Welcome to Debate Club! Please be aware that this is a space for respectful debate, and that your ideas will be challenged here. Please remember to critique the argument, not the author.

Can you both desire to lose weight and be body positive?

SkylerisSquid
SkylerisSquid Posts: 17 Member
edited November 22 in Debate Club
I am a big fan of fashion bloggers on YouTube and social media in general especially plus sized ones, just more relatable I guess. But, a lot of them push body positivity which I love but I feel like that community exiles everyone trying to 'better' themselves. Can I want to lose weight and be body positive. Because trying to change my appearance and love it is kind of the opposite. I am all for the fat positive movement and general acceptance of everyone but I don't know if I am able to do both.
«13456710

Replies

  • JeromeBarry1
    JeromeBarry1 Posts: 10,179 Member
    Since I don't have a clear idea of what 'body positive' is, I'll analogize it as asking if one can both walk and chew gum. Yes. And rub your belly while patting your head. You're a human. Juggle!
  • guacamole17
    guacamole17 Posts: 109 Member
    edited November 2017
    I find myself conflicted as well. I want to be body positive and such but my fitness goals (ability related) are not commensurate with the body type I currently have. So it gets fun juggling those two ideals in my head at the same time. what I try to do is focus on my goals. Visualize them, and what it will take to get there without focusing on my weight or body type too much.

    More of a "I'm going to go to the gym to do XZY workout and eat enough but not too much to support my work outs and feel good" than a "I need to workout to lose weight and barely eat because weight loss".
  • Rosemary7391
    Rosemary7391 Posts: 232 Member
    You can certainly be body positive in the sense that you want to look good in clothes now as well as wanting to lose weight for other reasons - say health. Just talk about the now with the fashion/clothes people and the process of getting to the future here :)
  • ladyhusker39
    ladyhusker39 Posts: 1,406 Member
    Of course you can! That YouTube channel is pandering and most certainly trying to sell something.
  • clicketykeys
    clicketykeys Posts: 6,582 Member
    I think a big part of body positivity is not only learning to love your own body, but supporting others in their decisions about what's best for their bodies, even when their goals are different from yours. I would suggest being careful about what you're saying when you're discussing what your goals are and how you want to "better" yourself. It's easy for that to come across as you saying that your goals are better in a GENERAL sense, even if that's not what you mean.
  • whosshe
    whosshe Posts: 597 Member
    edited November 2017
    I am a big fan of fashion bloggers on YouTube and social media in general especially plus sized ones, just more relatable I guess. But, a lot of them push body positivity which I love but I feel like that community exiles everyone trying to 'better' themselves. Can I want to lose weight and be body positive. Because trying to change my appearance and love it is kind of the opposite. I am all for the fat positive movement and general acceptance of everyone but I don't know if I am able to do both.

    If the community exiles everyone trying to "better" themselves stop following that community. Body positivity is a made-up thing so it can literally mean anything to you. A lot of youtube vloggers or instagram stars have no want to better themselves and get healthy. A lot of them are in denial. But there are also a lot of them who got healthy, lost the weight, and want to motivate you to "better" yourself. I'd suggest following someone such as @ericafitlove or @graciesjourney (both on instagram and I think youtube).
  • stanmann571
    stanmann571 Posts: 5,727 Member
    Certainly.

    I've lost ~20 lbs since my profile pic was taken. I'm shooting to lose about another 20. losing those 40 pounds will make it easier for me to run, and will improve my ability to do other neat tricks.
  • yskaldir
    yskaldir Posts: 202 Member
    Once you have a nice body you can be quite positive about yourself.
  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
    We invest time and energy into things we love, so self improvement is simply an act of love.

    The simple fact that a group is attempting to "exile" anyone improving themselves tells you much about their mindset. Doesn't seem like positivity at all.
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,267 Member
    absolutely.

    I didn't lose the weight to feel better about myself or to look better...I lost it for health reasons.

    I always knew I looked fine and had enough confidence that is can border on cockiness (and I am good with that too btw)

    I actually find with lots of people that if they lose the weight to "feel better about themselves" chances are they will regain either because they don't feel better about themselves or they aren't in a space where maintenance is attainable to them because they haven't dealt with the issues that got them fat in the first place.

  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Can I want to lose weight and be body positive.

    IMO, absolutely. One of the things I found happened when I started exercising again -- way before I hit the weight I wanted to be -- was that I felt better about my body, and what it could do, and even kind of fond of it. But I'd separate my body from "how my body looks." I didn't have that old hatred of how my body looked, but I could neutrally look at it and think about the things I wanted to change or watch progress and be proud. But I still loved my body in that it could do things and is necessary for me and, indeed, is me.

    Does that make any sense?
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Many of the things we think of as mutually exclusive, really aren't. This is one of those things. Being or wanting to be normal weight, is certainly in line with loving one's body. In fact, you love it so much that you want to take care of it. You'll actually need to love it, in order to make the effort it takes to take care of it properly. You like your friends because they're nice, not because they are thin - I hope?

    And this is a really great point/way of thinking of it, IMO.
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,267 Member
    If you hate yourself you wont love yourself enough to lose weight. But if you delude yourself into thinking that being overweight is positive, you're doing mental gymnastics to make up for your inability to do physical gymnastics.

    Nobody looks better overweight, nobody feels better overweight. You aren't a bad person and you shouldn't feel embarrassed about having a problem. My problem is just more visible than other people's problems. But it would be dangerous for me to call my problem a part of who I am, except from the perspective of a challenge to be overcome.

    people don't always look worse overweight and some do actually feel better overweight...

    and its' not mental gymnastics ...as I know lots of obese women (not personally) that can get into yoga poses I wouldn't dream of.

    I don't think that people who are overweight shouldn't lose the weight but....it shouldn't be an either/or thing.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    yskaldir wrote: »
    Once you have a nice body you can be quite positive about yourself.

    True. Sometimes. Sometimes not.
  • stanmann571
    stanmann571 Posts: 5,727 Member
    SezxyStef wrote: »
    If you hate yourself you wont love yourself enough to lose weight. But if you delude yourself into thinking that being overweight is positive, you're doing mental gymnastics to make up for your inability to do physical gymnastics.

    Nobody looks better overweight, nobody feels better overweight. You aren't a bad person and you shouldn't feel embarrassed about having a problem. My problem is just more visible than other people's problems. But it would be dangerous for me to call my problem a part of who I am, except from the perspective of a challenge to be overcome.

    people don't always look worse overweight and some do actually feel better overweight...

    and its' not mental gymnastics ...as I know lots of obese women (not personally) that can get into yoga poses I wouldn't dream of.

    I don't think that people who are overweight shouldn't lose the weight but....it shouldn't be an either/or thing.

    I like what you did there. :)
  • stanmann571
    stanmann571 Posts: 5,727 Member
    SezxyStef wrote: »
    If you hate yourself you wont love yourself enough to lose weight. But if you delude yourself into thinking that being overweight is positive, you're doing mental gymnastics to make up for your inability to do physical gymnastics.

    Nobody looks better overweight, nobody feels better overweight. You aren't a bad person and you shouldn't feel embarrassed about having a problem. My problem is just more visible than other people's problems. But it would be dangerous for me to call my problem a part of who I am, except from the perspective of a challenge to be overcome.

    people don't always look worse overweight and some do actually feel better overweight...

    and its' not mental gymnastics ...as I know lots of obese women (not personally) that can get into yoga poses I wouldn't dream of.

    I don't think that people who are overweight shouldn't lose the weight but....it shouldn't be an either/or thing.

    Being obese is not healthy. You can do all the yoga poses you want but just being obese, just having more fat on your body is not healthy.

    I think there's a difference between loving yourself and then thinking being overweight is okay. This is the slippery slope of "body positivity" and "fat acceptance". You hear these instagram stars say things like "I swim 2km a day" or "I can do yoga". The thing with these exercises is they're not very taxing on the body. I went hiking with my completely out of shape boyfriend when I was 230lbs. He is thin but not active and I almost died while he hadn't even broken a sweat.

    People usually look bad obese and I guarantee you they would all feel better if they weren't.

    You mean like the Obese guy next to my name? He's 253-260 lbs.
  • Rosemary7391
    Rosemary7391 Posts: 232 Member
    yskaldir wrote: »
    Once you have a nice body you can be quite positive about yourself.

    How do you know you've got a "nice body" if you're never positive about yourself?
This discussion has been closed.