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Fat Acceptance Movement

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Replies

  • Marjayhan
    Marjayhan Posts: 59 Member
    edited June 2017
    Fat people know they're fat, they don't need to be told about it. I'm sure a lot of us feel bad about our excess weight as it is without the name calling from others. If people are happy as they are it's not for us to judge. I've never seen anything that glorifies obesity. I'm sick of ads that show stick thin models all the time and every magazine you'd pick up nearly all have "lose 10 lbs in 4 weeks!" or "get that summer body ready!" "10 top exercises for a leaner you!" . I'm not saying unhealthy living should be a tolerable thing but it's up to each individual to take ownership of their health and weight. It's not for any of us to point it out. Unless its a close family member and you're worried about their health. Over weight people are not happy being overweight, really , if they are genuinely being true to themselves deep down. The only thing we should all be doing is helping and supporting people when needed, when they are struggling with their weight/food issues. The struggle is real and ongoing. Sometimes there are other things affecting the person causing them to use excess amounts of food to fill the void or need of some other issue in their lives.
  • Marjayhan
    Marjayhan Posts: 59 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    CipherZero wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    ahhhh thanks friend.

    tbh whatever. Hate fat ppl all you want but why tell them? Sadism?

    K9jNCVe.jpg

    No one - least of all me - has said to tell fat people a thing. I've said HAES and their ilk are impossible to please if they don't get their over-inflated egos stroked for being "fat and beautiful". Their victim complex is nauseating and utterly unhelpful to their own cause.

    I think there are like a dozen ppl in the US who are that ridiculous. The idea of fat acceptance shouldn't be judged by that. And look at any single post of a happy, fat, confident woman and you will see comment after comment about how she's gross, unhealthy, promoting obesity, etc. I'm not talking specifically to anyone in this thread but to be, that's the opposite of fat acceptance. Just let ppl be fat and happy. Most fat people know the risks.

    People voice their opinions on people and things that they find distasteful all of the time. Why should the obese get a pass?

    People disproportionately voice their distaste for the obese.

    I've seen so many pictures of thin women eating a mountain of food and people say it's awesome and she's "wife material" and things like that. No one says it's gross or glorifying unhealthy habits.

    Furthermore, I would argue that people should do a lot less voicing their opinions of distaste although that's not what this thread is about. It's not hard to be decent. If you think something's ugly/stupid/whatever how hard is it to keep it to yourself and go live your own glorious life in the sun?

    Nope on the thin pets. She'd get labelled bulimic by many people. Actually post a picture of an overly thin person and there would be many many comments on how gross she is but it's acceptable because she's thin.

    I have looked at a lot of pics like that and never seen a comment like that tbh.

    I posted this progress picture on reddit
    5xgtq9nu3njl.jpg

    And got so many skeevy emails telling me that I was so much "sexier" in my "before" picture and other ones saying it was sad that I'd lost so much of my curviness.

    Well some people actually may like the bigger curvier ladies! But i think other people are just saying it to go on the negative of what they just saw. There are a bunch of negative Nancys in this world! LOL but if i'm honest your after pic is awesome. I'm well jealous! Fair play to you!
  • DamieBird
    DamieBird Posts: 651 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    CipherZero wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    ahhhh thanks friend.

    tbh whatever. Hate fat ppl all you want but why tell them? Sadism?

    K9jNCVe.jpg

    No one - least of all me - has said to tell fat people a thing. I've said HAES and their ilk are impossible to please if they don't get their over-inflated egos stroked for being "fat and beautiful". Their victim complex is nauseating and utterly unhelpful to their own cause.

    I think there are like a dozen ppl in the US who are that ridiculous. The idea of fat acceptance shouldn't be judged by that. And look at any single post of a happy, fat, confident woman and you will see comment after comment about how she's gross, unhealthy, promoting obesity, etc. I'm not talking specifically to anyone in this thread but to be, that's the opposite of fat acceptance. Just let ppl be fat and happy. Most fat people know the risks.

    People voice their opinions on people and things that they find distasteful all of the time. Why should the obese get a pass?

    People disproportionately voice their distaste for the obese.

    I've seen so many pictures of thin women eating a mountain of food and people say it's awesome and she's "wife material" and things like that. No one says it's gross or glorifying unhealthy habits.

    Furthermore, I would argue that people should do a lot less voicing their opinions of distaste although that's not what this thread is about. It's not hard to be decent. If you think something's ugly/stupid/whatever how hard is it to keep it to yourself and go live your own glorious life in the sun?

    Nope on the thin pets. She'd get labelled bulimic by many people. Actually post a picture of an overly thin person and there would be many many comments on how gross she is but it's acceptable because she's thin.

    I have looked at a lot of pics like that and never seen a comment like that tbh.

    I posted this progress picture on reddit
    5xgtq9nu3njl.jpg

    And got so many skeevy emails telling me that I was so much "sexier" in my "before" picture and other ones saying it was sad that I'd lost so much of my curviness.

    That's so gross! If you posted this picture, it should serve to reason that you're PROUD of the progress you've made and I hate that people would turn that around and say such things to you, implying that you were somehow better before. The only appropriate response is to say 'great job' or nothing at all. *hrumph*

    AWESOME transformation, btw! All of your hard work has really paid off!
  • VintageFeline
    VintageFeline Posts: 6,771 Member
    edited June 2017
    I just want to point out that the slim woman Insta-boasting about how much she can eat. She could be super active. I walked 15 miles today, that gets me a LOT of calories. I need to eat enough to cover that activity, well, a little less because I'm still losing but if I was at maintenance I'd need to eat them all up. That volume of food isn't grossly unhealthy, it's necessary. And so I'm not a bulimic about to purge either.

    So there's the judgement of slender people and their habits. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. You can't preach fat acceptance while skinny/slim shaming.
  • GottaBurnEmAll
    GottaBurnEmAll Posts: 7,722 Member
    newmeadow wrote: »
    DamieBird wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    CipherZero wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    ahhhh thanks friend.

    tbh whatever. Hate fat ppl all you want but why tell them? Sadism?

    K9jNCVe.jpg

    No one - least of all me - has said to tell fat people a thing. I've said HAES and their ilk are impossible to please if they don't get their over-inflated egos stroked for being "fat and beautiful". Their victim complex is nauseating and utterly unhelpful to their own cause.

    I think there are like a dozen ppl in the US who are that ridiculous. The idea of fat acceptance shouldn't be judged by that. And look at any single post of a happy, fat, confident woman and you will see comment after comment about how she's gross, unhealthy, promoting obesity, etc. I'm not talking specifically to anyone in this thread but to be, that's the opposite of fat acceptance. Just let ppl be fat and happy. Most fat people know the risks.

    People voice their opinions on people and things that they find distasteful all of the time. Why should the obese get a pass?

    People disproportionately voice their distaste for the obese.

    I've seen so many pictures of thin women eating a mountain of food and people say it's awesome and she's "wife material" and things like that. No one says it's gross or glorifying unhealthy habits.

    Furthermore, I would argue that people should do a lot less voicing their opinions of distaste although that's not what this thread is about. It's not hard to be decent. If you think something's ugly/stupid/whatever how hard is it to keep it to yourself and go live your own glorious life in the sun?

    Nope on the thin pets. She'd get labelled bulimic by many people. Actually post a picture of an overly thin person and there would be many many comments on how gross she is but it's acceptable because she's thin.

    I have looked at a lot of pics like that and never seen a comment like that tbh.

    I posted this progress picture on reddit
    5xgtq9nu3njl.jpg

    And got so many skeevy emails telling me that I was so much "sexier" in my "before" picture and other ones saying it was sad that I'd lost so much of my curviness.

    That's so gross! If you posted this picture, it should serve to reason that you're PROUD of the progress you've made and I hate that people would turn that around and say such things to you, implying that you were somehow better before. The only appropriate response is to say 'great job' or nothing at all. *hrumph*

    AWESOME transformation, btw! All of your hard work has really paid off!

    Thank you. But I want to make a larger point here. The thing is, I am not alone. In the main photos section of reddit, people didn't restrict their comments to private emails on before and after transformations.

    On those photos, you didn't just get chubby chasers who liked "curvy" women telling the OP that she looked better before, you got bitter women telling her to eat a cheeseburger because she looked like a stick and that she'd better keep an eye on her boyfriend because he'd come looking for a "real woman" like them.

    It was disgusting.

    Sounds like a riot to me. Link?

    Oh, they were from a while ago. Every now and then someone would post progress pictures to... I think it was r/photos? Anyway, the post would end up on the sub I was reading because of the comments.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    For the record I'm into Jess Baker and Lindy West's brands of fat acceptance if anyone's interested in further reading
  • jseams1234
    jseams1234 Posts: 1,219 Member
    edited June 2017
    @GottaBurnEmAll

    You look fantastic, btw.

    The shaming also goes for skinny men. I've always been very lean - from my years in the military all the way up to my 40's. I can't even count how many people day to day - even at work - would comment on how skinny I was... and not in a "wow, you look great!" way. The interesting thing is that I was about 185# and 6'1. Granted, a lot of the people who were commenting were very overweight. It's what prompted me to start lifting weights. I'm 225# now and I don't get those comments anymore. ;)

    I can't ever recall every hearing anybody tell a fat person at work they were fat to their face.
  • Squidgeypaws007
    Squidgeypaws007 Posts: 1,012 Member
    I personally don't understand what someone's bodyweight has to do with anyone else.

    If someone's fat, they're likely to know it. They're likely to know the effects. If they want to stay that way it's up to them.

    Imo it's only worth a discussion if it becomes a wider issue which actually affects you in some way.

    Basically follow what should be the number one rule of being human: don't be a jerk.
  • msf74
    msf74 Posts: 3,498 Member

    Basically follow what should be the number one rule of being human: don't be a jerk.

    Right. Personally I think it comes down to having some common decency and / or good manners.

    And most people I think are that way.
  • Ken1Lutheran
    Ken1Lutheran Posts: 8 Member
    I'd always been a bit stocky, 5'10 and between 200 and 220, playing a lot of sports. But when I became less active, and then had an accident that kept me from running for about four months, I started packing on the weight. I felt less and less like exercising, but was still eating and drinking as if I were playing softball, football and basketball. I wound up at 270. It wasn't good; I couldn't run, because of the pounding my feet would take when I did. I became less energetic in a whole number of different respects. I'd started with MyFitnessPal once before but didn't stick with it. This time I'm in it for the haul, not only dieting but exercising, and I've lost 18 pounds in the last 5 weeks. Don't ever start feeling satisfied about being fat; it doesn't look good, and if you're honest with yourself, it doesn't feel good. That said, it's just plain mean to shame fat people. It may be the right thing to say to someone if that's someone close to you--your spouse, your kid, your patient--but even then it can be said kindly.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    edited June 2017
    jseams1234 wrote: »
    @GottaBurnEmAll

    You look fantastic, btw.

    The shaming also goes for skinny men. I've always been very lean - from my years in the military all the way up to my 40's. I can't even count how many people day to day - even at work - would comment on how skinny I was... and not in a "wow, you look great!" way. The interesting thing is that I was about 185# and 6'1. Granted, a lot of the people who were commenting were very overweight. It's what prompted me to start lifting weights. I'm 225# now and I don't get those comments anymore. ;)

    I can't ever recall every hearing anybody tell a fat person at work they were fat to their face.

    I'm sorry that's been your experience. It's unacceptable. I think people make those kind of comments honestly because they're jealous and/or socially inept. When I was younger and stupider I've caught myself saying things like that and I regret it. I try to hope people in situations like work are well meaning but eff if i know their intentions. And, yeah, it's not at work people are calling me fat. It's on the internet or yelled out of cars. Or occasionally at bars or comic-cons, things like that where people are just pissed I'm taking up space.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    edited June 2017
    I'd always been a bit stocky, 5'10 and between 200 and 220, playing a lot of sports. But when I became less active, and then had an accident that kept me from running for about four months, I started packing on the weight. I felt less and less like exercising, but was still eating and drinking as if I were playing softball, football and basketball. I wound up at 270. It wasn't good; I couldn't run, because of the pounding my feet would take when I did. I became less energetic in a whole number of different respects. I'd started with MyFitnessPal once before but didn't stick with it. This time I'm in it for the haul, not only dieting but exercising, and I've lost 18 pounds in the last 5 weeks. Don't ever start feeling satisfied about being fat; it doesn't look good, and if you're honest with yourself, it doesn't feel good. That said, it's just plain mean to shame fat people. It may be the right thing to say to someone if that's someone close to you--your spouse, your kid, your patient--but even then it can be said kindly.

    meh. looking good is objective. and for me, not something I'd ever want to motivate me. I'm fine with my body, which someone will always find ugly (and someone else will find attractive) no matter what I weigh. with ya on feeling good.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    edited June 2017
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    jseams1234 wrote: »
    @GottaBurnEmAll

    You look fantastic, btw.

    The shaming also goes for skinny men. I've always been very lean - from my years in the military all the way up to my 40's. I can't even count how many people day to day - even at work - would comment on how skinny I was... and not in a "wow, you look great!" way. The interesting thing is that I was about 185# and 6'1. Granted, a lot of the people who were commenting were very overweight. It's what prompted me to start lifting weights. I'm 225# now and I don't get those comments anymore. ;)

    I can't ever recall every hearing anybody tell a fat person at work they were fat to their face.

    I'm sorry that's been your experience. It's *kitten*. I think people make those kind of comments honestly because they're jealous and/or socially inept. When I was younger and stupider I've caught myself saying things like that and I regret it. I try to hope people in situations like work are well meaning but eff if i know their intentions. And, yeah, it's not at work people are calling me fat. It's on the internet or yelled out of cars. Or occasionally at bars or comic-cons, things like that where people are just pissed I'm taking up space.

    I admit that I have trouble reading your posts because I see so much of the FA narrative in how you are ascribing motives to people and describing experiences, and instead of coming off as something you genuinely have learned or feel, it just comes off as something you're clinging to in order to avoid facing something else.

    What does it even mean to say that people are "pissed you are taking up space"? That is straight out of the Fat Acceptance Movement rhetoric playbook, and it's something you read that sounds good and you think resonates with you because nothing else sounds better.

    It's an empty phrase.

    Here's something for you - some people are just JERKS. It's not isolated to fat people.

    I've been fat, and I've been thin, and I've come to a realization. People come in all types. Overwhelmingly, people don't give a rat's behind about the people around them and what they look like, but some people are just not nice people and get their jollies by giving other people a hard time. If it's not for being too fat, it's for being too thin, or for wearing glasses, or for being dressed a certain way, or for wearing their hair a certain way.

    No one wins when you start playing the oppression Olympics and start looking for offenses as part of a class.

    Apply Occam's razor. You'll be a lot more well adjusted and happier to go about life.

    they're like mad I'm in their way. They want to get around me and call me fat. That's what I'm talking about them being mad I'm taking up space. That's literally what's going on. At places like bars or sdcc everyone's in your way but it's somehow more infuriating when a fat person does it. It was just a more succinct way to say that. I can be in a group of people where everyone's in everyone's way and I'm the one who gets yelled at and name called. That has literally happened to me dozens of times.

    but good job trying to gaslight me about it? lol
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    jseams1234 wrote: »
    @GottaBurnEmAll

    You look fantastic, btw.

    The shaming also goes for skinny men. I've always been very lean - from my years in the military all the way up to my 40's. I can't even count how many people day to day - even at work - would comment on how skinny I was... and not in a "wow, you look great!" way. The interesting thing is that I was about 185# and 6'1. Granted, a lot of the people who were commenting were very overweight. It's what prompted me to start lifting weights. I'm 225# now and I don't get those comments anymore. ;)

    I can't ever recall every hearing anybody tell a fat person at work they were fat to their face.

    I'm sorry that's been your experience. It's *kitten*. I think people make those kind of comments honestly because they're jealous and/or socially inept. When I was younger and stupider I've caught myself saying things like that and I regret it. I try to hope people in situations like work are well meaning but eff if i know their intentions. And, yeah, it's not at work people are calling me fat. It's on the internet or yelled out of cars. Or occasionally at bars or comic-cons, things like that where people are just pissed I'm taking up space.

    I admit that I have trouble reading your posts because I see so much of the FA narrative in how you are ascribing motives to people and describing experiences, and instead of coming off as something you genuinely have learned or feel, it just comes off as something you're clinging to in order to avoid facing something else.

    What does it even mean to say that people are "pissed you are taking up space"? That is straight out of the Fat Acceptance Movement rhetoric playbook, and it's something you read that sounds good and you think resonates with you because nothing else sounds better.

    It's an empty phrase.

    Here's something for you - some people are just JERKS. It's not isolated to fat people.

    I've been fat, and I've been thin, and I've come to a realization. People come in all types. Overwhelmingly, people don't give a rat's behind about the people around them and what they look like, but some people are just not nice people and get their jollies by giving other people a hard time. If it's not for being too fat, it's for being too thin, or for wearing glasses, or for being dressed a certain way, or for wearing their hair a certain way.

    No one wins when you start playing the oppression Olympics and start looking for offenses as part of a class.

    Apply Occam's razor. You'll be a lot more well adjusted and happier to go about life.

    they're like mad I'm in their way. They want to get around me and call me fat. That's what I'm talking about them being mad I'm taking up space. That's literally what's going on. At places like bars or sdcc everyone's in your way but it's somehow more infuriating when a fat person does it. It was just a more succinct way to say that. I can be in a group of people where everyone's in everyone's way and I'm the one who gets yelled at and name called. That has literally happened to me dozens of times.

    but good job trying to gaslight me about it? lol

    No, I'm not trying to gaslight you.

    You are ascribing motives to people you can't be sure exist because it suits your narrative.

    But let's see, claiming I'm gaslighting you? FA tactic.

    Claiming that people get extra mad at you because you're fat? FA tactic

    This movement is toxic, and it makes me angry. And I say that as a person who grew up with a fat shaming mother and who has been subjected to fat shaming. I've also been subjected to thin shaming. I've also been subjected to be treated as lesser than because I'm a woman. I'm a great deal older than you, judging by how young you look in your profile picture. I'm old enough to have been one of only two fat children in her 8th grade graduating class. I was fat for most of my life during a time when a lot of people weren't fat and it was socially acceptable for the school nurse to tell me I had middle aged spread when I was in high school.

    I'm not denying that fat shaming exists. I'm denying that people have the motives you're ascribing to them when it's not overt and in your face (they're mad you're taking up space or they add extra bonus mad points because you're fat - really, you need to do a reality check and look at how much you're projecting fear of being shamed there). I'll share a story. I used to be afraid to eat in public when I was fat. I lost weight, and walked down the boardwalk, stuffing my face with caramel corn. Some people looked at me, some didn't, the same as when I was fat. None of it mattered. I could ascribe motives to them if I'd like (who's that uncouth old lady stuffing fistfuls of caramel corn in her mouth? Can't she wait until she gets back to her hotel, what is she some kind of kid or something?), or maybe their gaze just passed my way.

    Look, I believe you're a sweet young woman under all of this who went through a bad time in her life. I get that. Unfortunately, I think you've grasped onto the wrong way out of that for yourself.

    Let go of perpetually feeling like a victim, it's never going to get you anywhere, and is one of the uglier sides of the FA movement.

    are you not getting it? It was overt. It's people saying "move, fatass" or "oh man, it's a whale" or "look, i get to sit next to the behemoth over here." Stop telling me I'm reading too far into it. It's literally people calling me names and being rude to me literally bc I'm fat. And that's why FA needs to exist.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    or once, a woman just looking me in the eye and going "fatty!" when I was in her way, like... what? ok.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    I'm not looking for your sympathy but don't tell me I'm playing a victim; I'm just describing my life. and FA is the idea that THEY are wrong, not me.
  • estherdragonbat
    estherdragonbat Posts: 5,283 Member
    edited June 2017
    Common decency is the idea that THEY are wrong. It doesn't take a movement to further define or defend that. Especially one with a slippery slope like the one that the FA movement comes with.

    I too have been called fat, whale, fattie, and had pig noises snorted at me from cars throughout my life. I was the fattest person in my class from middle school to present day and I suffered for it. Guess what? The people doing that would find something else to ridicule about me if I were thin. Those people are just bad people. The people wanting you to move out of their way would have wanted you to move even if you were thin. Then they would have said "Move your *kitten*, twiggy." Or "b****" or what ever else they needed to say to shock you into moving. Our fat is the most obvious target but people like that, rude people, not "ultra obesity prejudiced people", will find any target and take aim. There's nothing about being fat that brings out some additional capacity for evil in those who see a fat person that they otherwise would not exhibit when seeing someone else they want to victimize.

    This whole "fat people have it worse than absolutely everyone else because it's the last safe prejudice" BS needs to stop. We're all victimized for something in our lives as human beings. It's how we deal with it that differentiates us. I believe that FA proponents have chosen to let their obesity define them rather than allowing themselves to define their own world on their terms. It's another search for outside validation when the only person who should be validating your actions is yourself.

    Yep. I've been overweight as far back as I can remember, but I got picked on for being uncoordinated and lousy at physical activity. And for having poor social skills, not being able to laugh off insults... People have all kinds of (bogus) reasons for being cruel. Sure, my being inactive probably contributed to my gaining weight, but I don't recall anyone picking on me for being fat. It was that I couldn't catch a ball that was tossed to me lightly from about 3' away. Or play hopscotch without stepping on the lines. There I was so excited that I could actually do three hops on one foot without toppling, and they were teasing me for stepping over a lousy line. It was that I burst into tears at the drop of a hat and lived in a working-class area when most of the other kids lived in more affluent neighborhoods. I'm sure at some point, someone probably did say something about my weight. I mean, why would that have been considered off-limits? But I really can't recall being singled out for it.

  • DamieBird
    DamieBird Posts: 651 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    I'm not looking for your sympathy but don't tell me I'm playing a victim; I'm just describing my life. and FA is the idea that THEY are wrong, not me.

    Common decency is the idea that THEY are wrong. It doesn't take a movement to further define or defend that. Especially one with a slippery slope like the one that the FA movement comes with.

    I too have been called fat, whale, fattie, and had pig noises snorted at me from cars throughout my life. I was the fattest person in my class from middle school to present day and I suffered for it. Guess what? The people doing that would find something else to ridicule about me if I were thin. Those people are just bad people. The people wanting you to move out of their way would have wanted you to move even if you were thin. Then they would have said "Move your *kitten*, twiggy." Or "b****" or what ever else they needed to say to shock you into moving. Our fat is the most obvious target but people like that, rude people, not "ultra obesity prejudiced people", will find any target and take aim. There's nothing about being fat that brings out some additional capacity for evil in those who see a fat person that they otherwise would not exhibit when seeing someone else they want to victimize.

    This whole "fat people have it worse than absolutely everyone else because it's the last safe prejudice" BS needs to stop. We're all victimized for something in our lives as human beings. It's how we deal with it that differentiates us. I believe that FA proponents have chosen to let their obesity define them rather than allowing themselves to define their own world on their terms. It's another search for outside validation when the only person who should be validating your actions is yourself.

    Very well said, Siegfried!!

    MJ - people who are dicks are going to be dicks about whatever they can find. Most of them have a particular talent for zeroing in on the thing that we're most sensitive about (which is often also the thing that makes us feel like we're different in a bad way).

    I don't doubt for a second that you experienced the kind of comments that you describe; I do think that you should consider that it wasn't extra fat shaming.