get a head injury and wasn't wearing a cycle helmet? No knee replacements for former footballers with osteoarthritis? No resuscitation for someone who crashed their car when driving too fast? No care for someone who has a heart attack running a marathon? Or a paraplegic who wouldn't have been injured if he hadn't been playing rugby? Or a critically ill child with measles who hasn't been immunised? No care for women and their babies if it's a multiple birth because of IVF?

You can't discriminate like this. Taxpayers love and value the NHS because it doesn't judge and offers care for everyone, without reference to their lives and 'choices'.

BigFellaThanks · 24/09/2013 21:18

That message and your first one made me cry a little, AF

Thank you. It's something that nobody has ever explicitly said to me, and that I've never really thought about.

As for psychological reasons - I'm not sure. Can think of a thing or two in his past but nothing terrible really. He hasn't always been like this - just gradually got bigger and bigger.

I tell you what though, as offensive as Yoggi's posts were - they have beautifully illustrated a point for me here. My kind, generous, incredibly hardworking, loyal and amazing husband just got called 'a slob', because he has a problem controlling his relationship with food. It tears me up that people look at him (or hear about him even, in this case) and immediately think nasty, judgemental thoughts, as Yoggi has illustrated. He doesn't deserve that.

He clearly has a problem. Nobody would choose to be his size - there are so many difficulties in day-to-day life when you're that big.

OP posts:
Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:20

Guy, yes i read it. It is about changing him.

Why not keep your comments to helping the Op rather than getting chippy with me. (not the lack of a question mark here )

Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:20

Note* the lack of...

AnyFucker · 24/09/2013 21:21

And you have made me tear up a bit, BFT. You clearly love your husband. And it is clear that this is unsustainable because you love him so much.

SugarMiceInTheRain · 24/09/2013 21:21

Sadly he is the only one who can do anything about it. Gastric band surgery will only work if he also makes changes to his unhealthy eating. A friend had a gastric band fitted privately, paid loads for it, but was ultimately unable to commit to a healthier lifestyle and had put all the weight back on within 18 months or so. If he can't exercise enough self control to lose some weight to start with, they probably won't consider him for a gastric band on the NHS.

ExcuseTypos · 24/09/2013 21:22

Yogic piss off. You're not helping the OP at all.

ExcuseTypos · 24/09/2013 21:24

Yogii

AnyFucker · 24/09/2013 21:24

You say you don't feel able/ready to hurt him by showing him the OP of this thread ? I get that.

Could you write a similar letter that doesn't make it clear you have shared your fears with strangers on t'internet ? (there is absolutely nothing wrong with that, of course)

Keep it personal, between you him and the children you share ?

GuybrushThreepwoodMP · 24/09/2013 21:25

I meant which DON'T work in the long term.
OP ignore slob comments. Your husband sounds lovely. It's as easy for a thin person to tell an obese person to stop eating as it is for a sober person to tell a drug addict to just stop using. If only it were that bloody simple.
AF is right. You didn't cause this and he does need to take control himself.
Also your resentment and feeling upset that he can't do it for you- it's OK to fell like that. Anyone would. Don't punish yourself.

AnyFucker · 24/09/2013 21:25

Yes, I do believe Gastric Band surgery patients usually have to commit to losing X amount of weight (and more importantly, keep it off) before they will be considered

JaquelineHyde · 24/09/2013 21:26

yogii the websites and technology you mention are just as faddy as all the diets that promise to help us get fit and lose weight.

Bigfella I feel for you and your dh. Until 2 years ago I was your dh, I have now lost nearly 10 stone and my life has changed dramatically. I still have several stone to lose but I wanted to let you know that it can be done and there are several ways it can be done but they all involve your dh and your dh alone. You can't do this for him as much as you want to you just can't.

I really, really hope your dh wakes up and realises he can do this and more importantly that he wants to do this. Flowers

Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:26

Big... One of my best friends who i've known for over 30 years ran 3 marathons last year. He was once 26 stone and is now 14 stone. He used to call himself a slob.

I hope you find a way of encouraging your husband to look after himself. Despite the tone of my comments, you can be sure i do wish you and him well.

maypoledancer · 24/09/2013 21:29

Yogii you might be well meaning but your comments about what taxpayers should fund within the NHS show your true colours.

You didn't answer my question about where you would draw the line, did you?

Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:29

Jaque... the people i know who use those things are having far more success than they ever did with diets. They really are worth a look, after all, dieting has been rather ineffective for most people.

Xollob · 24/09/2013 21:30

Counselling, counselling, counselling. This sounds like an emotional issue to me Sad. You sound lovely & I hope you sort things out.

Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:31

I didn't, maypole, but it's complex, isn't it. Probably too complex for here and you and I debating it would take attention from the Op.

JaquelineHyde · 24/09/2013 21:31

Yogii you having a friend who was once fat and called themselves a slob does not give you the right to refer to all overweight people as slobs.

Your post just stinks of the usual 'I can't be racist/homophobic etc as I once knew someone who was black/gay' comments that idiots make.

Xollob · 24/09/2013 21:33

And ignore Yoggi's ignorance.

SPBisResisting · 24/09/2013 21:34

as others have said the sad fact is there is little you can actually do. However, you know him and you know what makes him tick. So what could possibly help? Is he competitive? How is he likely to respond to an ultimatum? To family-centred activities? Is he likely to be able to exercise or diet more willingly?
All you can do is playto his strengths while accepting that ultimately you cannot alter the path he is choosing.

Yogii · 24/09/2013 21:36

Jaque.. just an anecdote. Don't read too much into it.

Primadonnagirl · 24/09/2013 21:40

Others have said it but I will too...your post is filled with real love and although it's ultimately up to your DH ,he's really lucky to have you on his side. No one can change their weight unless they have that moment where something goes "click" and it's different for everyone. The only other thing I'd add is you don't have to keep silent.e.g. tell him calmly how it makes you feel when he snacks when you are cooking dinner...ie it's not about the food as such but that he is being disrespectful ..there's no reason to let him off his behaviour towards you just because he's not facing up to his problems.Maybe the thought of letting you down might trigger something?

TravelinColour · 24/09/2013 21:40

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Mumsyblouse · 24/09/2013 21:43

I would encourage him to look at gastric surgery- he's just too far along for thinking that diet and exercise is going to change things, even if he wants to change, clearly he can't for whatever reason. I think the latest research shows that gastric surgery has better long term outcomes (in terms of weight loss sustained) than stuff like diet and exercise or even counselling, although all of those would help alongside surgery.

Of course, that would be his personal choice, but I really think it would be better than being stressed while he continues to get bigger as he ages and his metabolism slows more and his ability to take exercise is diminished.

I can tell you love him to bits, I know a very obese guy who has a very successful business, gorgeous kids and his wife adores him. I don't think necessarily you can solve these things completely- but it would be great to get him lighter (he doesn't have sleep apnoea does he?)