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LightningRodOfHateThe American Obesity Problem
Published: 2011-02-07 01:33:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 941255; 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

zigra [2011-02-22 19:29:50 +0000 UTC]

it's not your body that makes you woman ^.^ it's your gentle tender soul
don't fall into despair, please I wish you the greatest luck and happiness in whole world

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Dreamyko [2011-02-22 15:30:39 +0000 UTC]

My post will probably get lost in the sea of other comments you've received on this piece, but it's not often literary work touches me like this and so I feel I must post something.

As I read through this I felt a variety of emotions. The first was anger. Or rather a mix of anger and depression. As an overweight person (I hate the term obese) I felt this piece was a bit depressing. I knew from the DD description it was supposed to be satire but at first I kept thinking, "where is the satire?" Maybe it hit too close to home I guess. But then I kept thinking, "my life has more meaning then the person this piece is describing". Then I thought, "is this what other people really think of me?" Like I said, a mix of anger and depression at first when I began reading this.

The other part that really hits close to home is how this character addresses relationships, sex, and college. "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 a younger brother who has now been married for one year and cousins and friends around the same age getting married and having kids. Although I'm not longing for a relationship right now, I can't help but feel like I'm not where I should be. Should I be in a relationship like everyone else? Should I be having kids by now? I see how proud my parents are of my brother, who never went to college and graduate with a BA like I did, and I wonder if they feel proud of me too. Or do they feel ashamed to have a fat daughter?

I thought your piece did good at bringing to light how overweight people are dehumanized. People who suffer from this are faceless examples of this "epidemic" sweeping our nation. People that are addicted to drugs/alcohol/pills or are anorexic have a face. We dedicate one-on-one interviews to them. We feel sad for them and want to reach out and help them. But it seems like for fat people, we just recoil in disgust and feel it is our right to berate them and yell at them all the things that are wrong with them. Double standard? I guess fat isn't pretty so overweight people deserve no sympathy. "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone". As you said in a comment, we all have our vices. I'm not excusing obesity, but people need to have more compassion for their fellow man. We all have our problems and instead of ranking those problems, lets all just help each other. hm?

By the end of your piece I felt more impressed. You wrote this very well and made a clear point while also allowing the reader to feel something for this character. I know I certainly did, perhaps because I see myself in this character. However, while I have dreams too, I also recognize the good in my waking life. I do have a lot of people that love me. I might be fat, but people who know me know I am a hard worker and I have more drive then most "skinny" people. I'm reliable. I'm smart. I'm strong willed. I speak my mind. I can be silly. I have compassion for my fellow mind. I'm open minded. I'm worldly. Maybe I'll meet someone someday and maybe I won't. Regardless, I've learned to be content in my own company which many people can't do.

While things about this character depressed me because I could relate, it also made me feel hopeful and happy because it reminded me about the good things I have going for me. I'm not a person who is just content with having dreams, I like to reach those dreams. I may be fat, but I have a face and a voice and if someone can't see it, I'm gonna make sure they do see it because I don't like being ignored. I'm not an "in your face" type person but I'm not a wallflower either. So yeah, I guess this was one of the last emotions this piece invoked, empowerment.

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neil78b [2011-02-22 03:52:44 +0000 UTC]

just live for yourself and make sense of the world in your dreams.

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fangedfem In reply to ??? [2011-02-22 02:02:52 +0000 UTC]

Wonderful! I usually dont read much Lit on dA but I am glad I read this

(ps - and dont pay any attention to the idiots who feel they must degrade to feel better about themselves - its people like that which make the human race awful)

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mreid973 In reply to ??? [2011-02-21 04:30:40 +0000 UTC]

This is wonderful. Well-written, not too wordy, personal in the details and universal in scope. Congratulations on the DD. How did the essay go over in class?

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Cheychu In reply to ??? [2011-02-20 22:18:23 +0000 UTC]

im still wiping tears from my eyes. i kid you not.

this has honestly inspired me...

all my life i have been over weight...it runs in my family, sadly. I try so hard every day to lose weight, exercise, healthier food, all of that.
I've had days where I'd come home from school in tears because kids are so cruel..no one wants to sit next to "the fat girl" on the bus. No one wants to be friends with "the fat girl". It hurts...alot.
Most of the friends i made in highschool were very supportive, telling me i looked pretty when i was feeling insecure. but deep down inside i didn't feel "pretty". I let the things people said get to me...to the point where i had no self esteem, i sunk into depression...and all i could think in my mind was ending my life to make the pain go away.
about 4-5 monthes ago i went to the doctor and i had lost 20 pounds. that made me so happy, it made my self esteem go up more. and i wasn't as ashamed of myself...
i'm still trying to lose the weight. it's difficult of course. but i guess it's just something we have to work with...
and i still get made fun of in school, but not as much.
thank you...for inspiring me to...i dont know....feel better about myself, i think? i can't exactly throw out how this makes me feel..but i know for sure that it's a good feeling.

thank you for the inspiration.
and sorry for my long story... lol. >_<

and congrats on the DD. you deserve it for making such a great piece. <3 i really do hope this opens more peoples eyes.

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stonesundial In reply to ??? [2011-02-20 22:13:43 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for writing this. It makes me very happy. That's not very eloquent but I think I'd be preaching to the choir to tell you all the reasons I support your message. All "overweight" or "obese" people are of course human and sexy, same as those of us of varying sexuality, gender, race, religion, physical and mental abilities, age, politics . . . Anyway, love to you across the internet.

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VentAnger In reply to ??? [2011-02-20 20:22:50 +0000 UTC]

Bla bla bla. Lose weight, it'll make you happier.

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ChikenArt In reply to VentAnger [2011-02-20 20:55:58 +0000 UTC]

exactly

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ZoeyFagerlid In reply to ChikenArt [2011-09-13 19:48:24 +0000 UTC]

Don't you think if it was that easy, everybody would have done it by now?

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nickynamo [2011-02-20 09:00:01 +0000 UTC]

I've written a million different responses now, and deleted them all. None of them seem to fit, or adequately express how I feel.

All I can say is; Fantastic.
I used to be obese (although I still feel as though I still am) and this text is... spot on. I have to stop reading it now, before I start to cry.

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SuiluaP [2011-02-19 22:34:02 +0000 UTC]

Crap! Stop This shit!

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Shirudia [2011-02-19 18:29:40 +0000 UTC]

... You have inspired another Obesity problem... The German Obesity Problem. Currently, I feel a bit better, thank you.

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caitidyd [2011-02-19 10:11:23 +0000 UTC]

This piece is true, and beautiful, and well-written, and I love it.


And it sucks that the anti-obesity Nazis of the internet have decided to hang out and start fights in the comments. You don't deserve that.


But it's brave and wonderful prose

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EmCaCo In reply to ??? [2011-02-19 08:35:58 +0000 UTC]

This writing is a beautiful as it is biting and heart-breaking. There's a weird sensation I can't quite find the words to describe, when writing pulls me in and my world becomes words, and you definitely accomplished that.

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beranyth In reply to ??? [2011-02-19 06:48:46 +0000 UTC]

This was amazing and just heart-wrenching. I admit to tearing up a few times while reading it. You hit the nail on the head, and I'm extremely proud of you for writing it. It needed to be said.

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inertbiscuit In reply to ??? [2011-02-19 06:01:05 +0000 UTC]

My goal in writing this was never to advocate obesity, but to advocate for the HUMANITY of obese people.

This line. This. This is what I was missing in my own life. I was finally, vaguely, realizing it over the past couple of months. And you say it beautifully in this piece. And you say it so succinctly, and perfectly, in that simple statement as well.

I was always unhappy with myself, and felt I didn't deserve due to my own failures. I thought my weight was one of those failures. It was one I owed up to, and was able to hurdle over and have a body that is well within everyday social norms. But, years later, after the workouts and feeling pumped from making proper eating choices, I still was left feeling I didn't deserve things....

I was still in that mindset. We must accept others, show compassion, and be patient with ourselves.

thank you for posting this.

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Ramune [2011-02-19 04:28:19 +0000 UTC]

Check out the Health at Every Size website. [link]

also, a book called "Lessons from the Fat-o-Sphere". It's pretty awesome.

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Despoinanyx [2011-02-19 02:37:49 +0000 UTC]

Laura, you are so beautiful <3

-Sabina

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LightningRodOfHate In reply to Despoinanyx [2011-02-19 04:43:47 +0000 UTC]

I had no idea you were on DA...though I'm not a bit surprised. I love you, Sabina! <3

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Despoinanyx In reply to LightningRodOfHate [2011-02-19 06:36:44 +0000 UTC]

I haven't done much lately, but I'm going to try and post at least two or three times a month haha

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LightningRodOfHate In reply to Despoinanyx [2011-02-19 18:04:52 +0000 UTC]

Haha, nice! No pressure or anything.

I used to use this account WAY more when I was in high school. Then, occasionally, I'll have a bunch of stuff to put up in a week or so (i.e. scan in a ton of costume design renderings.)

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nightambre [2011-02-19 01:32:10 +0000 UTC]

You've probably heard this lots, and unfortunately I'm too lazy to read through five pages of comments (I'm sorry!), but this ... I was nearly in tears by the time I finished it. This... is exactly how I feel. I'm married, with two children (I've been with this man for fifteen years now). I've struggled my entire life with my weight, and no one willing to inviestigate it past 'change diet/activity' (when, now, it's contributed to my ovaries and thyroid). I've been called 'fat' when I thought I wasn't. Always compared to what I /should/ be by some dumb chart. And all of this has stuck with me. To the point where I look in the mirror and all I see is the fat. I hate mirrors because of this. My husband confesses he still finds me attractive, and all I can do is stare at him like he grew a second head. My response is usually "But I have all of this...". I... It's just... It really really nailed how I feel. And just with that one sentence about not having a face. I Favorited this so I could go back and reread it. To draw strength from it. It's inspiring.

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byrdiethemotley [2011-02-19 01:12:36 +0000 UTC]

I have had the dream in the last full paragraph so many times. Until the being held part, of course.

This was strangely moving. On one had, I was initially annoyed. On the other, it says pretty much...everything that I think, sadly. It's beautiful and sad.

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anoukbd [2011-02-19 00:08:17 +0000 UTC]

I don't really know what to think about it... I once had a friend, my best friend. She was tall and fat and gently called Godzilla at school. It was so sad and frustrating! I was more frustrated than she was. She was great and cool... but people just saw her fat. I'm a little bit fat myself, but next to her people didn't see me. When she wasn't there, I was fat. But when she was there, OW I was no one. I was no one whenever she was there or not. Bizarre eh?

Anyway. It was really cool to read. But I clearly think that anyone who has a weight problem can solve it. I don't know for people who suffer of hypotyroidic problem or things like that... I'm not an expert. But with a strong will and a bit of effort we can do anything! I don't mean being super sexy an fit in 0 pants, but just having our healthy pound, or over! (It's better to be over than bellow... for health) and a round woman is so much prettier than a girl with no form... a plank. Anorexic or just naturally over thin. It's no pretty. And an oversexualised girl too. No. Not pretty. I prefer round woman, even "obese" over barbies.

Haha, sorry for the long comment. I hope you understand my point of view. Otherwise, it's not important Have a nice day!

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Sakuraczek [2011-02-18 23:24:43 +0000 UTC]

I read this, maybe I don't understand all because my english isn't very well but I understand u

ur really great and beautiful person! everything what u want will come with this own time...
girl ur really amazing and don't be SAD! ur the ONE and ur unique on your own special way

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soophieO In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 23:23:44 +0000 UTC]

Wow..
I read your essay and was truly moved. My judgment of the topic aside I think you're an amazing and clever writer.
Also I must admit I feel kind of ashamed. I mean, weirdly enough I never gave it much thought how obesity affects the mind and not just the body. People look and (don't) see a person, but a problem, and sadly enough I was sometimes one of those people. I really feel like you helped me understand something and for that I thank you.

Keep on writing!

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Art-of-DarkElegance [2011-02-18 22:08:36 +0000 UTC]

I read one of the horrid comments by a glamazone here. It was how I found your piece.

I must say, you have such grace and dignity.
Your work most definitely deserve the DD and thank you for writing it and most of all, for posting it.


You are most definitely beautiful.

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kebuki [2011-02-18 21:36:46 +0000 UTC]

this was a fine peice of work and i'm very glad i read threw it all of course i relate to it lol

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Ronja-chan [2011-02-18 20:41:55 +0000 UTC]

I am not obese myself, buI have a friend that have been, and she have told me about how it is. I know that it doesn't have to be something someone chooses themselves. I know it's hard, and you feel hopeless... I don't have to be in the situation to understand this. And this text is just amazing. I am so glad I saw this, it's a wonderful piece of work. Congratulations on the DD, be proud <3

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Chocolatedishsoap [2011-02-18 19:01:12 +0000 UTC]

This made me cry. i bet it made alot of people cry...but man...this is beauitful

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outlander-girl [2011-02-18 18:30:12 +0000 UTC]

This is wonderfully written. And in a way it's beautiful. Thank you.

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artofgb In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 18:01:12 +0000 UTC]

Well written, clever and well thought out piece. Kudos to you

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Erika06 In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 17:46:58 +0000 UTC]

I applaud you! this is a GREAT essay

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beautybymauii [2011-02-18 17:39:31 +0000 UTC]

wow, that was amazing to read. you are very talented!

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B-gata [2011-02-18 17:28:43 +0000 UTC]

Wonderfully written. I particularly liked the parts about imagining having a childhood once, and imagining that an asexual blob could really be a woman. And many of these feelings can apply to anyone who doesn't fit a norm. It's sad, but you worded all this so well.

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Scheme86 [2011-02-18 16:11:43 +0000 UTC]

I actually found this through someone else's picture, and I got into reading it, and I must say, this is very interesting. You do well by speaking as the "American Obesity Problem" itself, because it's actually become an entity of sorts with how people speak about it. Speaking of overweight people as a collective intelligence of sorts that only seeks to continue a self-destructive behavior, yet never dying due to its random and inevitable "spawning". No one stops to realize that these are people with individual issues, individual lives, not to mention not necessarily liking the fact that they're portrayed as part of a "national problem".
What I can't stand are overweight people who have little to no reason to be the way that they are. They eat constantly, sit at home all the time, and do nothing with their lives, and then they complain when people talk bad about this type of lifestyle. Those who "choose" to be overweight, don't have the choice like they do when they "choose" to have a certain hair dye. These people engage in self-destructive activities that could injure their bodies (because, yes, being overweight can very well hurt you), yet see no repercussions. They seek no catharsis; they enjoy themselves the way they are, not because they know that they are very much a person with those who love them, but because they like their lifestyle, self-destructive though it is.
It's a relief to see someone like you who not only can "speak as" the "American Obesity Problem", because of the unrelenting categorization that modern culture has pursued on overweight persons, but can also say that you're working to fix it. You being overweight doesn't make you any less of a person, no less than having your hair dyed black (for example) would. Still, you recognize that being overweight is less healthy than not, and you seek to do something about it. And, of course, who doesn't want to look more fit? I'm not overweight in the slightest -- I would love to put on a few pounds of muscle.

All in all, this was a very good piece. It wasn't a rant, or a bitching essay about how sucky life is. You didn't go all emo; you instead identified an issue in a professional manner, in a very artistic and touching way. I do hope you continue to touch others with this in the hopes to inspire them.

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TheSonos [2011-02-18 16:06:11 +0000 UTC]

Beautiful piece. It does wonders to humanize what we don't understand/like. The faceless is easy to ridicule/hate; it becomes harder when it becomes a person.

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tonguesofbabel In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 16:02:10 +0000 UTC]

Just to let you know. Your essay left me with teary eyes. You have uncanny writing abilities. And such a great mind. You definitely need to write more essays for DvArt.
FAVED!!!

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tarajenkins [2011-02-18 15:36:58 +0000 UTC]

You are loved here as well.

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artastrophe [2011-02-18 14:49:31 +0000 UTC]

I can only assume the people who are writing such inflammatory things would have to be 'broken', because I honestly don't see how anyone can read this without being moved--assuming it didn't just completely change the way they think about "The American Obesity Problem." You did such an amazing job putting a face to this and restoring some humanity to the subject by revealing such an intimate piece of yourself.

I am just so floored by your writing and the emotion and talent behind it, and the courage to post something so personal... I really don't know how to say it and I feel like you deserve some equally profound words in return. Just... thank you very much for sharing this.

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Alice4Tea [2011-02-18 14:37:32 +0000 UTC]

Wow! That's all I can say.

Words are just beyond comprehension right now.

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YourRain In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 14:05:02 +0000 UTC]

This is absolutely wonderful. Thank you for writing. Thank you for sharing. <3

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GirlyPinkRox [2011-02-18 13:48:19 +0000 UTC]

This is amazing.
I am obese, and this pretty much made me cry.
In a good way, I believe.
You are just amazing.
I can't stop shivering.
Amazing.

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The-Feaithil-Clan [2011-02-18 13:12:09 +0000 UTC]

I just got back from an over-night shift...so forgive me is this isn't as tactful as some of my other comments when I come across Earth Shattering Eloquence.

This....you.....you deserve a Nobel prize for this!

I -did- have a weight problem, but it was the other side of the spectrum....and frankly, I must admit, I am afraid of gaining weight. I'm finally at a weight that's suitable for my height....but I can't look at myself in the mirror sometimes....

I don't want to know....
Now I'm faced with a new challenge...due to a deformity in my left foot since birth....I can't move around like I used to (I was an athlete for the longest time and I still exercise regularly) but now, the pain is making me limp....I can't exercise as much as I'd like....

And I'm scared.....I don't want to gain weight.
I eat healthy (is one meal a day healthy?)
But....I don't enjoy it....(unless it's pizza, thanks to my idol)

.....anyways.....thank you for this!
You've made my morning.
And I think I might be able to enjoy my salad a little more too.

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PrincessMinty [2011-02-18 12:18:26 +0000 UTC]

Gorgeous.
It really moved me.

Thank you so much for sharing this with all of us and congratulations on the Daily deviantation.

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PrincessMinty In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 12:18:21 +0000 UTC]

Gorgeous.
It really moved me.

Thank you so much for sharing this with all of us and congratulations on the Daily deviantation.

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bestefan In reply to ??? [2011-02-18 11:39:58 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for lending beautiful words to my own thoughts, and doing it so profoundly. You have a great gift, and a strong voice and a sharp wit.

The woman in this piece is a credit to my species.

Thank you so, so much.

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shady-zaher [2011-02-18 09:36:17 +0000 UTC]

what a wonderful essay , it shows what a beautiful person you are. <3

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RogueSareth [2011-02-18 09:04:25 +0000 UTC]

This was a wonderfully written essay. I suppose I've always had it a bit easy because I have a fast metabolism and its hard for me to GAIN weight but I have very dear friends who could be called obese ( one who was anorexic in highschool and has just now started to accept that shes always going to be curvy ) and whenever I see them go through hell because of it it really hurts me because I love them and want them to be happy, I want the media to stop pounding it into their heads that they have to weigh next to nothing to be attractive ( even if they did loose a lot of weight neither of them would be "skinny" its just not in their genetics) Hell I would KILL to have the kind of curves one of them has ( the one that used to be anorexic ) I would trade being as skinny as I am any day to have her body type.
But anyways, before I ramble, just thought I ought to say I really like this.

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