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my boyfriend says he loves me but says he is not attracted to me because of my weight

By June 14, 2009 - 2:59pm
 
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First off, I am 38 and my boyfriend is 22. He is an old soul, I am a young one. I am getting ready to move to Seattle to move in with my boyfriend. I am overweight. In the beginning of our relationship - we met on a video game - I didn't take him seriously because of his age and distance and kept him at bay. Also because I didn't take him seriously, I sent him older pictures of me. When things began to take a turn and I started to have feelings for him, I came clean. He said it didn't matter to him. When we met for the first time, things were great. But he did say to me that my weight is an issue for him and he found himself not attracted to my weight, but he loved everything else about me. He has been encouraging with the weight loss. My problem is...as accepting as he as been with my weight....I feel the absence of his affection. He tells me if he wants more of my affection, I need to lose the weight.

He made a decision to stay in this relationship even though I wasn't upfront about my weight and I am grateful for that. But sometimes, I feel really alone in this. He tells me he wants me to move in with him, but I am so nervous about it. When we get into arguements, it is typically about his lack of attention. Which leads to him referring back to my weight and the decision he made to stay in this relationship. I am just thoroughly confused. He says he loves me, but I do not want feel alone in this relationship. I know that I cant blame him for being attracted or not attracted to certain body types. I probably wouldn't date myself if I was a guy. So, do I trust that the attraction will come back?

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(reply to Anonymous)

Amen, sister. There is nothing I can add other than thank you for sharing this and good luck in your new life. You've earned happiness-grab it and go with it.

June 19, 2010 - 8:08am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I've been in a similar situation, where my boyfriend of 4 and a half months said he isn't really attracted to chubby girls. All of my friends have said he must be mad as I am not chubby but I have seen his other girlfriends who were stick insects in comparison so I guess I must of looked fat in comparison. He spent months trying to get me to go to gym, storming out on me saying I don't have any energy and if I just went to gym he thinks it would be better for me and him - that I needed to get goals in my life. This used to hurt me because I didn't understand why he was so mad at me. He finally admitted that he tried to love me but just couldn't which he made sound like not such a bad thing . I was devastated.

Then I got to thinking, hang on. I'm in love with him and so didn't look at him in that kind of light. I could have said to him well I don't really like men who have big biceps with no six-pack (in fact a little soft in the middle himself), who are less than 6 feet tall, have male pattern balding, have no financial security, or who only have two pairs of pants and no car. BUT of course I still loved him to bits - I loved the funny jeans with frayed edges and his cute balding head and then I thought hey isn't that what someone else is suppose to feel for me? If not then what the hell am I doing weeping over someone who is clearly not worth it?

The concept of what's in the inside is more important than what is on the outside is not just a concept we should be "feeding" to kids to make them feel better but think about it would he rather be with a lovely person like you who maybe has I little meat on her bones or some 2B pencil who couldn't care if he died in a gutter. He needs to grow up. If he is so superficial to chose the latter then I say leave him in the gutter and move on!

I eventually said to my ex, "So I see, if I go to gym and lose weight then everything will be fine and you would be attracted to me because I was thin"...then looked quizzically at him I followed it with (once he was nodding his head in agreement) "So does that mean you will have a frontal labotomy to change the fact that you are a horrible, superficial jerk because that is REALLY unattractive to me?"

Reading Alison B's comments and the marks of a healthy and unhealthy relationship was a good measure, and remember that if the relationship is unhealthy it will make you unhealthy too, not to mention very unhappy in the long run.

Good luck and I hope everything worked out in the end. Don't let anyone make believe that you are anything other than beautiful!

May 17, 2010 - 5:36am
(reply to Anonymous)

Anon,

You said it beautifully. And I very much admire your own personal growth through your experience with this boyfriend. It obviously was very hurtful to you in the beginning; the fact that you were able to center yourself, think it through and act on your own behalf is awesome. Thanks so much for sharing your story -- you will help everyone who reads this thread. Best wishes to you.

May 18, 2010 - 9:06am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I say, "Right on!" to the first Anonymous.
I was recently just thrown into a similar situation. My boyfriend of a year and two months admitted to me that he wasn't attracted to my body, and would like it if I could lose some weight. I realize that I can use improvement and I've always wanted to do this for myself but could never keep up considering my love for food. All I do is go to school three days a week and spend some extra time and home, sit around, and eat when I'm bored. Very unhealthy, I know; but hearing him saying that made me cry and feel inadequate, despite how true it was. I asked if that was the only thing that he felt unattracted to, and he said yes; claiming he fell in love with my personality, not my body. I know this for a fact considering I'm his first girlfriend and he is a very, very handsome man who gets hit on and flirted with practically everyday. He's only had a few sexual encounters before me, all of which he was under the influence of illegal substances. People tell him he should a be a model constantly and I feel physically imperfect being with him. He loves my face and has claimed I have a genuinely beautiful face, but the flesh around won't allow its full potential to blossom.. (I have a chubby face so I call myself "moonpie-faced") Despite all this he loves every aspect of my being, and he knows that I've been insecure about my body for quite some time now and he just wants to encourage me and have a healthy, happy, confident girlfriend. So whatever way you look at it, hunny; your boy isn't being a "jerk" considering that it is OBVIOUS he loves you for all the right reasons. If you were overweight before he got with you and he was only after physical attraction then trust me, you would not be with him now. He saw something more in you, despite your apperance, but now that he's more involved in your life, he cares enough to share with you that he wants you to improve for him and yourself.
Hope this helps. :)

April 23, 2010 - 10:10am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I admire and respect your boyfriend for being honest about what he dislikes in regards to your physical stature. If more men and women were like him then many relationships would have possible have been salvaged.

THINK ABOUT THIS: How many times do men and women prejudge someone based off how they look or their attire. If someone attempts to greet them or show interest in them and then they choose not to engage in conversation yet alone a potential friendship because they are not physically attracted to them. Every day this happens and no one makes anyone feel bad about it. It is human nature to want to look at something that is aesthically pleasing, especially your mate.

With that being said, BRAVO to your boyfriend for making the committment and valuing who you are as a person and encouraging you to lose weight. If you were secure in your weight and ok with your physical appearance, I would tell you to let him go but it appears that this is something that you want to change also. Us women are strange creatures when it comes to pleasing our men. We will change our hair color and anything else. If your man tells you he loves when you wear fishnets, what women would not have a couple pairs on standby? Dont lie to yourself. You know you would : ) All jokes aside, it is one thing for your to want to change something and letting your man inspire you to do it versus it being his desire and you having nothing to do with the goal.

With that...continue to move forward with losing weight. But once it is no longer a shared goal or he is not supporting but demanding you to lose weight, let it go. At the end of the day if you lose the weight and it turns out that he is a jerk, guess what...You still have reached a goal and improved the way you feel and see yourself.

This current man in your life may only be there for a season, so absorb the positive from this encounter and learn from your mistakes.

March 26, 2010 - 5:47pm

jemlovestravel,

How are you doing? Any updates on your situation?

To Anon-- I really think you should read Alison's post on a healthy relationship again. Unfortunately, your insecurities due to what your boyfriend has said to you are now your demons. Personally, I think when a man has crossed the line to tell you how unattracted to you he is-- that's enough to get out of a relationship and know that it's bad for you. Easier said than done but it's important to love and respect yourself enough to say "I don't need to take this". Good Luck.

February 8, 2010 - 4:42am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

what a loser tell him to go bury himself

February 7, 2010 - 10:26pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I have a similar problem... This may be really long, because I haven't told many people as I have no friends or family, and no one would really ever want to take the time to hear this whole thing. I am going to tell you all of it though, not to steal your fire or take over your thread haha, but because I think people in these situations feel very alone and want to understand what is going on. I want to give you a lot of details because maybe they will link up with yours, and you will "figure something out." I also have moved in with the person and lived with them for two years.

I have been with someone now for over two years, who initially wasn't attracted to me because I'm not curvy enough hahha :) Mainly my butt, and because at the time, I had gone through a lot of hardships and was sort of unhealthy, and depressed, not eating much, and not having the time to dress pretty. I was practically homeless, just dealt a bad hand for a while. He wasn't just not attracted to me, he was actually disturbed at points by how my body looked, even stopping in the middle of making love. But again, I was *quite* "sickly" (as he likes to call it) at the time.

He "took care of me" and allowed me to live with him, paid for everything, until I could get a decent job and qualifications. Now we are both relatively successful, and somewhat iconic in our area as being important in the art world, as a unit. I know that if he asked me to marry him, I could absolutely love him always, we work together well, are dedicated to the same things, and we have strange things that link us from our pasts, like making up almost the exact same characters in our artwork before we met. I am also now doing exactly what I always wanted to do with my life, and we are mostly only growing closer, dealing with arguments better/not arguing much anymore.

So if you want to know what happens when you stay with someone who is not attracted to you--- I don't know. It is still very painful for me, that he was not attracted to me in the beggining. I don't get excited for our anniversary dates, because I know now at the time when we first me, he didn't feel the same as I did. I read in his old conversations with friends online, he said "I'm not as hot as his other girlfriends."

I have worked out a lot, and I guess I'm somewhat "presentable" now, more healthy and capable, but I'm still working at it. The reason why I didn't mind doing this for him, was because I didn't feel good about how I looked, and I *was* sickly and barely able to keep myself going. But It is painful because I want to be loved and wanted no matter what I look like, haha, I want it to be my decision only to exercise and better my self, and for him to just be happy for me, not like my body is so terrifyingly skinny and ill looking that I have to work out just to not be scary during sex.

Now I often feel inferior to other women, am always watching him to see if he will check out someone (which he does in front of me at times, but denies it, who knows, I actually could be imagining it-- I am often very paranoid now, and I know that men also instinctively do this). I am jealous of his past relationships with people who he was very sexually attracted to. In fact, I read all his love letters to them online in their journals, look at their pictures together (he still has them in a folder called "girls"), and just get sick over it to the point of almost fainting and torture him about it every few months, when I'm feeling down. I'm always trying to "figure something out" about his past, and I don't believe him that he isn't still in love with them, although I don't *really* have any reason to think that. I just want to know what they have, that I don't, that fills that missing gap. Why are they so desirable. I want to know why he doesn't write love letters to me, or want me so much that I get annoyed at him haha, or act like a puppy dog to me. It sounds selfish out loud, and babyish. But I want him to be obsessed with me like he was with them-- not in an unhealthy way, but it wouldn't be unhealthy anyway because if he was that into me, I would take care of him, and treat him well, and not leave him or manipulate him, or make fun of him like they did. I think we both have problems, because I am too insecure, and he has been hurt so much by women that he is enslaved by his need to worship an unattainable thing, or something. Why else would he have all these failed month or so long relationships with very pretty but egotistical girls that are based mostly on sex seemingly, although he says that he was miserable because he couldn't *find* someone to stay with him, and that girls are fickle. ("But c'mon, look at the choices..." that's what I think/say and it makes him mad because he says that you can't know what someone will be like.)

The sex in the beginning was pretty akward/unsatisfactory for me, and for him. He prides himself on his passion and intimacy, but he is much less intimate/free than my other boyfriends, but maybe it is just our chemistry that makes it that way. (another mind-f*** that makes me start obsessing about his past, wondering what "they" do in bed that is different from me, especially since he doesn't really let me take initiative, and likes pretty basic sex.) It has grown better with time, sometimes it is amazing and beautiful, sometimes there are weird patches that evoke the beginning. It usually coincides with my confidence level, another reason why I believe the chemistry problem is all my fault.

So what do you do in this situation? It's very confusing, because on one hand, you have an ideal relationship that seems to be growing every day, despite hardships that don't sound very good to people if you try to explain it to them. For me, I can say that it is all effected by my acceptance of what has happened, I have to be able to accept the way he was with girls in the past, and stop causing conflict with my insecurities and need for reassurance, because if things keep growing the way they seem to be, then maybe what we have/could have would be truly unconditional and much more passionate than anything in his past. It's just hard because I feel this way about him-- and it's hard to restrain myself to be calm and loving, when I want to scream that he is my soulmate and kiss every part of him all the time. It's a very terrifying risk, because not only could it all amount to nothing, but there are also many ways you could sabotage yourself one way or the other. I just have this *feeling* that we will get married and he will be the one for me always, but each time I push him away and fight with him and act crazy, I know I make this outcome more and more difficult and unrealistic. So even though his actions don't/didn't help, I am my own worst enemy in this.

Can you overcome these feelings? It is very scary, but I suggest trying to do what your heart tells you, if you really want to be with this man. Make sure you are sound financially for the most part, or have a career that can allow you to live on your own if you have to. But maybe you just need to see what happens if you go into it with full trust and a full heart. If you get hurt, then you just have to NEVER do anything like this again. And KNOW for sure that it was not your fault, and that you are an amazing, loving, and beautiful person that has a real soulmate out there.

November 13, 2009 - 9:37am

Hi,
Let's start again; I have some educational information regarding relationships that takes all of the "opinions" out of this, and will be more of a help to you (my assumption, gauging from your response above).

Here are some ways to know if you are in a healthy relationship, which is more to the core of your question.

"In a healthy relationship, you:
* Treat each other with respect
* Feel secure and comfortable
* Are not violent with each other
* Can resolve conflicts satisfactorily
* Enjoy the time you spend together
* Support one another
* Take interest in one another's lives: health, family, work, etc.
* Have privacy in the relationship
* Can trust each other
* Are each sexual by choice
* Communicate clearly and openly
* Have letters, phone calls, and e-mail that are your own
* Make healthy decisions about alcohol or other drugs
* Encourage other friendships
* Are honest about your past and present sexual activity if the relationship is intimate
* Know that most people in your life are happy about the relationship
* Have more good times in the relationship than bad

In an unhealthy relationship, one or both of you:
* Try to control, change or manipulate the other
* Make the other feel bad about her/himself
* Ridicule or call names
* Dictate how the other dresses
* Do not make time for each other
* Criticize the other's friends
* Are afraid of the other's temper
* Discourage the other from being close with anyone else
* Ignore each other when one is speaking
* Are overly possessive or get jealous about ordinary behavior
* Criticize or support others in criticizing people with your gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion, disability, or other personal attribute
* Control the other's money or other resources (e.g., car)
* Harm or threaten to harm children, family, pets, or objects of personal value
* Push, grab, hit, punch, or throw objects
* Use physical force or threats to prevent the other from leaving"

"Perhaps the most important thing to do is to trust your instincts and the people close to you whose opinions you trust and value. Each and every one of us deserves to feel safe, valued, and cared for. Keep in mind that one of the strongest signs of a healthy relationship is that both people involved feel good about themselves. Also, by treating yourself with self-respect and believing in your right to be treated well, you are taking important steps towards developing equitable, mutually fulfilling ties in the future."

Which is another important question: your closest family and friends who you love and trust, and who know you the best and have your best interests at heart. What is their opinion on this matter?

So, this is the million-dollar question: after reading the criteria above, do you think your relationship meets the criteria for a healthy relationship? I am still concerned about anyone wanting to be in a relationship with someone who wants them to change, and emotionally blackmails them into changing because they "can't" be attracted to them. I truly believe this is a form of emotional mistreatment, so please be cautiously optimistic.

By the way, is your boyfriend ultra-fit, or does he have some weight to lose, too? Is he open to changing his appearance or working on a character flaw, or are you the only one with a flaw that needs changing? Maybe something to consider...how open is he to change, for the good of the relationship?

Sources:
- Go Ask Alice
- National Center on Domestic & Sexual Violence (previous article written, can read here

June 14, 2009 - 6:40pm

To all that have responded....This is not a whim....we have been dating a year and see each other at least once a month. And we have had sex and it just keeps improving. Just asking him now if there are any other issues that I am not aware of and he said no. I believe that we have the issues that most relationships have considering it is long distance. He is the one that asked me to move in with him. He always apologizes because he feels guilty because he wants to love me unconditionally but he can't because of my weight. I think because he made the choice he did that he truly does love me unconditionally, but has not realized the depth of it yet. I am not making excuses for what he is or is not attracted to. I like handsome men, but if they are stupid, well then I won't date them. I feel blessed that he sees more in me than just my weight. I appreciate his honesty in regards to my weight. Oddly enough, he is the one that initiates the sex...so I think in my heart he is attracted to me, but because of his opinion on overweight people his entire life, falling in love with an obese woman wasn't in his plans and does not quite know how to deal with it.

I am not purely focused on what he wants. What I do want is to see if we can have a "normal relationship." If such thing exists. I am smart enough to know that long distance relationships only go so far. I feel blessed that he is attracted to my personality and my brains. He said the only thing missing for him is the weight. He even said to me that it probably wouldnt take me losing that much weight. I also feel good about him because he is supportive of my weight loss. He encouraged me to join weight watchers and calls me in the morning to wake me up and says "Time for Zumba sleepyhead" and he tells me he is proud of me when I dont feel well and still work out.

Writing all this has made me realize that my insecurities because of my weight do tend to make me clingy sometimes and I think when I get clingy and started needing reasssurance all the time, it probably gets old for him. I am also a woman that tends to really over think things because I was cheated on in my past.

Thank you for all the feedback, it is truly appreciated. :)

June 14, 2009 - 5:49pm
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