Robin --
I always get tongue-tied when people say the "unsupportive" comment, but I love your comeback. I have a "friend" who I think means to be nice, but is always commenting on how "great" I look or how "good" I am about eating, but it ends up feeling that she is being passive aggressive -- because she is. There's always a put down woven into the words. She is usually communicating that it must be nice to be born tall and thin (I'm born tall, but work hard like the rest of us here to be thin and healthy) and it must be nice to have time on my hands to exercise. Someone as busy and important as her doesn't have time for exercise. (My husband says it amazing someone as unlikable as this woman could have such high self esteem -- but doesn't it seem to go that way?)
I think sometimes that women-to-women there are no standards of sportsmanship about health and diet. I think a lot of women cannot admit feelings of envy to themselves and instead passive-aggressively lash out.
When I get this kind of comment from a friend, or a family member, I end up thinking and thinking of how I could put it in a sportsmanship framework which sometimes gets hilarious, but I stretch to find a way to say something positive -- usually in my head after the fact since at the time, I'm remembering that it's not nice to be rude, even when "she" starts it. So to your BIL's annoying comments:
--It's so sweet of you to be concerned about me, but I am feeling so fit and healthy!!
--Oh you are such a kidder, Me? Blow away in the wind. I'm feeling so strong these days.
-- All these questions about my eating, I'm beginning to wonder if you've got a book contract and are going to start writing the "eating healthy for dummies" book after dinner. (oops, that's not so nice.)
But I must say, I like the holding on to his fat wife as an anchor ever so much better.
Did I mention you look mah-velous????
Barb
