Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They know. My elementary aged kid told me I'm fat.
Fat is not unattractive. For some reason on this board people seem to think a fat person is automatically not good looking. They equate the two.
Because healthy is attractive, so fat, by definition is unattractive.
Skinny people can be wildly unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:My mom always had an usually large amount of facial hair. It’s been there as long as I can remember. It was embarrassing as a kid, and as an adult, it’s still unsightly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They know. My elementary aged kid told me I'm fat.
Fat is not unattractive. For some reason on this board people seem to think a fat person is automatically not good looking. They equate the two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They know. My elementary aged kid told me I'm fat.
Fat is not unattractive. For some reason on this board people seem to think a fat person is automatically not good looking. They equate the two.
Because healthy is attractive, so fat, by definition is unattractive.
Skinny people can be wildly unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid noted I was the second to least fat mom in her girl scout troop! She had all the moms ordered in size in her mind!
My kid also routinely tells me to dress nice for certain school events.
And she will often ask me why I look good (if I happen to look good) or bad (if i happen to look worse than normal)
None of this offends me. I mean, it's a bit weird that she had the moms from our Girl Scout troop sized up but it's just how kids observe their world.
My daughter started noticing in MS. If I ask her if she thinks someone is "pretty" she has one of several answers:
- 'yes'
- 'straw blonde botox mom' - we're at a fancy private school so there's lots of plastic surgery that's noticeable
- 'she just looks like a mom' - most women fall into this one (including me)
- 'she doesn't take care if herself'