I’ve been very overweight for a long time. Lately I’ve been trying to eat healthier and lose weight. (among dealing with other nutritional deficiencies.)

One of the big problems I have though is that I have a lot of trouble eating foods with weird textures, smells, tastes, etc. This of course includes a lot of vegetables and some kinds of healthier proteins like fish.

A doctor I was working with recommended talking to a nutritionist who is familiar with these kind of problems. However, I didn’t find them to be that helpful. They didn’t really have a good understanding of what kind of things bothered me and didn’t really seem to want to learn or incorporate that into a plan. I got a lot of “Well can’t you just try to put up with some of these things that bother you?” So eventually I gave up with them. So I’m back to eating either miserably small portions of unhealthy foods (which doesn’t really solve the nutrition problem and makes me hungry) or a handful of rather bland healthier foods that are fine to eat but just make me sad.

Does anyone have experience navigating these kinds of problems? What did you do? Do you have any suggestions? Types of foods, recipes, resources that deal with this, etc?

  • Seigest
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    1 year ago

    My roomate has adhd but, they have this issue.

    Anything with a watery crunch they won’t eat. This is pretty much all fruits amd veggies. Cooking healthy is a huge pain. Event the little flakes in ramen packets need to be sifted out. I do all the cooking.

    I’ve learned since it’s all texture I just need to eliminate that. Gourds like squash and pumpkin are great because I can just cook the hec out of them then mash them into a paste. This eliminates a lot of nutritional value but it’s better then nothing.

    A food processor is also good. I can make anything into a paste. But finding things that taste good is tricky. And only some things can be processed enough to be void of texture.

    Smoothies are good and along the same idea. But you can also make sauces just toss on a pasta. One I did was a bunch of tomatoes, spinach, onions. You could also make a squash based sauce.

    Last option is just to supplement. Take daily multivitamins, fiber drinks, and eat less. This is not healthy but better then starving

    • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️@7.62x54r.ru
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      1 year ago

      I have ADHD and my sister has autism and I wouldn’t be able to deal with that, especially needing to go through a process to remove the flakes from ramen.

      I’m tempted to do group cooking for my roommates so they can eat healthy and charge them an extra $100 per month or so to accommodate it, but I wouldn’t be able to deal with a lot of special requests like that. My entire mentality along with my autistic sister is to want people to get over it.

      My wife’s uncle probably has autism and massively over compensates for it and he doesn’t tolerate “food aversion.” He’s also a total shithead and would be completely unhelpful with actually helping someone over come food aversions.

      • Seigest
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        1 year ago

        The trick is to get a siv where the flavors and salts get through but the flakes don’t.