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Relationships

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Am I really “too fat for a relationship”? Please answer honestly

301 replies

WildflowerGardens · 27/08/2025 03:40

Context: I am in my mid thirties, and as the youngest daughter of the family I do all the caring for our elderly mother (81). It isn’t much, really, but I buy all the groceries, cook her meals and sort out any health related problems she has. I am also 95% of her emotional support (to use a rather cold sounding term), as my three siblings are older and rarely get in touch with her (citing busyness, work, etc). I also live closest, geographically.

I have been slim in the past, but now go up and down between a size 14 and at my largest a size 14-16. I find it hard to lose weight because I suffer from pancreatitis and have a nonfunctional gallbladder which is being looked into, a slow process - yes I’m making excuses, the honest truth is I enjoy eating and love cooking. My life is rather uneventful and monotonous at the moment and having a nice dinner to look forward to really breaks up the tedium (I do not eat to excess, mind). A calorie restricted diet sounds boring to me. I walk lots and do some barre type exercises from home.

My mother, who has always been slim (she is a size 8), keeps on at me every single day - imagine, every day - about my weight, and about how I’d have a happier life and meet the man of my dreams if I were slimmer; about how I’d quickly find a partner if I were slimmer; about how a man 12 years older than me and who treated me appallingly during a situationship “would have wanted to be with [me] had [I] been slimmer” and so on. EVERY day.

it is draining, very annoying and quite upsetting, I have told her many times that the way to help someone slim down isn’t by antagonising or bullying them, it’s by gentle encouragement. But still she keeps on.

please don’t suggest cutting her off or making ultimata as I am not in a position to do that, but any advice about what I should say to finally stop this would be much appreciated

OP posts:
LoyalKhakiWasp · 02/09/2025 11:14

That honestly sounds really tough — you’re doing so much for your mum already, and it’s unfair that she’s putting this extra emotional load on you. You’re absolutely not “too fat for a relationship.” Plenty of people meet partners at every size, and the right person will care about your kindness and loyalty (which you’ve already shown in how much you do for your family), not whether you’re a size 8 or 16.
If you do ever feel like making small changes for yourself (not for her or anyone else), it can be more helpful to focus on gradual, sustainable habits instead of drastic calorie restrictions. Even walking and the barre-type workouts you’re already doing are solid foundations. I came across some interesting insights here: liam hemsworth weight loss — it’s about how even celebrities deal with ups and downs in their health journey, and it really highlights that it’s not about perfection but balance.
In the meantime, maybe when your mum comments, you could say something like: “I hear you, but my health is between me and my doctor. I’d rather we talk about something more positive.” Sometimes just repeating a calm boundary helps over time.
You deserve peace and support, not pressure. 💛

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