Anonymous wrote:To all the PPs discounting OP's experience, what about statements like "real women have curves"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thin used to be the norm. Now overweight is the norm.
This, so since most people are fat, they think it's normal and bash the people who aren't like them.
Anonymous wrote:Thin used to be the norm. Now overweight is the norm.
Anonymous wrote:To all the PPs discounting OP's experience, what about statements like "real women have curves"?
Anonymous wrote:I agree. I am thin, and exercise and eat well, but I do enjoy the occasional burger or donut and whatnot. Comment I received yesterday as told my coworker about the EggMcMuffin and sausage I had eaten for breakfast: "But you're so skinny! How can you eat stuff like that? What's your secret?" I didn't really care (in the long run one egg mcmuffin and some sausage makes no one fat if it's only rarely) but yeah...you'd never ask a fat persone eating a salad, "What's your secret? You're eating something healthy, but you're still fat!" so why is it ok to do the same to a skinny person?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from a family of excessively thin people - my BMI is just under 18 without exercising. I get where OP is coming from. I've been asked my entire life whether I was OK or encouraged to "just eat." Comments about my size happen at least once a week. It doesn't bother me, but people certainly feel that they can say it to my face (repeatedly) and would never say the converse about an overweight person. Don't get me wrong, I don't feel oppressed or anything, but it is definitely more acceptable to discuss a person being too thin very openly.
Be glad someone cared about you. Instead of just mocking your size. Yesterday, three teen boys yelled fat slurs at me from their bikes as I jogged in Sligo Creek Parkway.
Teenagers are assholes. But you see how it feels for a stranger to comment on your body negatively? That's what the thin PPs are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from a family of excessively thin people - my BMI is just under 18 without exercising. I get where OP is coming from. I've been asked my entire life whether I was OK or encouraged to "just eat." Comments about my size happen at least once a week. It doesn't bother me, but people certainly feel that they can say it to my face (repeatedly) and would never say the converse about an overweight person. Don't get me wrong, I don't feel oppressed or anything, but it is definitely more acceptable to discuss a person being too thin very openly.
Be glad someone cared about you. Instead of just mocking your size. Yesterday, three teen boys yelled fat slurs at me from their bikes as I jogged in Sligo Creek Parkway.