Hey Fat Girl

I read this blog post when I started my weight loss journey. Then I started running outside when I weighed 253 pounds.

Hey Fat Girl

Yes, you. The one feigning to not see me when we cross paths on the running track. The one not even wearing sports gear, breathing heavy. You’re slow, you breathe hard and your efforts at moving forward make you cringe.

You cling shyly to the furthest corridor, sometimes making larger loops on the gravel ring by the track just so you’re not on it. You sweat so much that your hair is all wet. You rarely stay for more than 20 minutes at a time, and you look exhausted when you leave to go back home. You never talk to anyone. I’ve got something I’d like to say to you.

You are awesome.

If you’d look me in the eye only for an instant, you would notice the reverence and respect I have for you. The adventure you have started is tremendous; it leads to a better health, to renewed confidence and to a brand new kind of freedom. The gifts you will receive from running will far exceed the gigantic effort it takes you to show up here, to face your fears and to bravely set yourself in motion, in front of others.

You have already begun your transformation. You no longer accept this physical state of numbness and passivity. You have taken a difficult decision, but one that holds so much promise. Every hard breath you take is actually a tad easier than the one before, and every step is ever so slightly lighter. Each push forward leaves the former person you were in your wake, creating room for an improved version, one that is stronger, healthier and forward-looking, one who knows that anything is possible.

You’re a hero to me. And, if you’d take off the blaring headphones and put your head up for more than a second or two, you would notice that the other runners you cross, the ones that probably make you feel so inadequate, stare in awe at your determination. They, of all people, know best where you are coming from. They heard the resolutions of so many others, who vowed to pick up running and improve their health, “starting next week”. Yet, it is YOU who runs alongside, who digs from deep inside to find the strength to come here, and to come back again.

You are a runner, and no one can take that away from you. You are relentlessly moving forward. You are stronger than even you think, and you are about to be amazed by what you can do. One day, very soon, maybe tomorrow, you’ll step outside and marvel at your capabilities. You will not believe your own body, you will realize that you can do this. And a new horizon will open up for you. You are a true inspiration.

I bow to you.

http://flintland.blogspot.com/2012/05/hey-fat-girl.html

Replies

  • neanderthin
    neanderthin Posts: 10,222 Member
    Like.
  • Roxie65
    Roxie65 Posts: 155 Member
    I have wanted to say this to people running or walking at the park but I have never had the courage. Thank you for the post.
  • Mr_Excitement
    Mr_Excitement Posts: 833 Member
    That's great-- and it is how I feel about the bigger people I see in the gym. I get the feeling they're a bit shy about being there sometimes, but they're usually the ones I respect the most, personally.
  • sun_fish
    sun_fish Posts: 864 Member
    I remember reading this a while back.

    There is a guy I pass on my way to work, he walks his dog every morning. He is overweight but I can tell over time he is losing. That is what I want to say to him - "hey fat guy, YOU ROCK!"