“It’s the food that you don’t eat in public. It’s the tears that sting the backs of your eyeballs throughout the day until you can release them into your pillow at night.”
I understand that a lot of people don’t ‘get’ what it feels like to be…fat. I honestly can’t blame them.
How can they, if they have never been fat, overweight, obese, large, big, huge, heavy, morbidly obese, before? Just the same as with anything else in life, we can’t TRULY understand unless we have actually experienced it before. This is just to give you a partial look into…a fat girls heart.
How does it feel?
It’s the assumption that people describe you by your size when explaining who you are, rather than on hair colour, personality, anything else. It’s the brick like weight pulling you down with every step you take – physically, and metaphorically.
It’s the scanning of the shop before you even enter, to determine if there are any clothes than may remotely fit. It’s the not entering of said shops to avoid awkward stares from non-fat sales girls. It’s the cupboard full of clothes that includes a little pile in the corner that actually fits.
It’s the pile of clothes that really, you would never choose if you had the choice: the oversized T-shirts to cover your hips; the cheap Size 26 3/4 pants that you are too afraid to wear because they could rip up the backside as soon as you bend over and it makes you wonder why they even made them in a big size with cheap material in the first place; the cardigans that you never button up because people may notice that 1 button is missing because you tried to hide your big stomach one day, and that would be more embarrassing than not buttoning up; the 4 pairs of staple shoes because every pair of shoes hurts.your.feet.; the fat singlets that you dream of one day not wearing; the pair of pants that is falling apart but you continue to wear it because you refuse to spend any more money on fat clothes because one day soon you won’t need to wear them, and besides, you don’t deserve new clothes.
Top Comments
In the beginning, no one notices. Invisible.
Suffering from an external manifestation of life's chaos.
If you tell your secret, you will endure hours while friends and family dish out their dieting advice and exploits.
You focus intently and comply successfully to your plan.
Weight loss "flu" comes on strong and demands supernormal sleep.
They will wait for you to fail. Most will hope not.
Are you ready for that? Just 100 more pounds to go.
You keep going. Someone notices.
They look more closely now and judgement looms.
Your clothes become hard to hold on to.
You won't buy more more until there is a near wardrobe crisis because you know there is no way you are stopping now.
Commentary flies.
You will feel the need to deny the compliments. You are out of practice.
Are you ready for that? Just 80 pounds more to go.
You keep going. More notice now.
They keep asking "how" but they don't want to hear the truth.
They believe it must be "magic" or exercise. Neither will be true.
It will feel slow to you and fast to others.
The food police arrive in force.
You still have oversized clothes in your closet.
Are you ready for that? Just 50 pounds more to go.
You keep going. Most notice now.
You are not invisible.
Your physical being becomes front and center.
You look in the mirror but see the "old you".
You'll try on our 'skinny clothes' to convince yourself it wasn't a dream.
Crossed legs and non-punishing seat belts reassure you of your progress.
Are you ready for that? Just 25 more pounds to go.
You keep going. Everyone notices.
Some will bait you.
Now they want advice but will despise and patronize you for giving it.
Trust will be hard because you will remember what they forget.
If your'e a woman, take caution as your IQ still drops by 1 point for every 10 pounds lost.
But, energy escalate. Manic almost.
You can't hide now.
Are you ready for that? Just 10 pounds more to go.
You keep going. You will become "the one who lost all that weight".
With your new identity in tow, some will exude fear and doubt while others applaud you.
Remember, other people fear change to.
Mostly you'll feel confused because, right or wrong, your human encounters are different now.
You'll wonder why because you have always been the same person.
You will wonder "is it me or them"?
Are you ready for that? Just 10 pounds more to go.
You deep going. Then, no one notices.
You are nearing arrival. Nothing to see now.
New people you meet won't know.
People you know have forgotten, sort of.
Rightfully so. It's not them.
External validation be gone. Don't rely on it.
You may still have oversized clothes in your closet.
Are you ready for that? Are you ready for arrival?
P. Bailey McBride
Being overweight and losing weight both requires incredible emotional resilience.
Our stories are very similar and I congratulate everyone for their efforts and writing about their experience.
How would you have liked or would like friends and family help you with your weight loss journey?
How about a different fat story. I have been fat (as in morbidly obese) since I went on the pill in my teens. For my entire life I have been told how beautiful I am and am frequently complimented to this day. I have a very healthy ego and sense of self-worth. I have never been in a room with a woman more beautiful than I am (and neither has my husband!). I go into any store I like (only very rarely have felt judged by a shop assistant) and I have a wardrobe full of really nice size 26 clothes in every colour and style. I also have (and wear) over 30 pairs of shows in every style from vans to patent leather pumps. I am regularly complimented on my style and penchant for 'matching shoes with every outfit'. I go the gym, I like walking, I do not have diabetes or high cholesterol (do have fatty liver tho) and, like the author, I quite enjoy BBQ Samboys. I do not eat in private, hide eating or cry into my pillow. I have an awesome job and a beautiful family. I have had great success in life, in my education and in my career. Workmates and bosses often comment on my 'boundless energy'. I am very happy for anyone who wants to lose weight to do so and wish them every success. I am not happy to be pressured into hating myself because I'm fat. We don't expect that all thin people have the same story so why expect that all fat people have the same story. Last week I read a piece on this site about thin-shaming and the unwanted negative public attention on the size 4 author. Let's stop pegging our self-worth to our size. Just as we might expect naturally thin people have awesome lives, I am naturally fat and still have an awesome life. Just saying.
This! A million times This!
No one can make you feel inferior without your consent, no woman should EVER feel she's not 'allowed' to be beautiful.