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LightningRodOfHateThe American Obesity Problem
Published: 2011-02-07 01:33:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 941270; Favourites: 1612; Downloads: 201
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Description                I have no face. There was a time when I may have owned one, but this is a fuzzy half-memory. In fact, it may be entirely an invention of fantasy. These days, regardless of my history, I know for a fact that I have no face. However, I have been granted a name: The American Obesity Problem. And I am growing in the United States. You may have seen me on television. You may have been witness to my disconcerting back cleavage and mystified by the seamless transition my legs make from my calves into my ankles. You probably saw my unsettlingly large, shelf-like behind as it strained against my tight Capri pants that I swore I would fit into someday and, when I didn't lose the weight, decided to wear anyway because, "If I spend more than $30 on pants I better damn well find a way to squeeze into them." You may have caught a glance of ponytail resting on my back, or a peek at several of my lower chins. But, if you've seen me at all, you can say with confidence that I do not have a face. I have a plethora of everything else, but that is one thing I do not have.



                There was a time when I thought I may be a woman—but I am not. I am The American Obesity Problem. Women are not obese. Women are creatures with perfectly smooth hair, smooth skin, smooth voices…but, most importantly, women have faces. Faces with large, engaging eyes that hide behind long, fluttering eyelashes. Faces that are graced with petite, feminine noses. Faces with plump, red, moist lips. Faces that smile and laugh and contort to emote coyness. Have you ever attempted to be coy without owning a face? One time, in 2009, I attempted such an endeavor and it left spectators believing that my hip was out of joint. I was so upset that I wanted to cry but, without a face, I wasn't properly equipped with the tear ducts that are required.



                I have been told by close friends, in confidence, that women have sex. I'm still not completely convinced of this rumor's validity, but my sources are fairly reliable. I do have several friends who are women themselves. In all honesty, I remain skeptical. For nearly two decades I have believed that women, like The American Obesity Problem, spawn at random. I spawn, you see—I appear as if by magic. One night I am an unsuspecting human being with hopes and dreams, full of love and ambition, and then, the next morning, I am mystically transformed into The American Obesity Problem. I was never born. I will never procreate. I have no gender. I've looked—I've set out on expeditions, you see. It takes planning and provisions to search for any sign of gender on The American Obesity Problem. There's quite a bit of ground to cover. Quite a bit of flesh to explore. I returned sadly from each journey only gleaning knowledge of endless rolls of fat. They extend for eternity into some great abyss I have yet to fully understand. There is nothing else there, no sign of any kind of life or vitality or feeling. On one occasion I brought a Sherpa with me, but he got lost somewhere—enveloped, rather. I wonder if I'll ever see him again…  

  

                It is quite interesting to be an asexual blob living in a world whose axis spins on the idea of sex. I press my fleshy, faceless cranium against the thick pane of glass that separates me from everyone and everything else, and I attempt to observe. Which is quite difficult without eyes, I admit, but you develop other sorts of senses as part of The American Obesity Problem. Fatty perceptions that the rest of society is not privy to. You watch women struggle into tight, low-cut shirts and hear them claim they enjoy cutting off the circulation in their breasts and that they are not—definitely NOT—trying to grab anyone's attention. You watch men lift weights up and down in endless repetition in the hope that they will lose their insecurities like you lost that pen you swear you just had five minutes ago. Then there are the instances when both genders pound down drink after drink after drink so that their stark biological differences are made inconsequential. At this point, they are able to converse freely and—according to rumor—copulate. Or, perhaps, they simply meditate on the idea.



                I have been witness to such things because I am in a peculiarly rare situation. Most members of The American Obesity Problem are not college students like I am. Education is not terribly important to many of us. Typically, food is the priority. And lack of exercise. We love not exercising. If we could not exercise all week, we would—and quite frequently do. But a college education is about binge drinking and spring break bikini contests and sleeping through class and loveless sex and pregnancy scares. Clearly this excludes The American Obesity Problem, as most of us would much rather read a book or write an essay. There has to be activity between food and not exercising to break up the monotony, and I find that reading books or writing essays helps pass the time. Yet, without one solitary pregnancy scare, I've somehow managed to maintain a decent GPA. If I had parents, I'm sure they'd feel a slight tinge of pride that might, momentarily, outweigh the guilt and shame of having The American Obesity Problem as a child.



                I have vague recollections of being a child—which is strange, because they can't possibly be true. They must be fabrications; illusions of the mind. Perhaps these memories are dreams. I recall one such dream, and it included an ice cream party. I was, allegedly, in the sixth grade. A boy, mindlessly licking his frozen treat, approached me with an incredulous look on his face. "Why are you eating that?" he asked, pointing to the vanilla ice cream cone melting in my hand. "Aren't you already fat enough?" I stared at him for a moment, blinking with eyes I couldn't have possibly had, yet distinctly remember. After this brief moment, I responded. "No. No, I am not fat enough. I must continue to eat and gorge myself; shovel in the ice cream. I am not nearly as fat as I could be. There's so much potential! I will grow to be part of The American Obesity Problem, and you can't stop me!" At which point I consumed the entire cone in one gigantic bite. "I am America's future!" I proclaimed. I jumped onto one of the desks, commanding the attention of all the other sixth grade children in the room, and proceeded to give a speech to the captive audience:



           "I am America's future! I will be the consumer of super-sized value meals and, simultaneously, diet pills that have not been approved by the FDA. One of the two—or both in tandem—will lead to cardiac arrest. And that, my friends, is my ultimate goal. There is comfort in knowing that I have planned to end my life via heart attack. I may settle for a severe case of diabetes to tide me over, but heart failure is the only victory that will satiate this appetite! Until then, until success, I will perpetuate industry. I will consume. I will spin the cogs of this great nation. And when I say 'great' I don't mean 'good,' I mean 'LARGE'—large in capital letters. It is my duty to make sure America remains the greatest country in the world! My cause is just, my religion is Consumerism, and my fuel is ice cream. If you have any iota of patriotism, you will give up your ice cream right now! You will hand your cones to me! You will witness as, one after another, I shove them down my throat. And I will grow, my friends. I will grow into The American Obesity Problem!" My cries were suddenly muted by rapturous applause.



             Then, as effortlessly as it weaved itself into my psyche, the dream unhinges and recoils into some dark corner of the mind. There is a strange, backwards relief in this fantasy that plays itself out on the stage of my subconscious. The dream implies choice. That I had a decision to make—a desire, even—to become part of The American Obesity Problem. I can't claim full knowledge of how I properly spawned, but that is the dream that always springs to mind when I struggle to remember. I'm not entirely sure what to make of it, but I do love the dreams in which I appear to be human.



            The American Obesity Problem is not human. Our species is something modern science is still trying to comprehend and classify. But, as a virtually undefined genus, we don't have many of the rights that most human beings take for granted. Like dignity, for example. Or respect. We are frequent fodder for comedians and pedestrians alike. Why not? There is, after all, nothing worse than being part of The American Obesity Problem. In a "Most Disgusting" contest, our flabby folds will beat out any challenger, any day of the week. Our asexual spawning confuses and alienates humans. Our apparent lack of self-awareness and disdain for proper bodily upkeep is inexplicable. Our desire to be hated and loathed is unfathomable. We are a misunderstood group, though there are many of us. We make vain attempts to become human, to be accepted into a foreign culture, to forge a path between worlds.



            I know. I've tried.



           At the end of the day, all that's left to me are those wonderful dreams. Under the quiet blanket of endless stars, I feel the impossible could be possible. I am inspired to imagine myself in a woman's body. I grant myself the ability to dream of a time and a place in which I am human. The folds of endless fat lift up and over my head like a poorly fitting costume I can now freely discard on the floor. I feel the ability to breathe fully. I drift and float and feel light. I sometimes drift right into someone else's arms by accident. Sometimes they are arms that belong to a man. He smiles, and kisses my forehead, and reaches his arms around me with ease. He doesn't have to stretch and strain, but simply embraces as if it were wholly natural. And that makes me smile. I smile a big smile with coy lips and engaging eyes that ask him not to let go. My entire face lights up—and suddenly I'm aware that I have a face. I have a face. And, if I'm lucky, I imagine I have a name. And even luckier still, I have all of these things, and…



        …and I am loved.
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Comments: 1040

The-NecroNeko In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 05:46:25 +0000 UTC]

WEST SIIIIDE!!

XD

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Judas-Priest In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 01:49:38 +0000 UTC]

SO true..... I'm fat and I don't let it get me down. I LOVE my weight, and I'm a housekeeper, so I'm on my feet 8 hours a day and only get to sit for 30 min for lunch. That's it.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 23:41:26 +0000 UTC]

One who is lazy in mind tends to be lazy in body. I'm betting it took more than diet and exercise for you; I'm also betting your enflamed esophagus wishes you'd stop abusing it by sending the things that go down it back up, as is typical with the bone-rattlers.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 12:43:25 +0000 UTC]

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Mad-Writer-From-Hell In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 02:43:13 +0000 UTC]

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Glamazone In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-17 23:53:12 +0000 UTC]

How typical of you fatties: assuming that being fat is normal, and everyone who's slim simply has an eating disorder. Maybe you comfort yourself this way, though.

I don't even do diets. I don't eat junk food or drink Coke, but I just don't like it (and Coke, in my opinion, is a corrosive poison). I exercise not to lose weight, because I generally don't gain, but to be in shape. But I know a lot of people whose goal was to slim down, who worked hard and achieved that goal. That's why I have a right to say that losing weight is possible, and keeping your body mass in check is easy.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 12:44:23 +0000 UTC]

let me guess now, anyone disagreeing with you is...fat?

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 00:15:17 +0000 UTC]

I never said "being fat was normal." You WISH I had said that.

And no, of course, puking isn't a "diet." You know nothing about exercise, you look like something I'd hang my coat on, and I'll bet you know a lot about "corrosive" liquids. Underweights always make up stories about their habits, and yet, I never see thin people at the gym. How about that? I see fit people, I see fat people, but you and your pink sparkly friends are strangely absent. No, you're at home, shooting up and guzzling whatever you can reach into that thinsporational gut of yours and then you go into the bathroom, making sure everyone knows where you're going and what you're about to do, and send it all back up and into the toilet.

I'm not making unfair assumptions, sweetheart, I'm making observations. The same kind you're making of fat people, which is obviously the right kind to make, otherwise you wouldn't be making them.

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Glamazone In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 00:24:44 +0000 UTC]

How many gyms you've actually been in, to say thin people never visit them?

I make observations, because I've seen people who went from fat to fit, and I know them pretty well. You, on the other hand, have never met me. I don't even know why did you decide I have an eating disorder, but if that's your opinion, fine. Think whatever you want, it doesn't change the fact my words are true.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 12:45:42 +0000 UTC]

no your words are your OPINION not truth. learn the difference.

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Claudybun In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 04:00:40 +0000 UTC]

I am skinny....and I am saddened to see you say such things.
Wow...
This is why "fluffy" people think we are such bad people, because of people like YOU!

Actually, I have an aunt that was way too skinny, to the point doctors had to get her pills and she got fat, now, even if she tries, she can't loose the weight due to her problems.
Also, metabolism IS A REASON.
I eat fatty foods, and I am still skinny due to my metabolism and genetics, my father and I eat alot of different foods and never gain weight, other people don't happen to have the same thing.

Just, please shut up, everyone is open to opinions, but yours is not an opinion, it's an attack to people that don't deserve it.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 00:37:36 +0000 UTC]

I've lived in five or six cities and signed up at a gym in all of them. I've seen thin people at some of them, but they're a rarity. I'm talking "as thin as you," of course. Never spotted them yet at the gym in town. But they're probably all off puking somewhere.

I've known plenty of thin people, and all of them suffer from the same trait- they puke. Vomit. Ralph, upchuck, spew, and hurl. Some of them starve, but they're not as funny to me. You too can think whatever you like, but my words ring true even in your reaction to them. How like a clattering skeleton to deny her pukage, just to give herself asspats? You don't exercise, you don't eat healthy. No, you sit around and guzzle junkfood, and when you eat, it doesn't stay down for long. This is conventional wisdom here. The most reliable information comes from hearsay. You can't argue with facts- thin people just don't have the willpower to keep it down. Nothing you say can change that.

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kousagi In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 04:02:58 +0000 UTC]

I didn't want to get in on this, but dude, you're shooting your credibility in the foot by making such brash generalizations. You're not being any better than Glamazone by claiming she's got an ED and you know the reason thin people aren't in gyms is probably because they know they don't need to lose any weight! Those you do see in gyms are probably there to bulk up.

And before you go bawwing that /I/ have an eating disorder, I just want to throw out that I actually don't find fat = laziness, etc. Call me "Pro-Fatty" if you want (I only do because I'm anti-PC about shit I'm affectionate about.) Some people really do struggle to gain weight just like you might struggle to lose it.

I don't puke, I don't eat healthy, I just have a metabolism that burns that shit like it's nobody's business and here's the kicker, darling, I don't like it. I'd punch Johnny Depp in the dick for a healthier weight around like 115-120lbs, but no. I've been frozen at 90lbs since I was 12.

On the bright side, I do enjoy wearing bikinis. Make the best of things on my way to a healthy weight, I suppose~

tl;dr.
Stop sounding so jelly, there are better ways to argue your point than to spew insults. The point of an argument is to rise above that which you oppose. Don't drag yourself down with her.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to kousagi [2011-02-18 14:46:44 +0000 UTC]

Didn't it occur to you that maybe I'm just doing to her what she's doing to people like me just to give her a sense of what it's like to be unfairly stereotyped, using the same unrealistic generalizations that she's using? Do you actually think I really believe that thin people invariably throw up? COME THE FUCK ON.

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kousagi In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 17:05:49 +0000 UTC]

Hey, bro, I've seen some pretty straight-faced people saying the same shit you do.
If so, nice save. If not, chill, it's the internet.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to kousagi [2011-02-18 17:50:41 +0000 UTC]

A resounding "ok"

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kousagi In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 17:53:35 +0000 UTC]

That's the spirit, chap!

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Macushla In reply to kousagi [2011-02-18 06:05:09 +0000 UTC]

"I'd punch Johnny Depp in the dick-"

It was worth reading all the comments just to see that and laugh my ass off, oh lawd.


But to not get off track, I've known people from both ends of the spectrum: people like you who are skinny as hell and literally can't do enough to gain an ounce of weight, and I've also seen over-weight people who do everything they can to lose weight and just seem stuck. :/ All of this seems kinda silly when there's that similar problem of being stuck for both sides. D:

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kousagi In reply to Macushla [2011-02-18 06:07:28 +0000 UTC]

I'm here all week, bb.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 00:54:12 +0000 UTC]

I can't wait for some asshole to go, "GOZER IT IS NOT NICE TO MAKE FUN OF PEOPLE WHO ARE THIN" and completely miss the point of what I was trying to do.

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Kay-O-Dakota In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 04:34:08 +0000 UTC]

All I wanna do is give you a hug ;-;

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SgraffitoFerret In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 01:36:11 +0000 UTC]

Actually, I super love all of your comments thus far. =3 Keep it up!

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Plooshy In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 21:12:42 +0000 UTC]

To be fit and slender is so freakin SIMPLE.

Oh, and I'm SURE you'd know. I'm just SURE you've been through SO MANY hardships and done SO MUCH to stay thin that you'd REALLY, REALLY KNOW.

Answer me this: have you ever been seriously overweight? Have you ever ACTUALLY tried losing more than fifty pounds? Has your undoubtedly perfectly skinny body ever been anything but?

Do you have any idea how hard it is for an overweight person to 'just exercise and eat healthy food?' It's people like YOU, who consider them 'land whales,' that make it so impossible.

I'm not obese. However, at times, I do have a low opinion of myself when it comes to exercising or physical activity. I know how overweight people feel when they try to do anything that isn't sticking straight to the stereotype slim, fit women like you pound onto their forehead with a red hot branding iron.

Don't damn the people your shallow conscience can't even comprehend. Come back and try again when you've got something to say that's worth reading.

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Kumori-luvs-Kakashi In reply to Plooshy [2011-02-17 23:46:09 +0000 UTC]

I have to say, GO YOU, for sticking up for all the people out there who have difficulty with themselves, physically and mentally Thanks for that

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Plooshy In reply to Kumori-luvs-Kakashi [2011-02-18 00:10:46 +0000 UTC]

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Glamazone In reply to Plooshy [2011-02-17 21:22:38 +0000 UTC]

I didn't, but I know people who did. A lot of people. The first example I saw in high school, a girl who was always fat, and one day she comes after the holidays perfectly slim. The whole class was shocked. She didn't do anything revolutionary, just stopped eating junk food and began working out. Another example was my dad's old friend, whom I remembered from my childhood as a blob of fat, and recently I saw her as a rather petire woman. All she did was lots of walking (it helped that she doesn't own a car) and no eating after 6 pm. I won't even list those girls I met in the gym.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 12:48:10 +0000 UTC]

those are examples. NOT THE WHOLE WORLD.



and here is the news break for you. Even if someone IS fat by lack of doing what ever...who the hell are you to judge and condemn them?

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Banjelerp In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 20:29:33 +0000 UTC]

And before you reply with, "They don't have a strong enough will, blah blah blah", keep in mind that what you do and say to these so-called "land whales" is essentially psychological warfare.

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Banjelerp In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 20:14:44 +0000 UTC]

I don't mean to be another one of those "fatty sympathizers", as I'm sure you'd call them, but have you ever considered that maybe, just maybe, it's words like those that you chose to use in your comment that make overweight/obese people feel even worse about themselves? Have you ever thought that, perhaps, the way you respond/treat people who are not slender/beautiful/"healthy" causes them to stay that way because they're already ashamed enough?

Have you ever considered, instead of berating and slandering a person for being overweight, you could encourage them and even motivate them to lose it or do something about it to help themselves become that slender person they've always wanted to be?

Negative attention only causes negative results. Sure, there are loads of lazy slobs out there who don't give two shits about whether or not they're 300 lbs and pushing themselves towards their own demise. I've known a few. But most of the people who become obese/overweight do so because they don't know how to become slender, or they don't have any support to get into shape.

Being fit and slender is not always simple. These "land whales", as you so call them, are sometimes damn near afraid to go to the gym because of people like you. They don't want to be the reason you're rolling on the floor laughing, and they don't want to be the subject of your sneers and jokes. So instead of bitching about how lazy they are, maybe you should reevaluate how you view anyone who isn't slender and fit. Maybe you should consider that, if you were actually more receptive and supportive, more people would be willing to stick their necks out and actually work to be like you (at least body wise, because you have the personality of an old, wet dishrag).

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Glamazone In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-17 21:13:12 +0000 UTC]

I believe that asspats get people nowhere. Only negative emotions motivate a person to change. If you love yourself, you'll most likely be content with it and do nothing. If you hate yourself, on the other hand...

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 12:51:43 +0000 UTC]

and we have the answer folks! what heavy negativity have you been force fed?
seriously. that comment right there has shown us you must of been seriously abused to think that negative emotions motivate a person.

what a twisted world you come from.

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RogueSareth In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 09:24:59 +0000 UTC]

You, my dear, need some therapy. Self hate does nothing to make you a better person. Its finding that acceptance of yourself that will motivate you to make your life better, because you know you're worth the effort. hating yourself will just spiral you down into unhealthy or even dangerous behavior.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to RogueSareth [2011-02-18 12:49:46 +0000 UTC]

In her view I guess those people that have killed themselves due to self hate or bullying and negative comments must of been trying reallllly hard to better themselves.
bloody 'eck I have never seen anyone so venomous.

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RogueSareth In reply to Art-of-DarkElegance [2011-02-18 13:22:07 +0000 UTC]

well her life is probably a pathetic spiral of self hate and being told shes worthless, which would be correct

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to RogueSareth [2011-02-18 13:27:33 +0000 UTC]

she boggles the mind. seriously. on one hand I want to smack along side her head and go "what the HECK?" the other I just want to get away from her, the venom is amazing. Then there is the pity because sooner or later she WILL learn that size, a pretty face or any of that wont matter. that all those things can be ripped away in a heart beat.
She is the type if she was in an accident and her face or body was ruined, she would believe it was all over. Or worse, the type that if her spouse was ruined in an accident they would see them as "ugly" and would abandon them or abuse them.

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RogueSareth In reply to Art-of-DarkElegance [2011-02-18 13:48:18 +0000 UTC]

I suppose I'm a little spite machine...or just a decent person with a few troll instincts, so I'm not worried about the venom. Eventually something like what you described will happen to her and she will either learn a valuable lesson or we'll have one less determental member of society to deal with

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HoneyAppleNinja In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 02:48:43 +0000 UTC]

Only negative emotions motivate a person to change.

well aren't you a big old ray of fuckin sunshine?

So lemme get this straight
If a girl is overweight, and someone finds them to be attractive or genuinely tells them that they're fine the way they are, that would be an asspat to make them feel better about themselves?
Overweight people can be beautiful inside and out.
But you, my dear troll, are the reason I wouldn't want to be skinny. I wouldn't want to be put into the same category as someone like you,

and, bytheway~
It's the opposite. Most people change for the better when given support or having a positive emotion on what they want to change. Most times, a negative emotion just leads to BAWWWing and feeling sorry for yourself.

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JoSnapeMalfoy In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 01:34:29 +0000 UTC]

Or, or! Motivate you to kill yourself!

Because I can really tell you're a very open-minded person. /sarcasm

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ThirdPotato In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 01:18:29 +0000 UTC]

<.< Only negative emotions motivate a person to change?

... Then I encourage you to hate yourself and go away.

XDDDDDDD

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Glamazone In reply to ThirdPotato [2011-02-18 01:37:40 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, post more smileys so I can understand how hilariously funny your comment is!

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 23:53:05 +0000 UTC]

Wow, what wonderful insight into a deranged mind.

Invert your reasoning. Why would you bother helping yourself if you don't think you're worth helping? How does that make any sense? You know what made me start losing weight? When I realized that I was worth the time and effort it takes to do so.

You, on the other hand, you're making excuses and justifications to perpetuate your own sadistic nature. Your logic makes absolutely no sense.

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Art-of-DarkElegance In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 12:52:41 +0000 UTC]

I do not want to know what her childhood is like if she believes that. seriously that is a sign of some serious abuse.

it is like the person that grows up and beats their kids saying "my momma did it and I turned out fine"

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blackskye13 In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 02:01:53 +0000 UTC]

THANK YOU very much for saying that!

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Banjelerp In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 21:25:01 +0000 UTC]

I never said you should coddle them; support =/= coddling. Negative emotions motivate a person to hate themselves more than they already do.

I fear for the day that some poor sod impregnates you, for your child will commit suicide to get your approval. And I'm sure you'll just say, "Good riddance, you weren't worth my time anyway."

Because that's the kind of heartless, soulless bitch you are.

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KreepingSpawn In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 19:56:57 +0000 UTC]

Obesity is often a symptom of other problems. Threating the symptom but not the problem never produces lasting results.

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KreepingSpawn In reply to KreepingSpawn [2011-02-17 19:57:13 +0000 UTC]

*treating

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GwenavhyeurAnastasia In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 17:59:50 +0000 UTC]

I hope you read the comments on this piece. The author of this deviation has already said that she is working out and eating healthier.

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Pandazilla In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 17:41:43 +0000 UTC]

It's people like you that make her faceless.

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Glamazone In reply to Pandazilla [2011-02-17 17:53:05 +0000 UTC]

Of course, it's our fault she eats so goddamn much.

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RogueSareth In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 09:23:12 +0000 UTC]

So what about people like me who eat crap food 4-5 times a day and never get off the couch but still weigh 125lbs? While I have friends that exercise and eat healthy and less then I do but weigh upwards of 200? Want to explain that with your "logic"?

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