Here’s the thing about being fat: strangers tell you that you’re fat all the time.
I know that, for decent human beings who would never dream of approaching a random person about their appearance, it sounds hard to believe. But it happens all the damn time.
I generally can’t get through a single week without having something yelled at me from a passing car. Or having someone ‘thoughtfully’ tell me I would be really pretty if I lost weight. Or having a taxi driver tell me about weight-loss surgery. Or having an old lady at the bus stop tell me I’m wasting my youth.
Or having a drunk guy on the bus laugh in my face. Or having someone in the supermarket patronisingly wink and say “Good on you” when I put fruit in my trolley. Etc etc etc blah bah DON’T YOU KNOW THAT YOU’RE FAT?
I haven’t been overweight for very long and the bizarre behaviour of strangers towards me and my body is one of the things I’ve found most difficult to adjust to. You may get used to it happening but it never stops hurting. It never stops being humiliating and devastating. You just get better at pushing it down and continuing on with your day.
It becomes a part of your life. It becomes too exhausting to get angry about every single time. And that is freaking sad.
Top Comments
One of my husband's sisters is overweight and I learnt that she had been having trouble breathing because of that. I was instantly worried about her health, and was looking for a private moment to talk to her about it, but we were in the middle of a family dinner, so I didn't approach her right away.
What came next was so disgusting I almost started throwing punches: my entire political family, with the exception of some decent souls, started laughing at the fact that her ass was so big she was taking over a chair and a half. They laughed. Out loud. In her face. About her ASS! it became the running joke of the reunion.
I was glad to see that she had a resting bitch face on, instead of a stream of tears coming out of her eyes, but I knew she was hurting. Who wouldn't?
I talked to her later and told her how disgusted I was at the way she had been treated, specially when the important thing is that her health is compromised. She told me it made her sad too, but that for sometime now she had stop caring about what she heard from other people, she told me: "You know what, sis? Losing weight has been really hard, but I'm doing it for me now, not for anyone else. I'm exercising and eating healthier food, and I'm ok with my body the way it is, as long as I don't have my health in danger"
I was so happy to hear her say that, proves how strong she is. And it's not because somebody helped her get strong, she did it herself.
I found a rebuttal from another witness.
Apparently the larger woman SAT on some people.
Does this change how we should feel about the comment?
http://boston.craigslist.or...