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ForumsPsychological & BehavioralPartner jealousy after weight loss — how to handle relationship friction

Partner jealousy after weight loss — how to handle relationship friction

AmyNC_wife Sat, Feb 21, 2026 at 4:41 AM 28 replies 552 viewsPage 1 of 6
AmyNC_wife
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Jun 2024
North Carolina
Feb 21, 2026 at 6:06 AM#1

I need to talk about this and I can't talk about it with anyone in my real life because they'll think I'm being ungrateful or dramatic.

I've been married for 14 years. I've been overweight for most of our marriage. My husband has always said he loved me at any size, and I believe he meant it. He's a good man.

But I've lost 73 pounds on semaglutide over the last 10 months, and our relationship is... different. Not bad, just different. And it's messing with my head.

He looks at me differently now. He touches me more. He compliments my appearance constantly — which should feel good, but it makes me wonder: was I not attractive to him before? Was he lying? Or was he telling the truth then and his increased attention now is just... natural human response to change?

Meanwhile, I feel like a different person. I have more confidence, more energy, more desire to go out and do things. He's an introvert homebody and I used to be too — partly because going out when you're 250 lbs feels like an ordeal. Now I want to go dancing. I want to travel. I want to wear bold clothes. And he's looking at me like he doesn't recognize me.

Are we growing apart because I changed? Or were we always going to grow apart and my weight was just keeping me in place?

I love him. I don't want to lose my marriage. But I also can't go back to hiding.

50 6JessicaM_2024, TomFromTexas, mike.trainer_LA and 47 others
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hyun_seoul
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1,456
Jul 2024
Seoul, KR
Feb 21, 2026 at 6:23 AM#2

Are you me? Because I could have written this word for word.

16-year marriage. Lost 60 lbs. My husband is simultaneously more attracted to me AND more insecure. He sees men noticing me now and gets jealous — which he never was before because, frankly, men didn't notice me before. And that's a painful thing to acknowledge for both of us.

We started couples counseling two months ago and it's been difficult but important. Our therapist said something that stuck with me: "Your relationship was built to accommodate a certain version of each of you. When one person transforms, the relationship needs to be rebuilt, not just maintained."

It's not about blame. It's about the fact that you're literally a different person now — neurologically, physically, psychologically — and your partner is still the same person. That gap needs to be navigated with intention and communication.

35 16GenomicsKate, Dr.ObesityMed, HealthEcon_DC and 32 others
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MounjBrad
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Oct 2024
Kentucky
Feb 21, 2026 at 6:40 AM#3

This is one of the most common issues I see in my practice with weight-loss patients, and it's one of the most nuanced.

A few things are probably happening simultaneously:

  1. Your husband's increased physical attention may not mean he didn't find you attractive before. Human brains respond to novelty and change. He's noticing your body because it's different, not necessarily because it's "better." That said, your feelings about this are completely valid.
  2. Your increased confidence is likely a combination of physical change, neurochemical change (GLP-1 RAs affect mood-related pathways), and the psychological relief of food noise reduction. You literally have more mental bandwidth for life.
  3. The introvert/extrovert shift is fascinating. Some of what we call "introversion" in people with obesity is actually avoidance behavior — avoiding situations where your body might be judged, uncomfortable, or visible. When the body changes, the avoidance lifts, and the person underneath may be more extroverted than either of you realized.

My strong recommendation: couples therapy, even if your relationship is "fine." Major physical transformation is a relationship event, not just an individual one. Give yourselves the space to renegotiate who you are to each other.

21 2nick_SD_fit, ben_calgary, patPC_UT and 18 others
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Dr.RenalNash
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Mar 2024
Nashville, TN
Feb 21, 2026 at 6:57 AM#4

I want to share my experience, even though it's not the hopeful one. Take from it what's useful.

I lost 90 lbs on Ozempic. My marriage didn't survive. Not because of the weight loss itself, but because the weight loss revealed truths about our relationship that had been hidden under layers of complacency and codependency.

My ex-wife liked me dependent. She liked being the "healthy" one, the caretaker. When I got healthy, she lost her role. She didn't say it that way — it came out as criticism of the medication, of my "obsession with appearance," of me "changing." But our therapist helped me see: she was afraid of losing control.

I'm not saying this is your situation. But I'd encourage you to pay attention to whether your partner supports your growth or just your weight loss. Those are different things.

I'm happier now, even though I'm alone. But it was the hardest thing I've ever done.

20 21anders_CPH, Dr.NutriCornell, pam_stl and 17 others
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WendyG_ATL
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5,678
Apr 2024
Georgia
Feb 21, 2026 at 7:14 AM#5

This thread is exactly what I needed. All of these perspectives.

I talked to my husband last night. Really talked. Not the "how was your day" kind of talk. I told him I was scared that we were drifting. I told him about the compliments making me feel weird. I told him I wanted to go dancing.

He cried. He said he's been scared too — scared that I'd "outgrow" him. Scared that the new me would decide I deserved better. He said the compliments were his way of trying to keep up, trying to show me he noticed, trying to stay relevant.

We're both terrified of the same thing: losing each other. And we were both too scared to say it.

We're going to look into couples therapy. Thank you all. This community continues to be a lifeline.

37 16DebRD_ATL, KristenIndy, MarkLI_maint and 34 others
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