An engagement ring can trigger an unrecognisable desire to eat healthily, diet crazily and have your body, skin, hair, nails (you didn’t care about pedicures before the diamond) in perfect, photo-ready order for the big day.
Marriage, on the other hand, can create a sense of comfort and freedom that completely undoes all of the aforementioned changed.
Coincidence? Definitely not.
Research out of the Flinders University in Adelaide shows women gain at least 2 kilograms (kg) in the first six months of marriage. The weight gain was more prominent for women who actively tried to lose weight before their wedding (they put on 3.2kg in the six-months following). While women who were pressured to lose weight before the wedding, usually from their fiance or mother, put on an average of 4.5 kg in the first six-months of marital bliss.
Two to four kilograms over six-months does not seem like much (let’s face it; it’s a fluctuation that can happen every menstrual cycle). But, over the long term, these small increments can add up to extreme changes. A 2012 study, published in Obesity, found women in their 20s gain an average of 10 kg in the first five years of marriage, while men in the same age group will put on around 13.5 kg in the same time period. Interestingly, couples who were living together but not married did not show the same pattern.
So what is it about getting hitched that tips the scales?
The goddamn relief.
I don’t know about you, but the pre-wedding workouts / diets / detoxes / beauty plans sound absolutely exhausting (not to mention unnecessary – you weren’t detoxed, fake tanned or living off kale when you met him having tequila shots at the bar, were you? Were you!?)