Friend loses 90 pounds and rips apart fat people

Anonymous
No joke...apparently she's still a nasty person inside despite losing 90 lbs. I love to celebrate people's wins. However when you post that size 14 = not sexy size 2 = sexy. Plus a bunch of other - fat people are lazy in your long description of your transformation, I'm not celebrating that hate.
Anonymous
Wow. That’s wild. Talk about major insecurities. Odds are she will gain the weight back, and hopefully at some point she will decide to stop hating herself and everyone else.
Anonymous
She shed the pounds, but not the insecurity within.
Anonymous
Ignore the crazies.
Anonymous
It's just an effort to make herself feel good. Ignore. Grey rock.
Anonymous
That’s mean. People don’t change I guess - sometimes the mask just falls off.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It's just an effort to make herself feel good. Ignore. Grey rock.


Love it, grey rock.
Anonymous
I mean, its an unpopular opinion but in some ways she's not wrong.

I wouldn't go around saying it but absent medical issues like thyroid disorders (etc.), overweight and obese people really have little to no self restraint. They lack impulse control and dedication. It's working out and eating at a caloric deficit, not rocket science. Anyone can do it. My fatter friends always love blaming genetics, but that's not it. They eat like crap and feed crap to their kids so when the kids become fat they point and say, "see? Genetics!" No, it's your diet.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, its an unpopular opinion but in some ways she's not wrong.

I wouldn't go around saying it but absent medical issues like thyroid disorders (etc.), overweight and obese people really have little to no self restraint. They lack impulse control and dedication. It's working out and eating at a caloric deficit, not rocket science. Anyone can do it. My fatter friends always love blaming genetics, but that's not it. They eat like crap and feed crap to their kids so when the kids become fat they point and say, "see? Genetics!" No, it's your diet.


Who cares if she is right or wrong. Or if it is genetics or the food chain or lack of impulse control. She's being mean. Just because something is true doesn't mean you have to spout it out. When I get a gift I don't LOVE I don't expose all the criticisms I have of the gift (it's ugly! It's stupid!) but I just say "thank you, it was kind of you to think of me" and then I stop and I don't say "when you saw this hideous monstrosity."

I'd call her out on it and ask her why she's being mean. Go from there.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:No joke...apparently she's still a nasty person inside despite losing 90 lbs. I love to celebrate people's wins. However when you post that size 14 = not sexy size 2 = sexy. Plus a bunch of other - fat people are lazy in your long description of your transformation, I'm not celebrating that hate.


A nasty person is a nasty person, 90 lbs less or not. Why are you friends with her?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, its an unpopular opinion but in some ways she's not wrong.

I wouldn't go around saying it but absent medical issues like thyroid disorders (etc.), overweight and obese people really have little to no self restraint. They lack impulse control and dedication. It's working out and eating at a caloric deficit, not rocket science. Anyone can do it. My fatter friends always love blaming genetics, but that's not it. They eat like crap and feed crap to their kids so when the kids become fat they point and say, "see? Genetics!" No, it's your diet. [/quote

You are talking healthy, not sexy. Sexy is an undefinable term. Many people do not find size 2's sexy.

But you don't sound like a pleasant person anyways, so this is probably lost on you.
Anonymous
I agree that these type of comments are not needed and unhelpful. OP, I suggest that you ignore these comments, or stop spending less time with her.

However, from the friends point of view, she may feel qualified to post these thoughts since she has the experience of being overweight. She is in a position to know what behaviors caused her to be overweight and then lose the weight.

Either way, you should not be friends with her if you consider her to be "still a nasty person".
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, its an unpopular opinion but in some ways she's not wrong.

I wouldn't go around saying it but absent medical issues like thyroid disorders (etc.), overweight and obese people really have little to no self restraint. They lack impulse control and dedication. It's working out and eating at a caloric deficit, not rocket science. Anyone can do it. My fatter friends always love blaming genetics, but that's not it. They eat like crap and feed crap to their kids so when the kids become fat they point and say, "see? Genetics!" No, it's your diet.


How did you do in school PP? How about your career? Do you have a good and healthy relationship?

Weight loss, like all of those things, requires not individual moments of impulse control and dedication, but constant control and dedication in pursuit of those goals. It isn't a single moment of willpower that fails a fat person, but willpower for every single waking moment of a day. I know skinny people who can't help speeding or who binge drink. Who can't keep a job because they can't be on time. Who failed out of school because they couldn't get it together to not fail their classes. These people have plenty of food will power, but can't exercise that same impulse and control when it comes to other parts of their life.

Everyone has failures and flaws, fat people just have one that is impossible to hide away from the world. Empathy would go a long way.

OP it is funny, I have recently lost like 40 pounds and have felt myself looking at people at my previous weight and feeling like...something. Some mixture of disgust towards my past self and earnestness of knowing they can change like I did. And I hate myself for this blend of emotions. More than I hated myself for being fat! It is so pretentious, it is emotional and I do not act on it because I know intellectually (and for a fact, since it used to be me) that nothing I say or do would do anything more than make these people feel bad. They will either decide to do it on their own or they will go on being perfectly worthwhile human beings the rest of their life, and its fine either way. But I feel myself having bought into a belief of 'they haven't seen the light' at least emotionally. Like if they understood, they would want it badly enough to do. Because I myself did not realize how much more I'd be able to move (I can tie shoes without getting uncomfortable/out of breath/have to sit down!), how nice it would feel to shop in regular stores again etc, I had blocked away the bad feelings, and it wasn't until I had solved the problem that I realized how it had taken over my life in ways I hadn't realized. But again, no one saying this to me then would have worked, I would have told them, truthfully, that I had no diagnosed health issues, that I exercised, that I was happy.

Anyway, I hope your friend learns to shut down that voice, she isn't helping anyone, she's just being mean. I feel like I understand how people become that person though, and in my case, try to actively fight that as much as any rebound weight gain every day.
Anonymous
People often think that they'll be different people when they lose weight. They'll be happier, less insecure, less reactionary. less judgmental.

None of that is true. They're the same people, just with a lower number on the scale.

If OP's friend didn't work on anything BUT weight loss, she's going to gain it back and then OP might not have to hear it anymore.

Sustained maintenance takes inner work, as well. Sounds like she skipped that part.
Anonymous
You describe her as both "a nasty person" and "a friend."

Stop gossiping on the Internet and do whatever work you need to do to resolve it so that you don't feel compelled to continue or form friendships with "nasty" people.
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