Okay to use the words "thin" and "skinny", but not "fat"
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TheNoLeafClover wrote: »jannickegn574 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »if someone called you fat, you would be on here complaining that your family called you fat...
Of course. But the issue I'm trying to bring up here is that nobody says "fat" because they know it's rude and not acceptable, but then they use the words "thin" and "skinny" without blinking an eye.
News flash. Everyone wants to be thin. Yeah, yeah. Queue the chorus of, "I don't want to be thin, I want to be strong." Strong and thin or strong and fat? I thought so. Look at every magazine. Every catalog. Every clothing website. Look at womens underwear ads. Look at mens underwear packages in fact. See any 250lb guys on their? Nope. Store mannequins. All small. Even in the plus size section they're only slightly larger. Everyone on TV who's not "the funny friend." You guessed it. Thin. Everyone from old photos before everyone in America started ballooning up. Yup. All thin people. The kids who made fun of me in elementary school? Thin. Jr high? Thin. High school? Nevermind, only time I was thin since I lost a little weight. Didn't get made fun of. Why? Because I was thin! People want to be thin. People don't want to be fat. Stop whining. Enjoy being thin. You have it made.
I understand your bitterness. I was bullied for being overweight too. But, people of all shapes and sizes are bullied, including those who are thin. I have personally witnessed it as well befriended people who have experienced horrific bullying for being thin or underweight. Bullying is never okay and is always harmful, no matter who is the perpetrator or who is the victim. And no, not everyone wants to thin. I aspire to have thick, muscular, legs and defined lats. But hey, that's me.
I agree - there are some women who are a size 0 and when they go shopping they're just as frustrated because nothing fits them properly - there's a very fine line where things will fit you and make you look like the model and where you just hate how you look. I think every woman is self conscious about something - legs, butt, stomach, thighs, nose, boobs, etc. We all have something. And I don't know that everyone wants to be "thin", women just want to feel good about themselves, they want that confidence that so few of us seem to ever get. And how do we get it? Well according to the media, it's by being thin. We all want to be thin because we really just want the confidence and to be happy and the media has told us that to be happy, you have to be thin, period.
There are some cultures (past and present) where being big is celebrated. They don't have the same type of media influence that we do, so really can you honestly say it isn't just the media telling us this is how we get happy?
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I kind of understand where you're coming from. I have a friend who will say "you're getting so skinny". It drives me up a wall! First, I am far from skinny or even a healthy weight yet. Second, "skinny" to me is unhealthy and a bad thing. I usually try to say thanks, but I'm not skinny. I think if our culture was less "politically correct" and actually discussed with their family and friends when they started getting fat we might have less of an obesity problem. I saw a discussion with an Asian and the people brought up weight and the Asian said that one reason why people in their culture tend to stay thinner is because everyone keeps everyone else in check. If a friend is gaining some weight they say hey, you're putting on weight. Looks like you need to cut back. I don't understand why our culture feels it's rude to let a loved one know that they are putting their life in danger and are looking like crap when they start gaining weight.0
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Im tired of this.0
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I don't know how I feel about this - I'm by no means thin (I wear a US size 16 jeans) however, I started at a 22 and at 320lbs. Now I wasn't happy there myself but after I lost my first 70 lbs, I realized it was other factors that greatly contributed to the unhappiness. For example, I was eating crap all the time which changes your mood greatly, I was in a bad relationship (which only got worse as I lost weight) and I was stressed all the time.
On the other hand of this, I know a couple women who are size 20, 22, 24, etc and they have no desire to be any smaller than they are. Is it healthy? Well carrying around a lot of extra weight is going to cause stress on your joints eventually but they're happy. They don't want to lose weight and no amount of trying I do gets them to come to a spin class with me. They don't judge me because I wanted to lose weight, they support me. And for that reason, I have to say each person's happiness is not up to others to understand. So for you to say you don't think fat people are really as happy as they say is a little unfair because you don't know if they're genuinely happy - they might just be. You weren't happy at your biggest and I wasn't happy at mine, but my friend who is size 22 and is happy then I am happy for her. She's a beautiful woman and I wouldn't want to try and get her to be someone she's not. Don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating for obesity, I'm just saying that what makes others happy isn't up to us to judge - lots of people love smoking and it's horrible for you. I think just letting others be happy in their own right is really all you need to do and when/if the time comes they are no longer happy, they have friends like us to help them through the challenge because we've already been there
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I agree with not judging people - I wouldn't like to be judged myself simply on my size and I can only speak for myself as i don't know how other feel but I do know lots of people who were "really happy" when they were fat who subsequently decided that they could never to back to being overweight once they'd slimmed down (myself included) so it does make you wonder.0 -
Mommaspoon1 wrote: »I don't know how I feel about this - I'm by no means thin (I wear a US size 16 jeans) however, I started at a 22 and at 320lbs. Now I wasn't happy there myself but after I lost my first 70 lbs, I realized it was other factors that greatly contributed to the unhappiness. For example, I was eating crap all the time which changes your mood greatly, I was in a bad relationship (which only got worse as I lost weight) and I was stressed all the time.
On the other hand of this, I know a couple women who are size 20, 22, 24, etc and they have no desire to be any smaller than they are. Is it healthy? Well carrying around a lot of extra weight is going to cause stress on your joints eventually but they're happy. They don't want to lose weight and no amount of trying I do gets them to come to a spin class with me. They don't judge me because I wanted to lose weight, they support me. And for that reason, I have to say each person's happiness is not up to others to understand. So for you to say you don't think fat people are really as happy as they say is a little unfair because you don't know if they're genuinely happy - they might just be. You weren't happy at your biggest and I wasn't happy at mine, but my friend who is size 22 and is happy then I am happy for her. She's a beautiful woman and I wouldn't want to try and get her to be someone she's not. Don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating for obesity, I'm just saying that what makes others happy isn't up to us to judge - lots of people love smoking and it's horrible for you. I think just letting others be happy in their own right is really all you need to do and when/if the time comes they are no longer happy, they have friends like us to help them through the challenge because we've already been there
I agree with not judging people - I wouldn't like to be judged myself simply on my size and I can only speak for myself as i don't know how other feel but I do know lots of people who were "really happy" when they were fat who subsequently decided that they could never to back to being overweight once they'd slimmed down (myself included) so it does make you wonder. [/quote]
Absolutely! I know the feeling - now that I've changed myself I cannot imagine going back and hopefully I won't. And perhaps if my friends lose weight they may never want to go back either. I'm not saying they will or won't, my whole point was most just let someone be happy. If she is happy right now at her size, don't tell her she'd feel better if she were skinnier - it may be true for us - but just let her be and if she gets to that point one day on her own, then I will be there to help her through the challenges. If not, well then I'm still her friend anyway.0
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