HOME | DD

LightningRodOfHateThe American Obesity Problem
Published: 2011-02-07 01:33:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 941273; Favourites: 1612; Downloads: 201
Redirect to original
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.
Related content
Comments: 1040

yig In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 17:08:32 +0000 UTC]

Rather than concentrate on the actual essay and it's many paragraphs she is projecting the advice relevant to her own issues.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

KneelingGlory In reply to yig [2011-02-17 17:10:37 +0000 UTC]

Which is very annoying.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

dragon-fly-to-me In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 15:53:23 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

xXEmilyXxx In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:37:44 +0000 UTC]

Oh my gosh, the news just switched to talking about obesity. I personally am not fat but I hate how some people can be so narrow minded on this topic. SOME people are obese from lack of healthy eating and activity but not all of them. My mother (who, by the way, is VERY active) got hit by a car 2 years ago and she has gained a lot of weight from cortisone injections and so on. It WAS NOT her choice to gain weight and this experience has taught me to be more open minded to peoples situations. People need to not be so narrow minded and believe that everyone who is obese has gotten there by having a huge appetite and lack of self control, because that is not always the case. And even if it is, it is not always easy for someone to lose weight and, to be honest, its not even healthy to lose the amount of weight you would need to to go from being classified as "Obese" to "Healthy weight" in a small amount of time (for example: a month or two) like some people claim to have done. I don't even know if anyone will bother to read this but I just hope that, in some way, narrow minded and quick-to-assume people will change their minds and be more thoughtful about what they say and believe.

p.s. I love the authors response to FunckyJunky's comment. You're great at writing and I'm glad you have the courage to speak your mind. Congratulations on the Daily Deviation

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

XSini In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:36:28 +0000 UTC]

Fascinating.

Your words dont tell me anything new, the knowledge about those problems (and you named a lot of problems in my eyes) is already in my mind.

But the way you put all those little things (letters/biographies) together to a whole (your text/the more or less obvious truth) is just wonderful. (In my eyes this word describes it better than a list of superlatives.)

I just want to assure you my highest respect for your ability to reflect and express your thoughts in this way.

One more thing: "...in endless repetition in the hope that they will lose their insecurities (like you)..." = Excellent phrase, works not only for lifting weights or exercising in general. A lot of people (maybe most?) do something in an obsessive way to loose insecurities. Its much more easier to fulfil existing expectation, than to find an individual one.

I really hope you continue writing,... I'm so impressed to see you writing something like this with 22. I can hardly imaging where your bright mind will guide you in future.

(Sorry for my poor language skills, once more I wished my english could be better.. ^^)

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Ellyevans679 In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:21:20 +0000 UTC]

You are beautiful and an amazing writer. I applaud you.
Elle

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

findmeastorm In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:21:08 +0000 UTC]

Best DD I've seen in months. Your writing is excellent, your message profound and intelligent. Thank you for sharing it and congratulations on the DD.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ArchonteSeraph In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:14:14 +0000 UTC]

loved it.
this is one piece of reality we sure aren't used to look at the way you just put it..
even though I am aware of this problem, I usually choose to ignore it and to look the other way - I also believe most of us do, not just me. and I see it as a fault, as our own part of the guilt.
for one's desire and motivation to change himself (and I ain't speeking just about the American Obesity Problem, there also are other issues that can frustrate any of us as individuals) isn't always enough; for better results, encouraging etc he should also have the support of those around him..

all I can add is that none should ever lose hope. keep fighting, you have such an inner strength!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Faehwin In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:12:58 +0000 UTC]

This is outstanding. Thank you for your poetic rendition of a well-known problem. I can really relate.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ThirdPotato In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 11:09:13 +0000 UTC]

Brialliant! So well written too n.n I'm SO glad this got a DD!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

TrueDragon13 In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:59:55 +0000 UTC]

Beautiful. I commend you. You not only brave the rarely faced fact of cruelty and ignorance, but you write wonderfully. This is so sad and poetic. There is love. Just not enough of it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

KneelingGlory In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:53:38 +0000 UTC]

I am SO happy this received a DD. I've been refraining from commenting in any depth because I wanted to be able to say CONGRATULATIONS in big fat letters like that.

I also want to say that you need to pursue writing, even if you only do it as a hobby. You're brilliant, and so is this piece. It didn't exactly open my eyes (I've studied stereotypes my whole life in an effort to work against them) but it reinforced many of my own values and gave me one more example of someone out there trying to change the world for the better. Thank you.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Fluro-Knife In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:52:57 +0000 UTC]

;_;

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

RidingTheWave In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:50:51 +0000 UTC]

...I love you.
And thank you.
You are a...hero among (wo)men.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

orchidew In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:44:54 +0000 UTC]

"living in a world whose axis spins on the idea of sex"

"a college education is about binge drinking and spring break bikini contests and sleeping through class and loveless sex and pregnancy scares."

i'm not overweight, so i feel like i don't really have the right to say anything that might imply i really identify with what you feel ...but i do. because this is the way i view the world. you're very intelligent and insightful (pfff like you didn't already need someone to tell you BECAUSE YOU ARE)

because when i tell people that we live in a sex obsessed society they don't fucking get what i'm saying and do you know why? BECAUSE THEY'RE A PART OF THAT SOCIETY.
throughout my whole life i feel like i'm completely different from other people and have been ostracized/shunned by them. i have barely any real friends. i've never been with a man no matter how hard i try and i can't figure out why. people like you and me - for whatever reasons - see the world for what it really is and the majority of most other people are quite blind.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

napneiviv In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:38:23 +0000 UTC]

Thank you.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

photofairy In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:35:28 +0000 UTC]

Brilliantly written, very moving piece The discrimination against overweight people is rivalled only by racism and homophobia, as they have been formally outlawed, the society needed to find a new victim. Naturally, there are people with morbid obesity, even children, in somewhat larger numbers due to bad nutrition, but I am continuously astonished at how the media has the guts to claim there is "epidemic" when in reality, the people who clearly have morbid obesity (meaning that they have health complications form it) are very few and far between, and vast majority of overweight people are simply as healthy as anyone else. What will happen to all of us as we age? Well, so much has been written in medical journals about lack of evidence that excess body weight "must lead to disease", certainly no more than moderate to excessive exercise (joggers dropping dead of a heart attack is as if not more common, arthritis in joints in anyone who's been exercising regularly most of their lives - and what is the expense to society of arthroscopies, joint replacements and arthritis medication), family history of illness, just being a man (this is an overwhelming majority of heart disease cases, but hey, let's drop "healthy body weight" for everyone by 5 - 10 kg and then look at all the normal weight males who normally, due to biology, get heart disease, but now we can say "they are 5 kg overweight!" and then we can erroneously stipulate that it is the "excess body weight" that has caused it. ridiculous!), smoking, drinking, dieting, stress...
And yet, despite all this common sense and epidemiological evidence, overweight people are brutalised by the media continuously, for the sake of earning money from the "freak shows". Not "freak" because of overweight people but freak because of personal trainers screaming and shouting abuse, being filmed half naked whilst exercising (something that most "normal weight" people would not allow in a million years because believe it or not, most do not look good in that setting, etc etc)..
That has nothing to do with any genuine concern, rather, discrimination is in the nature of unhappy people - the ones who desperately need to put someone down in order to feel better about heir own (usually much bigger) failures. So unfortunately, overweight people are currently fair game.
On another note, people at college are all struggling with trying to find love and acceptance, and these things come with age. And pregnancy scares are not all they are cranked up to be

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

commonjohn In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:30:05 +0000 UTC]

You are a great writer!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

taziekins In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:29:48 +0000 UTC]

This might come across as patronizing (which is not my intent), but my best friend is bigger than you, and by some fluke of nature she's actually more feminine than I am. She wears pretty clothes and shoes, her hair is always perfect and guys flock to her like bee's on the honey-trail. I on the other hand, am at my comfiest wearing baggy jeans, t-shirt and trainers. My wavey out of control hair is usually hidden under a beanie hat because I can't be bothered to spend 15 minutes taming it with hair irons and I hardly ever wear make-up. Personally I see it as a symptom of thinking of myself as a mother before a woman.

Anyways, back on topic; it's a long time since I darkened the halls of my old college, but I don't recall any intense concept of gender or idendity being a pre-requisit to being there. Certainly I had several encounters myself with strangers where if I bothered to care to guess their gender at all, I got it wrong. While that might seem arrogant (if this whole comment doesn't, and God I hope not), I simply didn't care about another person's gender in comparision to the potential for a new and intereasting friendship. The same went for sexual orientation and political/religious views - the more varied, the better.
Your perception of this subject (based on reading this) seems to suggest that you see it as it's own entity, like something you could debate with. To be honest, having never been in your situation I don't understand your viewpoint, but reading this was interesting experience that I do not regret.
Either way, I hope this comment doesn't offend you, but I try to be honest as much as possible, especially when I somehow manage to be simultaneously baffled and impressed.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

grindz0ne In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:27:38 +0000 UTC]

????

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

CinderFox73095 In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:14:07 +0000 UTC]

At first I clicked this because I thought the whole thing was the header picture, and I was interested in seeing a photograph of a pretty, fat girl that was good enough to get a DD (seeing as that sort of thing is incredibly rare), and then that turned to disappointment when I read the title and thought it was going to be some propaganda of some sort.
I'm so glad I decided to read it instead of immediately hitting the back button.

Thank you for this, is all I can say.
You are loved.
I love you.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

stephenb19 In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 10:12:02 +0000 UTC]

Fantastic work, the world is full of people who aren't human anymore. Popular culture and media has make it socially illegal for people to be normal, they've skewed the definition of normality so much that nobody knows what it means anymore. What I've just read is normal, you are beautiful, don't forget that!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DrSlug In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:43:50 +0000 UTC]

I usually don't read anything I see here in DA but this started out so good, that I had to. I have a family member who struggled her whole life to lose weight, and 'fit in'.I hate these discriminations.I guess us people are racists one way or the other....

Excellent piece.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

jacksl In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:38:54 +0000 UTC]

Incredible insight...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Siobhan68 In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:36:56 +0000 UTC]

Wow. So much emotion and meaning... wow.
Very well-written, a really good work and as a fat woman myself I can relate!!!
By the way... you are a very pretty girl!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Tinoculars In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:32:41 +0000 UTC]

I see a face and I like it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

muffin-wrangler In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:29:13 +0000 UTC]

Interesting work, it would be interesting to see what the other things your class wrote and how this fit in. If you ever feel like writing a sequel, we here in Australia have pretty much followed America weight-wise

Having done quite a bit of nutrition at uni, I've well and truly come to the conclusion that the obesity epidemic is a societal issue, and it isn't fair to blame individuals - yes, some people do overeat, but the majority of overweight people I know are just eating the food they were brought up to eat, food which is socially acceptable, the food that everyone eats. While some lucky buggers (like me) have the genetics not to put on weight, others can eat and exercise just as the lucky ones do but pack it on. Alas, biologically, humans are built for slight famine at all times, so in our world of plenty (and excess when it comes to salt and sugar), the biology goes awry! But then, being overweight and obese does have such dreadful health ramifications, so it is important that the unlucky people do watch what they eat and exercise. Alas, I do see a complacency that comes with being overweight, there's a general "but lots of people are fat, I don't need to change" that's developing alongside the conceited "fatties need to stop stuffing themselves" (both statements are counterproductive and just plain wrong). I think the 'faceless' theme of your work really fits that.

Thanks for the thoughtful piece, it was good to read in the comments you're keeping your habits healthy! (health is health, who cares what shape - fat, thin, oblong, tetrahedral!)

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

petrova In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:21:40 +0000 UTC]

Wow, this is just amazing. I was captured from beginning to end!
Well worth a DD!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

TinyTale In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:16:40 +0000 UTC]

Great piece, I don't know what more to say.

I also feel this 'you're not human' vibe from people sometimes, even though I'm not one of these really big persons but only a bit chubby. This is something that makes it very hard for me to eat among people, even my friends. It makes me angry when I realize that those horrible people who judge and laugh at others actually won over me and made food feel like a sin.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

SugarSnail In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 09:03:09 +0000 UTC]

You know, sex isn't the primeval goal of life, staying mentally healthy is more important! You need to build a self confidence and you need to travel, try to share your food with poor people, animals or birds, you will be satisfied and you'll eat less. Helping others can be rewarding. Trying to find a hobby can be a door to a new world.

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

heflein In reply to SugarSnail [2011-02-17 11:27:40 +0000 UTC]

Either the most unjustifiably patronising and least insightful comment that could be made or a cute (old sense and new) piece of sympathetic and satirical vitriol. I cheer for the latter and remain a happier man.

I should say I really liked LightningRodOfHate's piece. Observant and funny it was.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

orchidew In reply to SugarSnail [2011-02-17 10:28:02 +0000 UTC]

AHAHAHHAHA
sex is exactly the primeval goal of life i'm sure. we were made to procreate. not to mention that we live in a sex-obsessed society.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

SugarSnail In reply to orchidew [2011-02-17 11:11:47 +0000 UTC]

whatever....
everything has a limit , you can't/can f*** yourself to death ( generally speaking)

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

Nefertekas In reply to SugarSnail [2011-02-17 22:57:37 +0000 UTC]

well said!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

SugarSnail In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 07:18:29 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

orchidew In reply to SugarSnail [2011-02-17 11:28:20 +0000 UTC]

...excuse me?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

yoolchie In reply to orchidew [2011-02-17 17:05:41 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

PurpleHope In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:55:04 +0000 UTC]

Just... wow
Im really glad this was featured as a Daily deviation !

btw. you ARE really pretty

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DaisyLaRue In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:41:05 +0000 UTC]

I hit refresh and the piece of writing finally popped up. Wonderful job, I'm myself a 16 petite and I battle weight myself. I can identify with this, but I also know that the heart breaking part which I'm inclined to still believe sometimes isn't true. We're are beautiful deserving beings You're a wonderful writer

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

AmerielleSeaglass In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:40:37 +0000 UTC]

I can't stop crying.

You're beautiful.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

swandog In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:35:31 +0000 UTC]

Wonderful piece; thanks for sharing! And if that's you in the photo, you're beautiful and radiant!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

insomnical In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:33:09 +0000 UTC]

I read this... and I cried.



I am you.

I can't say anything else.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DaisyLaRue In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:30:15 +0000 UTC]

I'm not sure that I get this but I clicked it because I thought the girl was rather pretty, weather she's thick or not

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Nusquam-Vir In reply to ??? [2011-02-17 08:30:10 +0000 UTC]

I understand more than you'd know, yet unfortunately I am forced to partially agree with ...

I was that obese kid all throughout my school years, and it seemed to only get worse as I went along. Until I finally got tired of it, so sick in fact I stopped eatting entirely for a whole week. Merely out of self-disgust alone. But you know what? I came to realize that having dealt with the physical pain of literally starving that long, on top of already being an emotional wreck from years of being fat in the first place, I came to the conclusion there were no more barriers. There was nothing left to fear that I'd not already faced. So I got some advice from a local dietician, and started a strict workout regimen... Much of which I'm saddened to say I must continue to upkeep to this day, or relapse. I'm no ectomorph, I'm genetically made to be heavier than everyone else. This is cold hard fact. Now, what's up to me is in how I've dealt with the problem, and continue to do so. This fight can be won!

There will be sweat, there will be pain, there will be tears... But at the end of the day it all comes down to willpower, and you looking in the mirror nude realizing you do not look the same as you did yesterday. I've went from wheezing while I jog to being able to run a 5k marathon and barely being winded afterward. Most "average" people can't even make that claim! I've even come to love getting from place to place on foot as a result of my continued quest. You can do the same!

👍: 0 ⏩: 5

Inficia In reply to Nusquam-Vir [2011-02-18 03:48:31 +0000 UTC]

you're also a man...and lost weight when you were younger...so loosing weight rapidly was genetically easier...and really not that impressive.

if you were a 48 year old women who did this during menopause it would be a huge accomplishment.

sorry to pull the gender card, but it's true.

And many women may have a condition called PCOS that causes obesity. It's estimated that many women don't realize they have it and never get treatment-which would result in them loosing weight and ultimately prolonging/preventing diabetes.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Nusquam-Vir In reply to Inficia [2011-02-18 06:18:54 +0000 UTC]

Though I can't say I know a thing about said condition, I'd be forced to disagree. The "tranformation" took years, and in fact is still ongoing. And again, I too am genetically handicapped in favor of obesity, as my entire family is literally fat lol. Furthermore, aside from women having a natural added layer of fatty tissue to support child bearing, to my knowledge there is no scientific evidence to support that effectiveness in losing wieght is dictated on a gender basis, or to an extent even age as well for that matter. I've heard many women make this claim, and after hearing their testimonies on how they were attempting to alleviate the problem, often came to the same conclusion. They were not doing enough. We're not talking about merely switching from drinking strictly water when one used to consume soda. Nor taking brisk power walks once or twice a week for 30 mins. All great starts, granted. Yet it must be a COMPLETE LIFESTYLE CHANGE... Nothing short of that will suffice.

Not an accomplishment? I'd beg to differ.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Inficia In reply to Nusquam-Vir [2011-02-18 21:18:15 +0000 UTC]

I didn't mean it wasn't an accomplishment. You're a man lecturing a women as if the situation is the same. That is all I meant by it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

KneelingGlory In reply to Nusquam-Vir [2011-02-17 11:51:45 +0000 UTC]

You completely missed the point of this essay, I think. The author is not complaining about being fat. She's pointing out that fat people are not longer considered human by mass media or general public opinion. They're stereotyped so much that no one considers the fact that you can be fat AND eat healthy and run a mile each day and actually be comfortable in your own skin. It had nothing to do with her own personal desire to be thinner; it was a statement about society.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Nusquam-Vir In reply to Nusquam-Vir [2011-02-17 11:49:56 +0000 UTC]

To miss ,

First off, you cannot insult someone's intelligence and then ask they refrain for responding, as if you had any authority to do so, only to immediately put them on your ignore/blocked list to look as if you'd had the final word. I'm sorry dear, it does not work that way.

Again, I believe my aim was miscontrued. Which was to inspire, not degrade. If one is happy with oneself, then there is no problem to begin with, no? Which the very self-loathing this post is fraught with in the beginning is not indicative of. Granted, that changes later. As it too was meant as inspirational.

As for the heavier people being not unhealthy bit, I'd almost have to disagree utterly. I work in a cardiac care center, and NONE of the people in attendance are small. It's a mere hard fact that any excess weight in any form is hard on the heart. Regardless of whether you're simply overweight or even a bodybuilder. Someone who works out everyday can be just as unhealthy and just as suseptible to cardiac arrest. Now again, I'm not waving or pointing any fingers at anyone. If one is pleased with who they are, then all is fine. On that you have a fair point. and I must say, makes you a far stronger person than I. I for one got tired of the jokes, looks, and the general ridicule. Unable to withstand it further.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

syncs In reply to Nusquam-Vir [2011-02-17 23:35:02 +0000 UTC]

I think the problem lies in your assumption that those who are overweight are in need of "inspiration". I'm not seeking to insult or troll, in fact I think you seem like a very intelligent person and I appreciate where you're coming from. You went through a dark time, came out on the other side, and are just trying to show people that there is indeed a light on the other end. The reason people will take offense to this, though, is because trying to inspire someone to change means you are assuming that they want to change at all. It's a completely different mindset. There are many people, I'm sure, that are displeased with their weight and really wish to change themselves FOR themselves. However, there are also people who are comfortable at a heavy weight. What they are rallying for is not the strength to change themselves- what they are seeking is the compassion and understanding from other people to treat them with basic kindness and respect (something I'm sure you know as well as I is not NEARLY given enough to overweight individuals), and to not have people assume that they hate themselves and want to change. Instead, they just need acceptance for who they are. I think that's all any of us want, really. But by saying that they need to change themselves in order to feel good, it can be offensive because it sounds a bit like victim blaming- they got themselves into this whole fat mess and the consequences (mean comments, looks, jokes, ridicule, all the examples you gave) are inevitable. The problem is that they SHOULDN'T have to be inadvisable. People SHOULDN'T have to be treated so poorly just because of their diet and appearance. It's just, well, in the world we live in they kind of are.

I'm sorry if this seems like an attack, it wasn't meant to be! Heck this might be stuff you already know anyway. I just thought I'd jump in just to provide a sort of "counter viewpoint" that is (hopefully!) free of insults or attacks. I do think that your original comment was well meaning and I thank you for trying to reach out and help others (: that's something pretty rare and special on dA in and of itself.

👍: 0 ⏩: 2


<= Prev | | Next =>