AITA for telling my husband that I like the way he looks now?

A fitness-oriented wife has always loved her husband’s formerly built physique, but after kids and a desk job led to a substantial weight gain—including a prominent beer belly—she discovered she genuinely prefers his softer, “dad bod” look. It feels cozy, warm, and gives her more to hold onto, while he remains handsome with strong arms.

When he recently voiced feeling bad about being heavier than her slim frame, she tried to reassure him by saying she’s “into bigger bellies.” The phrasing hurt him, leaving him upset and self-conscious. She now regrets the delivery, has apologized by emphasizing her unwavering attraction regardless of his size, and wonders whether her honest but poorly worded compliment makes her wrong, or if his reaction overlooks her positive intent.

‘AITA for telling my husband that I like the way he looks now?’

The husband expressed insecurity about his changed body.

So I (30f) have always been into staying fit and working out, it’s just my hobby. And my husband (31m) was super into that when we got married and when...

He was super built which I loved but ever since kids and desk job he has put on a big beer belly.( used to weigh 180 now 250) but here’s...

It’s comfy and warm and i like having a lil more to grab on to. Hes still handsome still has really big arms he just has a belly and b__t,...

The reassurance attempt backfired.

But basically last night he said he felt bad that he’s heavy and I’m skinny(120 average) basically long story short I told him I’m “into bigger bellies”.

Now I realize that sounds mean but I didn’t mean it like that. I was tired. But he got mad and is still hurt so how should I apologize. And...

The resolution brought relief and mutual understanding.

Update: I just told him that I didn’t mean it like that and that whether he wants to keep his dad bod or lose it that I always will find...

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He said he feels better abt how it and that he just felt a little hurt. But he also said he feels a lil more confident now that I expressed...

He’s gonna lose a few pounds but jokingly said he want obliterate it lol. Ty and I’ll give more updates if anything happens.

The wife’s feelings are genuine—she finds her husband’s softer physique comforting and appealing, a shift many partners experience after parenthood or lifestyle changes. Her intent was loving reassurance, yet the phrasing “I’m into bigger bellies” landed as objectifying or fetishizing rather than affirming his whole self.

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It focused on one feature (the belly) rather than celebrating him as a person, which can feel reductive when someone is already insecure. His hurt is understandable; body image struggles are deeply personal, and even positive comments can sting if they highlight perceived flaws. Her quick apology—emphasizing unconditional attraction regardless of size—helped repair the damage and boosted his confidence.

The broader lesson is that compliments about bodies, especially during vulnerable moments, benefit from centering the person (“I love how you feel in my arms”) rather than specific attributes. Honest attraction should uplift, not unintentionally spotlight insecurities.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Most commenters agreed the wife was not an asshole for her feelings, but many considered her wording careless or unintentionally hurtful.

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JDsWetDream − if he said that to you, how would you feel?

Responsible_parrot − Your heart was in the right place. “I think you look good” would have likely landed better than what you said, which in his head was acknowledging that...

do_or_dee − I don’t think you were being an a__hole but as someone in a bigger body I will say there are ways people who are attracted to me speak...

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and ways that make me feel fetishized and personally when I feel fetishized I feel insecure, not hot.

I want my partners to touch my belly but I don’t want them to focus on it. I want to know that they are attracted to me but not solely...

car55tar5 − NAH I am you. I'm into bellies. Telling someone you find them attractive isn't an AH move. But he's allowed to be self-conscious regardless.

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One of my partners has gained some weight over the course of our dating and has a bit of a belly, and I love it. Would I feel self-conscious about...

kappple − NAH He just sounds like he’s a bit insecure right now, just reassure him in a more complimentary way

Several users gave a soft YTA, pointing out that the phrasing focused on the belly in a way that could feel fetishizing or insensitive.

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SQ_Madriel − YTA "I am super attracted to you, always have been, but if you don't feel good, I'm here to support you. "

Elegant_Anywhere_150 − Soft YTA. I know you didn't mean harm, but you caused harm. If I were you, I'd apologize for my wording. "I love your body because its you.

The details don't really matter much, I was just wording it poorly. I'm sorry that I hurt your feelings about your body. How can I be supportive to you right...

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arablink − Soft YTA. Poor choice of words. Could have said you found his dad body attractive instead of big bellies. I doubt you meant any harm from it.

But basically telling him he has a big belly after he said he didn't like his weight is more idiotic than anything

A few responses highlighted the difference between attraction and how comments can land, especially regarding body size.

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doesntmeanathing − You intended well but your worded it poorly. That doesn’t make you an a__hole, just someone who articulated your feelings in an accidentally offensive way. It’s a very...

[Reddit User] − i feel like saying “i love your body how it is now - i find you incredibly attractive” is way better than “i like your big belly”

The wife tried to lift her husband’s spirits by sharing her genuine attraction to his changed body, yet the specific wording about “bigger bellies” hurt him despite her loving intent. Her prompt apology—affirming unconditional attraction and supporting his goals—helped heal the moment and even boosted his confidence. The community largely sees this as a communication misstep rather than malice.

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How do you reassure a partner about body changes without making them feel reduced to one feature? Have you ever had a well-meaning compliment backfire, or been on the receiving end? Share your experiences below.

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