Are You Too Fat To Be Loved?

Aug 18th, 2009 | Author: The Fly Guy | Category: Fly Features
Comments (10)

Attention ladies and gentlemen, I have a public service announcement. As much as we pretend like the physical side of our relationship is less important than the mental and emotional aspects when it comes to long-term stability, I have news for you … that may not be the truth.

“But they already love me, so they should accept me as I am, right?”

Well, not exactly.

While it’s important to grow spirituality and emotionally with your partner, it’s just as important for you to avoid getting too comfortable and packing on extra pounds during the course of your relationship. I ran across an interesting feature this morning that I wanted to share, which details some true stories of couples who struggle with this very problem.

So put down that sausage biscuit from McDonald’s and learn from their stories.

By Tobi Elkin

Liz and Danny* have been in a committed relationship for more than a decade after a serendipitous meeting at a Mexican restaurant while both were seated at different tables. At the time they met, she was a sprite-like redhead with a quirky sense of humor; he was tall and thin with a mop of curly black hair. Physically attracted from the moment they locked eyes, emotional intimacy came later and grew over time.

Fast-forward 10 years. At 41, Liz remains slender. But Danny, 46, is no longer the lean, dark, handsome type she fell for. Now, she says, his 6-ft.-1-inch frame is “more than a little fleshy and mushy” and the weight gain is a turnoff. So much so, she’s found herself uninterested in sleeping with him. She’s unhappy; he’s growing more resentful.

“It’s hard to admit but he’s simply not attractive to me anymore,” she says. “I’m turned off by his belly fat and love handles.”

While the couple is talking about the problem, Liz concedes that she’s thinking about leaving the relationship if Danny doesn’t, literally, shape up. She feels he’s become so complacent and entitled that he has little motivation to change.

“It’s kind of symbolic of the way he feels about our relationship,” Liz says. “I have refused to have sex with him on several occasions.”

We’ve all heard of men who pressure their wives, partners or girlfriends to lose weight, and often female fears of losing a man will prompt a major overhaul. On the flip side, experts say women often withhold sex as a weapon of last resort when their partners refuse to or don’t lose weight.

Dr. Laura Triplett, an assistant professor at California State University-Fullerton, conducts research on body image and the social implications of physical appearance. She has found that women in their 20s in particular stop having sex with their partners when they don’t meet their idealized notion of what a man should look like.

“They usually give an ultimatum: ‘We’re going on a vacation and you have until June to look this good,’ and they give him a picture that they want him to mold himself to. They buy him gift certificates to trainers and gym memberships as incentives,” Triplett explains.

It’s no secret that obesity is a national epidemic: The number of obese American adults outweighs the number of those who are merely overweight, according to data released in January 2009, by the National Center for Health Statistics. The data reveals that more than 34 percent of Americans are obese, compared to 32.7 percent who are overweight; nearly six percent of Americans are “extremely” obese.

‘He was growing man boobs’
Sabine* says Kurt* began piling on the pounds 18 months into their three-year relationship.

“I’m not sure if it was because he was getting too comfortable or because his adolescent skinny boy metabolism was just growing into middle-aged fat man metabolism. Regardless, he was getting bigger and not in a good way … he was growing man boobs,” Sabine recalls. “I was getting really grossed out.”

Sabine, now 37, is a size two and argued with herself about the passive-aggressive comments she made to Kurt, 40. Still, she stopped sleeping over at his house as often and turned off the lights when they had sex; ultimately, they stopped having sex altogether.

When men gain weight and become physically unattractive to their partner, “what usually happens is the woman takes it much more as a sign that he doesn’t love her. Women tend to personalize things,” Mary Jo Rapini, a psychotherapist who specializes in intimacy and sexuality at the Methodist Weight Management Center in Houston, observes.

“First there’s the nagging, ‘let’s go for a walk, let’s join a gym’. Then we start finding negative things about them. At this point, women feel like their partners don’t care,” she says.

When Sabine finally confronted Kurt, “he was shocked. He said he hadn’t noticed. He said he would try to take better care of himself. But at that point it was too late.” A year after that conversation, Sabine left the relationship.

“It’s great that women are realizing that we are also visual creatures and that we are sexually stimulated by what we see and that we have a right to ask our partners to gift us with the benefit of good grooming and a regular visit to the gym,” Veronica Monet, a certified sexologist who specializes in relationship dynamics, says. But “any time we threaten our partners by withholding sex or love whether we’re male or female, we take the relationship in a negative direction.”

Monet suggests talking frankly about your feelings with your partner. For example, “‘This thing isn’t working for me, would you be willing to change it?’ ‘I would be so turned on if you lost 20 pounds.’ The big reward any man gets is female approval.”

“Share your true feelings, while requesting a specific course of action from your partner,” Monet advises. “It’s extremely important to avoid any negative statements, name-calling or accusations.  Instead, begin sentences with ‘I feel’ followed by descriptors such as ’sad,’ ‘afraid’ or ‘angry’.” She says this technique encourages compassion while simultaneously expressing negative information and requesting new behavior.

Ultimately, Monet says: “You have to realize that your overweight husband [or boyfriend or partner] is only going to lose weight when he wants to, which sometimes leaves you out of the equation.”

Which is exactly what happened in Sabine’s case, though it was too late for the relationship. After the breakup, Kurt was accepted into a graduate business program, became motivated to shape up and started dropping pounds.

*Names have been changed. (Source)

Fly Discussion Question: So what are your thoughts on today’s piece? Have you ever gotten comfortable and packed on extra pounds in your relationship?

And on the flipside, would you stay with your loved one if they let themselves go? Vote below and then state your case.

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Comments (10)

  1. 1
    Spoonie Gee says:

    Been there, done that. I can admit that I got lazy in my relationship and developed a little gut. She didn’t say anything though; she just cheated on me. When I found out, she blamed it on me letting myself go. Even though she was dead wrong, I learned a valuable lesson.

  2. 2
    Milly says:

    Sadly whenever this happens, someone usually ends up cheating

  3. 3
    Medina says:

    Similar to this, I know someone who is kind of blase about their teeth and says that whoever they get with will just have to accept them. That’s just gross.

  4. 4
    Qwest Producer says:

    Im not going to lie, it does count. No one is perfect, but at the same time you have to make an effort. People are supposed to keep themselves together as best as they can. It’s like keeping your house together no one likes to visit a house that’s out of order. It’s the same with your body.
    about an hour ago · Delete

  5. 5
    Naomi D. says:

    I experienced this with my ex. At about 2 years into our relationship, he developed the habit of picking women’s bodies apart; making crude comments about a woman’s stomach, how tight her clothes fit, etc. Every time he did this I’d think to myself “He obviously doesn’t realize that he’s picking up weight too.” One day while we cuddled, I rubbed … Read Morehis belly which had started hanging over his boxers. The look on his face was priceless. I could see him become insecure right before my eyes. He started working out right away and stopped making comments about other ppl’s bodies while we were together.

  6. 6
    Sojdanielle says:

    I like Naomi’s comment…I was surprised that the person in the story who had gained weight was a male. Men are always making critical comments about women’s bodies yet their bodies are FAR from perfect, but typically us women are so forgiving of their ‘changes’ so men don’t notice/care about their flaws. I agree with the woman in the post, you can’t help it if you’re not attracted to a person anymore, intimacy is important and if anything gets in the way whether its weight or something else, both people need to work to fix it.

  7. 7
    Tunde says:

    i agree with the article. i don’t live in a fantasy world where i think looks don’t matter. they matter a lot especially with me. i’m kind of typical where in that i’m very visual. if my significant other started to gain weight i wouldn’t wait till i was completely turned off before i said something. i would invite her to the gym with me and if that didn’t work then i would tell her exactly how i feel. it may hurt her now but less in the long run.

    to answer your question, i’m a very physical person so i don’t see myself letting myself go (barring something medical which would cause me to gain weight).

  8. 8
    CurlyScorpio says:

    I’ve always appreciated a mans honesty, especially when they’ve asked me to lose a little weight. Things work much better that way. I in return have no problem telling my SO’s when and if they need to hit the gym. I’m a believer that as a couple, we should always compliment each other, physically and emotionally.

  9. 9

    thankfully, all of the women I kick it with regularly, stay in the gym. It’s one of the things that attracted me to them. They’re not small, but they stay active. As for myself, I definitely need to get my ass in a gym, I’M GOING TODAY, because I’m just presenting myself as nicely as I’d like. I MUST loose this gut. I think it would help my confidence, as if I needed it.

  10. 10
    REINA says:

    I recently had this conversation with a man, and my position is that we both need to stay in shape. I understand life intrudes, but I definitely want your mouth to always drool when you see me, and he should want the same. His argument was that if the man is the breadwinner, he should be allowed to slack off in the physique. I call bullcrap. Breadwinner or not, if you want me in the bed with you, give me a body I can appreciate.

    And by the way, Mr. Guy, leave my sausage biscuits out of this.



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