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Fat Acceptance Movement

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  • Gallowmere1984
    Gallowmere1984 Posts: 6,626 Member
    CSARdiver wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »

    Or a weak, whiney parent presenting some chronically indulged little kid with a million options at the IHOP while the waitress has to stand there. "Do you want pancakes Honey? Or how about two scrambled eggs? How about some toast with butter and cinnamon sugar? Do you want milk? No? But you like all those things. What's with the sourpuss? What would you like then? Look at me sweetheart. The girl is waiting. How about French toast. They have the syrup you like. You could even have a hamburger sweetie. Sweetie? Come on now. Answer me. Would you like butter on your pancakes or she can serve it on the side. Honey?" Wait 'til this brat grows up to be the office supervisor.



    Having terrible flashbacks to my time as a waitress.

    Me too. Remembering the awfulness of not being able to roll my eyes, walk away, or even scream at them. To this day, if I dine with anyone who inadvertently tortures a waiter or waitress, I will never eat in a restaurant with them again.

    No better insight into the minds of others, simply watching how they treat those who serve them.

    Not necessarily. I can seem very crass if you read me wrong, but I am just not there for pleasantries, and I know the waiter/waitress isn't either, even if they get paid to seem like they are. I am efficienct with order delivery, to the point with any answer to a question, and so long as my coffee cup never empties, they've already earned at minimum, a $20 tip. Yeah, I've given 1200% tips before for that reason alone.

    Still doesn't stop people from telling me that I'm an a-hole for not smiling or being personable.

    Do you at least say please and thank you?

    Please? No. I don't say "please" for anything, ever.

    Thanks? Absolutely.

    Yeah. I wouldn't date you. Please is still part of manners when talking to waitstaff.

    Ehh, it's a personal issue. Please is reserved for one very specific person under a very specific set of circumstances. Neither of which really need to be discussed here. I'll just leave it at "random waitress 343896" is not said person.
  • Tacklewasher
    Tacklewasher Posts: 7,122 Member
    My personal take, as someone who worked in service jobs for years. If someone was speaking in a courteous way, I probably wouldn't even notice if they said "please" or not. I mean, I say it, but I didn't *expect* it when I was at work. I didn't expect small talk or specific phrases. I was there to do a job and if they wanted me to be social, I would do that for them. But if they didn't want to be social, it wasn't my job to force it on them.

    Some of the worst customers I had would *say* all the right words, but be utterly awful. And some of the best hardly said anything at all.

    To me there is a big difference between being social with a waitstaff and being courteous. I only worked fast food, so I was happy to not be sworn at, but a simple please and thank you, and putting your phone down when ordering, are not too much to ask when dealing with another person. Doesn't mean I need to chat.

    And I tip pretty well unless I'm ticked off at something.

  • Theo166
    Theo166 Posts: 2,564 Member
    Any competent wait staff keys off the vibes from the customer. They'll fish a bit to try establish a connection (good for tip) but should pick up when convo is not desired.
  • BodyByBex
    BodyByBex Posts: 3,685 Member
    Theo166 wrote: »
    Any competent wait staff keys off the vibes from the customer. They'll fish a bit to try establish a connection (good for tip) but should pick up when convo is not desired.

    This.

    And as a former waitress/bartender, "please" was never required, or even expected, from a guest. "Thank you" was ALWAYS appreciated and some days, a "thank you" can mean so much more than a big tip.
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,347 Member
    BodyByBex wrote: »
    Theo166 wrote: »
    Any competent wait staff keys off the vibes from the customer. They'll fish a bit to try establish a connection (good for tip) but should pick up when convo is not desired.

    This.

    And as a former waitress/bartender, "please" was never required, or even expected, from a guest. "Thank you" was ALWAYS appreciated and some days, a "thank you" can mean so much more than a big tip.

    Yup, former bartender, waitress, hospitality manager here. Please never bothered me. I did like a thank you, but you took the customer at face value and picked up on their vibe. Being flexible like that is the key to being good at your job. Sometimes, giving efficient service to the guy or girl who barely acknowledged your existence led to the biggest tips, and the most loyal return customers.
  • Theo166
    Theo166 Posts: 2,564 Member
    BodyByBex wrote: »
    Theo166 wrote: »
    Any competent wait staff keys off the vibes from the customer. They'll fish a bit to try establish a connection (good for tip) but should pick up when convo is not desired.

    This.

    And as a former waitress/bartender, "please" was never required, or even expected, from a guest. "Thank you" was ALWAYS appreciated and some days, a "thank you" can mean so much more than a big tip.

    Yup, former bartender, waitress, hospitality manager here. Please never bothered me. I did like a thank you, but you took the customer at face value and picked up on their vibe. Being flexible like that is the key to being good at your job. Sometimes, giving efficient service to the guy or girl who barely acknowledged your existence led to the biggest tips, and the most loyal return customers.

    And then there were the ones you had a great connection with, chatted them up, good meal, and you did special favors for, yet they would stiff on the tip. So frustrating sometimes.
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    My personal take, as someone who worked in service jobs for years. If someone was speaking in a courteous way, I probably wouldn't even notice if they said "please" or not. I mean, I say it, but I didn't *expect* it when I was at work. I didn't expect small talk or specific phrases. I was there to do a job and if they wanted me to be social, I would do that for them. But if they didn't want to be social, it wasn't my job to force it on them.

    Some of the worst customers I had would *say* all the right words, but be utterly awful. And some of the best hardly said anything at all.

    To me there is a big difference between being social with a waitstaff and being courteous. I only worked fast food, so I was happy to not be sworn at, but a simple please and thank you, and putting your phone down when ordering, are not too much to ask when dealing with another person. Doesn't mean I need to chat.

    And I tip pretty well unless I'm ticked off at something.

    I didn't mean to conflate being social and being courteous, I just meant that I don't consider "please" and "thank you" to be necessary components of courtesy. They're appreciated, but other things that go into courtesy are a pleasant tone of voice, body language, being considerate and not creating unnecessary extra work for a server (like making a mess at a table), letting me know when you're not ready to order so I can take care of other work, etc. If someone did all those things and just didn't say "please," I wouldn't consider that to be a failure of courtesy.
  • Annie_01
    Annie_01 Posts: 3,096 Member
    Annie_01 wrote: »

    The only way IMO that you miss out on life is if you turn your back on it. Obese people might not be able to climb a mountain but there are other things that they can do to enjoy life.

    I agree with the weight being hard on you as you grow older. However being obese affects the young in different ways...the opinions of others has more of an affect on you than when you are older. Quite frankly at age 64...I could care less about what others think of me.

    No one however has to miss out on life if they choose not to. Even people that are bed ridden can enjoy the life that they have been given.
    Sorry but that's simply not true. You do miss out on some parts of life when you are obese because you are simply unable to physically keep up. Doesn't mean you can't do something else you enjoy, but that doesn't alter the fact that you will miss out on some things if you are obese. You can't just choose to play hockey or soccer or go hiking if you are obese and physically unable to complete the task. If you're with a group of friends or family that decides they'd like to engage in some physical activity you can't do, you miss out.

    I've been there. In fact, not being able to play hockey anymore because I was simply too fat to keep up was a big eye opener and turning point in my health and fitness.

    What part of my statement is not true??? I didn't lie...I only stated my opinion.

    BTW...I was obese when I started hiking.

  • mustb60
    mustb60 Posts: 1,090 Member
    I was morbidly obese. I didn't have high cholesterol, I wasn't pre diabetic, my blood work was great. No one was making fun of me or making me feel bad about myself. But I felt like crap day in and day out. I was in pain from being big. I am down 80 and full of life. I feel like FA is a load of crap being twisted. No we shouldn't make fun but lets be realistic, MORBIDLY OBESE just ain't healthy.

    Yes. Eventually the gained fat starts to hurt the internal organs and body mechanism. However one can be little overweight yet fit. I think one should aim for fitness and losing the extra weight is part of it. What I see that it's not only vanity.
  • Shana67 wrote: »
    I think that shaming people for the size of their bodies is unbelievably cruel and should not happen, ever. Having said that, it is worrisome to me that it is becoming socially acceptable to be so very overweight. It is super unhealthy and can lead to early death. But, I can only do so much in my little corner of the world, so I encourage my girls to eat right and get decent amounts of exercise, and talk to them openly (and kindly) about the dangers of being obese.

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  • pastaordeath
    pastaordeath Posts: 1 Member
    I think that people should be respected regardless of their body size, but the fat acceptance movement just promotes the idea that being obese is healthy and okay, which is false.
  • zamphir66
    zamphir66 Posts: 582 Member
    Not to derail but there's another term I've come across recently that seems to intersect -- "Coercive Healthism." It's the idea that being optimally healthy is a moral responsibility.

    I'm going to be a shitlord and say yes, it is kind of a moral responsibility.
  • tomteboda
    tomteboda Posts: 2,171 Member
    Treasonous wrote: »
    Denying reality doesn't make it go away. The healthcare system is overburdened, largely because of lifestyle choices. We're not talking about ten or 20 extra
    Pounds here. Fat people know they are fat, and of course, schoolyard style taunts are unkind and ridiculous. But making obese a protected status is ridiculous. Also, the risk of "making" your child anorexic is minuscule compared to making him or her obese.

    You do realize that among adolescents the rate of anorexia and bulimia are quite high?
  • mph323
    mph323 Posts: 3,563 Member
    edited February 2017
    zamphir66 wrote: »
    Not to derail but there's another term I've come across recently that seems to intersect -- "Coercive Healthism." It's the idea that being optimally healthy is a moral responsibility.

    I'm going to be a shitlord and say yes, it is kind of a moral responsibility.

    I really disagree with this. It's nothing but righteous fat-shaming, and implies that a fat version of Mother Teresa is a bad person for failing to control their weight.

    eta: I doubt that people who feel they are worthless because they're not as healthy as they could be (and who decides what that is?) are going to be motivated by that to improve their health, especially because having been fat, they're probably never going to see the "optimal" health they could have achieved if they had never gotten fat in the first place.
  • zamphir66
    zamphir66 Posts: 582 Member
    mph323 wrote: »
    I really disagree with this. It's nothing but righteous fat-shaming, and implies that a fat version of Mother Teresa is a bad person for failing to control their weight.

    Notice I said "optimally healthy." That will mean something different for everyone based on individual factors, and it won't necessarily mean slim or uber athletic.

    I know Christianity does, but don't most organized religions have something to say about treating one's body nicely -- like a temple?
  • mph323
    mph323 Posts: 3,563 Member
    zamphir66 wrote: »
    mph323 wrote: »
    I really disagree with this. It's nothing but righteous fat-shaming, and implies that a fat version of Mother Teresa is a bad person for failing to control their weight.

    Notice I said "optimally healthy." That will mean something different for everyone based on individual factors, and it won't necessarily mean slim or uber athletic.

    I know Christianity does, but don't most organized religions have something to say about treating one's body nicely -- like a temple?

    But see, that's the point! You're saying everyone should observe the rules of one or another organized religion - and again, who gets to decide which one? And realistically, if "optimally healthy" means something different for everyone, it really doesn't have much meaning.
  • Annie_01
    Annie_01 Posts: 3,096 Member
    The Sunday-Go-To-Meeting dinners on the grounds that I used to attend as a child were far from "optimally healthy". If it wasn't swimming in grease (mostly lard)...or half a pound of sugar in each dessert...it didn't go on the table.

    Some people might also believe that treating one's body nicely is giving it what it craves.

    As a society...trying to impose "rules"...could lead to a world we don't want.

    I agree...health issues pertaining to obesity are out of control. I just don't think that we can arbitrarily decide for someone else how they live their lives.

    Assigning weight management to the "moral" category...I am not sure I agree with that though I do understand why someone might.
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