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Published: 2011-02-07 01:33:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 941270; Favourites: 1612; Downloads: 201
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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.
Related content
Comments: 1040
Pandazilla In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 03:07:29 +0000 UTC]
No, but being spiteful isn't the best thing, is it? What's it doing for you?
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 23:50:03 +0000 UTC]
Don't make excuses for your attitude towards people and don't blame others for it.
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Sketchpadofdoom In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 17:32:53 +0000 UTC]
I eat healthy, and have even gone to nutritionists who say I eat healthier than most of their patients, and I exercise everyday. I'm still overweight. Freaking simple enough for you?
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Benzaldehyde In reply to Sketchpadofdoom [2011-02-18 13:21:36 +0000 UTC]
I'm the same and I do 10 hours of kung fu practice every week, as well as do competitions, so this is a full body work out. I'm guessing we have more muscle than fat, which BMI doesn't take into account.
I had a friend who was really thin and went to practice and would keel over after 40mins of a 3 hour session (and 30 mins of that would be stretching and warm up), it was a case of that she had little to no muscle on her and what she did have was fat, you could grab her bicep and it would be all squishy, where as mine would be more solid. The instructor suggested that she eat more protein and build up muscle if she wanted to be any good.
Another example is if you see a shot put athlete, they're not built like some sickly gazelle, thats muscle.
tl;dr: The distinction here was that in this case I was more suited to fighting and endurance than sitting on my ass all day, despite being heavier.
The more you know...
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Glamazone In reply to Sketchpadofdoom [2011-02-17 17:56:10 +0000 UTC]
Then exercise more. It won't help until you sweat blood and fall from exhaustion. Most work outs that people do don't even begin to test the limits of their endurance.
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Inficia In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 03:52:52 +0000 UTC]
yeah I know a women who worked out like that (ran like 8 miles a day) and died when she was 40 b/c of all the stress it put on her heart.
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 23:49:25 +0000 UTC]
You've never had to exercise a day in your life, and this proves it- you have no idea how to do it safely. I'll bet you can't even lift 5 pounds by yourself, and you're here suggesting that people KILL THEMSELVES just to reach an ideal that you want them to reach. I may not be a body builder, but let me tell you- there's pushing yourself to a limit and then there's pushing your heart to explode. You need to push yourself, but you DON'T need to hurt yourself to become healthy; that's insane.
And IF that's what you did to yourself to lose weight? Then you're increasing your risk of death. Congratulations, you haven't averted anything, you've just shuffled the problem under a new cause.
You and your thinspo buddies need to be checked into a house for the psychologically wacky. That's not healthy at all.
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Glamazone In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-17 23:55:42 +0000 UTC]
Wrong guess. I exercise a lot.
The idea of pushing the limit is not mine. I heard it from my dad, who was very fat in school, but had the will to change himself.
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thaily In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 11:11:06 +0000 UTC]
Too bad your father didn't also teach you to respect.
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GOTHX789 In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 04:40:14 +0000 UTC]
Do you work out your arms as well..? [link] Judging by this picture I can't tell if it's flab hanging off of your arm or if your shoulder is just that large. Impressive if it's the latter.
Oh and on stalking your comments, I'm sorry but the controversy you've caused is too much to not get in on. This is what happens when one comments negatively on a DD apparently.
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 00:01:59 +0000 UTC]
You look like a coatrack, you don't exercise. And your dad's an idiot, and you're an idiot for listening to it. You don't cause BLEEDING INJURY to yourself to lose weight, you just push yourself and increase your exertion over time. If that's how your dad exercised, he's probably headed for stormy waters. You feel free to adopt his tips into your own routine, though, Sparkles.
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Glamazone In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 00:06:32 +0000 UTC]
As if I care how I look to you.
Yeah, of course. My dad's a successful businessman, but he's still an idiot, because some random fat Internet loser knows best. Internet losers, you're so funny.
It was a METAPHOR about bleeding, look this word up in the dictionary, if you don't know it.
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 00:21:36 +0000 UTC]
Obviously you care about how you look, Bonejangles, otherwise you wouldn't have raised a stink about it here.
Just because your dad sells boiled peanuts off of the side of the road and knows how to dress himself, that doesn't make him a "successful businessman." If your dad's advocating pushing yourself until you literally cannot stand without getting dizzy, then you need to re-evaluate his intelligence.
So I'm guessing the part about you exercising was just an extension of the same metaphor?
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Glamazone In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 00:30:19 +0000 UTC]
Just because you are proud to have awesome insulting skills, it doesn't make your words true, or make you anything more than a fat trolling loser.
I guess that's where I'd end this conversation, because you are starting to become too obvious.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 00:40:35 +0000 UTC]
But don't you realize? When you say something in a flippant and sadistically insulting way, no matter how factually incorrect it may be, you're still telling the truth. Always. Automatically. You said so yourself.
Oh, and I guess that means we both have something in common: we're both too "obviuous."
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Banjelerp In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 21:32:19 +0000 UTC]
Because killing oneself through exercise is exactly how one is supposed to better themselves, right?
👍: 0 ⏩: 2
Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-17 23:44:20 +0000 UTC]
No, see, she secretly wants to kill us.
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sailorangel In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 17:41:15 +0000 UTC]
secretly??? lol - not being very secret about it is she? XD XD
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to sailorangel [2011-02-18 17:49:37 +0000 UTC]
I doubt subtlety is her strong point.
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-18 00:25:06 +0000 UTC]
...So she can eat us!
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Banjelerp In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-18 04:02:39 +0000 UTC]
And become the thing she hates? THAT SCHEMING WENCH!
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RaInBoWkAt123 In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-18 04:30:46 +0000 UTC]
...GOD DAMN IT I LOVE YOU.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Banjelerp In reply to RaInBoWkAt123 [2011-02-18 06:01:23 +0000 UTC]
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RaInBoWkAt123 In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-18 06:06:25 +0000 UTC]
Well, Im non-human too, so I guess its a mach made in heaven
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RaInBoWkAt123 In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-18 18:27:47 +0000 UTC]
We should totally hang out sometim- oh wait, internet. Oh well, we're still a pretty badass combo.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
Glamazone In reply to Banjelerp [2011-02-17 21:40:19 +0000 UTC]
People are capable of much more than they think.
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Banjelerp In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 22:57:32 +0000 UTC]
See? You can be supportive! I'm so proud of you!
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ManifestedDreams In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 15:48:40 +0000 UTC]
Actually, for some people, it isn't. Many factors including genetic predispositions can make staying "slender and fit" very challenging. People who have to have their stomachs stapled just to drop a few sizes and they will still be larger.
Likewise, many of those "fit and slender" people? They eat junk food, sit and play video games all day. They are blessed with high metabolisms and other beneficial genetic factors.
You can't just lump people based on their physical condition into groups, there are too many extenuating circumstances.
Making the assumption that everyone overweight is lazy, or that all slim people work for it, is a very ignorant statement.
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SerinaTrunstall In reply to ManifestedDreams [2011-02-18 14:11:47 +0000 UTC]
Wheres the friggen like button on this thing? Thank you!!!
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thaily In reply to ManifestedDreams [2011-02-18 09:33:19 +0000 UTC]
ManifestedDreams uses LOGIC!
It's not very effective.
Glamazone uses BRAINDEAD!
It's super effective!
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RogueSareth In reply to ManifestedDreams [2011-02-18 09:11:10 +0000 UTC]
I'm one of those lazy skinny people! I have overweight friends and almost all of them are healthier then I am despite what outward appearences may say.
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HotaruThodt In reply to RogueSareth [2011-02-18 19:09:17 +0000 UTC]
And I've an active healthy "fattie" myself.
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WildcatzAL In reply to ManifestedDreams [2011-02-18 03:07:18 +0000 UTC]
Why can't you "Like" or "Favor" comments D:
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Glamazone In reply to ManifestedDreams [2011-02-17 16:25:46 +0000 UTC]
Fat cannot come from literally NOWHERE. Laws of physics in this universe don't work like that. You only become fat if you consume more energy than you burn down. Of course, it's much more easy to blame everything on genes and continue gulping hamburgers.
None of my friends eat junk food and play video games all day. Maybe because I don't associate with that kind of people. Girls who visit the gym and the pool I go to work hard to keep themselves in shape. Even if your metabolism is high, you won't look good without exercise.
There's nothing genetic in being fat. You can gain weight quickly, but if you watch what you eat and move a lot, you'll remain fit. I know people with a "genetic predisposition" to gain weight, who, however, aren't fat, and I know people who were obese, but worked hard and lost weight. Today, it's a question of will only.
Of course, there are illnesses that cause weight gain, but all of them can be cured.
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Ronja-chan In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 20:46:04 +0000 UTC]
I NEVER exercise. EVER. I eat junk food ALL DAYS. It's the only thing I eat.
I am underweight.
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HoneyAppleNinja In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 02:39:59 +0000 UTC]
Fat cannot come from literally NOWHERE. Laws of physics in this universe don't work like that. You only become fat if you consume more energy than you burn down. Of course, it's much more easy to blame everything on genes and continue gulping hamburgers.
here's nothing genetic in being fat. You can gain weight quickly, but if you watch what you eat and move a lot, you'll remain fit. I know people with a "genetic predisposition" to gain weight, who, however, aren't fat, and I know people who were obese, but worked hard and lost weight. Today, it's a question of will only.
Of course, there are illnesses that cause weight gain, but all of them can be cured.
Really? REALLY NOW?
Hm, how about this?
Before my mother had my older sister, she was at best 110 lbs and an athlete. She ate well, exercised, and took vitamins every day to keep in shape.
HOWEVER after my sister's birth, my mother developed thyroid problems that did indeed make her gain 30-40 pounds within a couple of months, which only got worse with time, no matter what she did. She even kept her routine.
That was 31 years ago. And guess what? Her thyroid could never truly be treaded.
She had her problem checked so many times she couldn't count on every digit she had.
SO
stop being an ignorant asshole
If someone is overweight, don't you dare talk as if you're any better or as if they were lower than you
I know people who are overweight and GORGEOUS, yes, i said gorgeous.
weight doesn't determine how attractive you are.
you can be heavy and still take care of yourself, keep your appearance the way you want it.
I also find it kind of funny
that most heavier people I know are healthier than their slim counterparts. Hmm maybe because most 'skinny' people I know starve themselves and obsess with their appearance so much that they lose their minds and only think like you do. Skinny is the only way to be attractive to them, because God forbid you have thick legs or big hips.
So shut your mouth, you don't know anything but the bullshit spewed by ignorant, discriminatory douchebags.
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SgraffitoFerret In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 01:53:59 +0000 UTC]
Mkay, so I'm just going to say one quick thing here, because you're wrong. =3
I eat healthy. I do not shove hamburgers down my throat-hole mindlessly. I drink water, because it's delicious and exceptionally healthy. Occasionally, I drink juice. I eat fruit and vegetables. I exercise by walking and running. I spend a lot of time with the effects of stress due to college related things. I walk the campus in order to get to various classes, libraries and labs. I'm always on the go except when I'm sitting to do homework and such... and yet, I'm overweight. Why is that? Because it's in my goddamned genetics. My father was mildly overweight, my mother was more than mildly overweight. Her whole family line tends to be stockier, and retain more water and fat cells. My father's line is a mix of overweight and 'average' weight. And yet.. here you are, saying basically that I have some kind of a choice. Well, where is it? Where is that choice? Did I lose it somewhere between eating healthy and my daily walks? Because if so, you'll have to drag your skinny ass out here and find it for me, because I guess, as a "fatty" I'm just apparently too stupid to find it, I guess... Or is it kind of like my choice to be homosexual? You know, the fact that IT DOESN'T EXIST BECAUSE IT IS NOT A CHOICE?
You do 'remain fit' by watching what you eat and moving a lot. Fitness and maintaining a healthy weight are technically two different things in a similar spectrum. Also, not all illnesses that cause weight gain be cured. Aaaaaand, your definition of having a high metabolism but not "looking good without exercise" is your opinion, not a fact. I know several people with very high metabolisms that look great, and they don't exercise at ALL. One of them even has a nice six pack, and I know for a fact he doesn't do anything to get it.
You know what's so cool about being a human being? It's that we all have opinions, and different thought processes, and we use those different thought processes and opinions for various things. Usually, it's to achieve some helpful, purposeful goal in life.
So, in my opinion, you're a fucking douche face that doesn't know dick shit about anything if it's not related to size.. what.. you look like a 2... or a 4? I'm sure you enjoy shopping in the little kid's department, but so do pedophiles, so be careful? And, from a medical standpoint, as I do have some background in that, you're under-weight for your height. Maybe in America, you think this is beauty, but you'll probably have difficult carrying a child, or passing a child anyway, and here's to hoping that you don't die because your body didn't have enough natural cushioning to sustain your life as well as the child's.
On another note, everything that you've been saying, while being an opinion, is also an assumption. "Knowing someone who knows someone who knows someone" or even knowing someone personally that went through A SIMILAR instance is not the same as being the person and knowing it all first hand.
Go get yourself 100 pounds overweight, then try to lose it after carrying it around with yourself for a good decade. Tell me if you still think it's easy. ^_~
Also, I'm still waiting for you to explain my weight, because you say there's nothing genetic about it. Stiiiiillllll waiting for that one.
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lnactiveAccount In reply to SgraffitoFerret [2011-02-19 00:04:19 +0000 UTC]
Give this person a Nobel peace prize.
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Neomc In reply to SgraffitoFerret [2011-02-18 13:46:57 +0000 UTC]
I seriously love you for that, it couldn´t have been said better. I also think you're very brave and sensible
What baffles me though, is the fact that she is so ignorant.
Being skinny can easily be as horrible as being overweight and can also be something you can´t help. Last year I suddenly lost over 15 kilos in a time period of three months, while I ate regularly and healthily, (sometimes) exercised and never changed my eating behaviour. Now I'm underweight, no matter what I try to do about it; I think I can honestly say I feel as sick/unhealthy and unhappy with my body as an underweight person could feel.
My point is that we can't choose who we are and the only thing we can do is improve ourselves as best we can, even though we might never reach what is generally accepted as "right". I'm not saying being underweight is automatically as bad as being overweight, but they both involve serious health issues. For overweight it may be heart diseases and other serious problems, for underweight it's infertility and generally being unfit.
It's just a double edged sword and in my opinion this stupid ignorance has been going on way too long. Yes, many people have a problem with obesity, but condemning them for it and stating it's their fault isn't going to help anyone.
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SgraffitoFerret In reply to Neomc [2011-02-18 21:30:02 +0000 UTC]
Exactly.
It's strange, and kind of sad and pathetic really, that a lot of "skinny" people get all kinds of bent out of shape at fat people, and make tons of assumptions about them and their activities/eating habits, when they don't know the first thing about the "WHY" in their life. But then they get all kinds of bent out of shape when people turn it around on them and say they have an eating disorder. They get all "I'm just this way!" or "I don't do anything to make myself this way, I was just born like this!" or whatever they're saying... I tend to tune them out these days.
It doesn't help that America, in particular, keeps dropping its social acceptance standards on what is or isn't "large and unhealthy." When I was 15, I was told that the average weight for my height and gender was around 135 - 150 lbs. Now? I am told it is between 110 - 125 lbs.
A Large shirt used to fit me. But now what consists as Large is really just somewhere between Medium and Toddler, I think. It's ridiculous. Everyone wants to be thinner, skinnier, wearing the cute tiny clothes and just whatever.... but you know what? Few decades ago, around the world, it wouldn't have been desired. People wanted women with meat on their bones, so that they could be healthy enough to bear children, etc. When I see a pregnant super skinny person, all I can think about is how bad her pregnancy is going to be, and how she looks like she might fall forward and break her neck at any moment.
And I have yet to meet a super skinny person that wasn't either A) anorexic, B) bulimic or C) a huge cuntwaffle. Literally every super skinny person (not just skinny/slender people, or people that exercise or whatever, but the really stick thin people that think they're all that) I have met has fit into one of these categories. I am almost 29 years old. That's a lot of years in which to meet a lot of people.
So yeah, when people tell me stuff like what that girl's ugly mouth was spewing? I get pissed, because I know it's not always the overweight person's fault. And I know that they can be just as beautiful or just as ugly as any other human, because I learned a long time ago that it truly isn't about looks... but about personality and compatibility.
If you don't think you're compatible with a fat/skinny person, then don't be with the fat/skinny person. Or the handsome/pretty/ugly/whatever person.
People are so ready to judge others, but when the guns get turned on them, they get hateful and defensive.
But that girl? that was posting? She has a hideous soul, and her vanity is just pathetic. Hope she's not Christian, because she won't be gettin' past those pearly gates any time soon. She thinks she's so beautiful, and I find her horribly ugly. She's way too skinny to be truly healthy, and her talk of fitness? Yeah, I don't really see any defined muscles on her that say she goes to the gym, or even does anything except fix her makeup and shop.
Ah well.
I hope that all the people that are overweight, and want to change, CAN change, and that their genetics allow the change to stay. And I hope all of the skinny people that wish they could have more meat on their bones, and be a bit healthier find the ability to do that as well. I hope that the people that are afraid of their weight, afraid of losing or gaining weight, or afraid to be themselves because of what others think... find the strength to not let society rule their lives. Because while you think that you might be alone forever because of your weight, you won't. I wasn't. Took me 26 years of living to find my mate, but I found her, and I'm happy. Sure, I'll still struggle with my weight, and personal acceptance, etc... but I have someone at my side now. She weighs more than me, and we're fine. But what other people think doesn't matter to me so much as what I think, and what my mate thinks.
Because at the end of the day, I'm not sleeping in the same bed with all of the hateful, vain, skinny people that think they're better than me because their metabolism is different.
So I'll just put my arms around my beautiful lover, and go to sleep just fine.
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Neomc In reply to Neomc [2011-02-18 13:51:25 +0000 UTC]
As an added point, femininity (wha? x]) is so beautiful. A full and curved body with real breasts and bum is way better than that unnatural comination of inflated boobs with deflated abs. It's just wrong; there's a reason why the image of absolute beauty has been a curvaceous woman for centuries.
[link] <-- now that's beautiful
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Tsubane In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 01:28:50 +0000 UTC]
It's not about it "coming from nowhere", it's how fast your metabolism is and how the fat is retained. It's not always "easy" to lose weight, and not always a matter of simply watching food and "moving a lot", even if you'd prefer to think that it is because you have some kind of personality complex that helps you feel better when you degrade other people without understanding their situation. There's also a lot of psychology in it. Everyone's different and what's easy for some is monumental for others.
Count yourself lucky that you're in a position where you can make fun of fat people without talking about yourself.
Although quite frankly your willingness to degrade people you've never met certainly says enough about your character that I don't need to know that much more.
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kaikaku In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 22:07:38 +0000 UTC]
Of course, there are illnesses that cause weight gain, but all of them can be cured.
O_o
We can cure all illnesses that cause weight gain? I call BS on that. Heck, the treatment for some illnesses causes weight gain--I know people who need to take corticosteroids or they'll die.
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IntrovertedPencil In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 20:05:51 +0000 UTC]
I like the shit you're stirring up. Do continue.
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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to IntrovertedPencil [2011-02-17 23:42:07 +0000 UTC]
Is it true? Is she just trollan'?
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ThiefofChance In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 18:18:12 +0000 UTC]
Please keep in mind that there are some diseases (esp liver diseases) that affect weight. My future mother-in-law suffers from a myriad of health problems, many to do with her liver (and no, she was never an alcoholic sometimes you just get the shit end of the stick). One of her treatments is that once a month, she goes to the hospital and has doctors insert needles into her abdomen and withdraw pounds of fluid. Her body cannot physically get rid of the excess fluid in her body. This means that while she may start out a normal size, over the course of a month she swells up like a balloon. There is no amount of exercise or diet (she is on a severely restricted diet anyways) that will help her with this problem.
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