The Columbus Dispatch

Food fight between spouses must steer clear of children

- CAROLYN HAX Write to Carolyn — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

My wife refuses to change her diet and grocery shopping to accommodat­e my health needs and those of our kids. Everything she gets is processed grains and sugar. My doctor recently recommende­d losing weight, and exercise won’t cut it. But because she had an eating disorder when she was a teenager, she defends her actions by saying I should be happy she’s eating at all.

If I step in and start doing more grocery shopping, it will be, “You don’t trust me to do anything right” — but she’s also not compromisi­ng on frozen pizzas, crackers, sugary cereals.

How can I have a conversati­on without confrontat­ion?

Your wife has said two very important things: Her history of disordered eating is in the present and very much on her mind; and her way of dealing with it involves frozen pizzas, crackers and sugary cereals.

It may seem obvious that her food choices are unhealthy and therefore an appropriat­e target for spousal persuasion, but even though “health” is one category, you and she — and your kids — have very different and very specific needs.

With her grocery shopping, she takes care of her needs. She buys food that will keep her eating. That you not disrupt this fragile balance is a valid thing for her to ask. She may not be making this request in those exact words, but her claims and deeds and history in combinatio­n are saying it for her.

So don’t disrupt it, and instead take care of your needs on your own: Shop for and prepare what you need.If your wife responds to that by saying, “You don’t trust me to do anything right,” then respond to her with validation, compassion and a pragmatic alternate viewpoint. “I can see how you’d think that. But I’m trusting you to do what you need for your own health — and you’re right to do it. It’s just time for me to manage my own health instead of asking you to manage it for me.”

This brings us to your kids and their distinct needs. The most important thing you both can do is not create any associatio­n in your kids’ minds between eating and conflict.

Once made, a connection like that is difficult to break. It’s not as if they can just remove it from their lives. People with food issues have to face their demons every day for the rest of their lives. You and your wife know this the hard way.

So please make this the only conversati­on with your wife: “What our kids eat is not important compared with the way you and I handle food. What do you think about giving our kids both kinds of food in balance, and agreeing not to disagree?”

— Anonymous

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