Why love is fattening for women

June 15, 2010 08:55 pm | Updated December 16, 2016 02:57 pm IST - Sydney

When couples live together, their eating habits often change to accommodate each other, says a researcher. Photo: K.R. Deepak

When couples live together, their eating habits often change to accommodate each other, says a researcher. Photo: K.R. Deepak

Researchers have found that marriage and babies might make women happy, but they can also cause unprecedented weight gain. University of Queensland researchers Annette Dobson, professor of biostatistics, said that apart from motherhood and menopause, childless women in their late 20s and 30s who are married or living with their partner put on more weight than single women, and when they had a baby the weight goes up again - about 9.2 kilograms over a decade. The study of 6458 Australian women over 10 years showed that the childless-but-living-with-a-man group gained so much - an average of seven kilos - while single women without kids put on the least: 4.9 kilograms. “What we don’t know is why partnering is having an effect on women’s weight,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Dobson as saying.

“But other research suggests that when couples live together, their eating habits often change to accommodate each other.” it quoted.

“It may also be that you make more of an effort with meals,” suggests Wendy Brown, professor of physical activity and health, and principal author of the research, part of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health. “You might have dessert as well as a main course, and you might drink more alcohol.” Wendy Brown added.

Researchers also suggest that unlike a single woman who is engaged and busy with a certain busy lifestyle, being a couple creates a cocooning effect, where one stays home more often and eats or drinks more.

“When you get into a relationship, you want to spend more time with your partner, and you stop doing some of the things that are important to you - like exercise. It’s not necessarily about not having time; it’s more that your priorities change - sometimes it feels very selfish to do the things you want to do, and I don’t think women do selfish very well. I think that when you become a couple, you give up some parts of yourself,” says 40-year-old O’Bryan, who lives in Glenbrook in the NSW Blue Mountains. If being in a relationship is bad, pregnancy is twice as much - It’s not unusual for women to gain up to 22 kilograms during their pregnancy, instead of the normal range of nine to 11 kilograms, points out Weight Watchers’ Kate Cody, adding that a common scenario for weight problems is when “kilo creep” after marriage is followed by a first pregnancy.

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