Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP if you're 135 pounds and you are in good health, then tell people to MYOB.
If you're 200 lbs and not in good health, tell them the same thing! It's no one else's business. At work, this sounds potentially like a bullying thing as much as a food thing. Don't discuss food and don't let them get any kind of response out of you. Make them trying to discuss food with you as boring as possible. Respond with silence, shrugs, "I guess/okay/huh." Nothing more.
+2
I find it really hard to believe multiple women at OPs work are commenting on her food. No one would care that much even if OP eats like a pig from a trough. What is more likely is that maybe OP thinks they stare or give eachother looks or maybe nothing happens at all- but OP assumes this is the dialogue in their heads or behind her back because they are "skinny" and eat differently than her.
When I was 18 and skinny, multiple coworkers commented on my food and appearance. So I don't find this super unlikely. It was about being young and sticking out in other ways that made it easy to pick on me as much as it was about my food choices. You can definitely have workplace dynamics where one person gets negatively singled out, but you can also do things to shut it down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP if you're 135 pounds and you are in good health, then tell people to MYOB.
If you're 200 lbs and not in good health, tell them the same thing! It's no one else's business. At work, this sounds potentially like a bullying thing as much as a food thing. Don't discuss food and don't let them get any kind of response out of you. Make them trying to discuss food with you as boring as possible. Respond with silence, shrugs, "I guess/okay/huh." Nothing more.
+2
I find it really hard to believe multiple women at OPs work are commenting on her food. No one would care that much even if OP eats like a pig from a trough. What is more likely is that maybe OP thinks they stare or give eachother looks or maybe nothing happens at all- but OP assumes this is the dialogue in their heads or behind her back because they are "skinny" and eat differently than her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP if you're 135 pounds and you are in good health, then tell people to MYOB.
If you're 200 lbs and not in good health, tell them the same thing! It's no one else's business. At work, this sounds potentially like a bullying thing as much as a food thing. Don't discuss food and don't let them get any kind of response out of you. Make them trying to discuss food with you as boring as possible. Respond with silence, shrugs, "I guess/okay/huh." Nothing more.
+2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if you get this from your mom and sister, why is this a racial thing?
I am white and every woman I know who is like this is also white (and UMC). My workplace is diverse but it is the white ladies who obsess about food in this way. And they also seem to have more restrictive ideas about what a “healthy” body looks like. I don’t presume to speak for women of color. I have just noticed this is a real issue among groups of white women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP if you're 135 pounds and you are in good health, then tell people to MYOB.
If you're 200 lbs and not in good health, tell them the same thing! It's no one else's business. At work, this sounds potentially like a bullying thing as much as a food thing. Don't discuss food and don't let them get any kind of response out of you. Make them trying to discuss food with you as boring as possible. Respond with silence, shrugs, "I guess/okay/huh." Nothing more.
Anonymous wrote:OP if you're 135 pounds and you are in good health, then tell people to MYOB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: stop treating body image issues, skewed perceptions of beauty and acceptance, and health concerns like they are exclusively "women's troubles."
There's my PSA for *you.*
-loving sister of an anorexic brother in recovery
I am just speaking to my experience as a woman. I'm sure men have issues with these things, but I've never had a man try to shame me over food or weight. That's why I directed my comment at women -- because I am speaking specifically to the phenomenon of women infecting each other with these attitudes.
I am sorry to hear about your brother and wish him a healthy and strong recovery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, people have different body shapes. However, "overweight/obese" is not a body shape, it is a medical aliment.
Skinny does not mean healthy, of course. But being overweight is ALWAYS unhealthy. There is no way to spin it. The health consequences of excess weight can be delayed or gradual, but they will eventually catch up with you.
Being underweight is also ALWAYS unhealthy. But a lot of people are totally fine with others being underweight but freak out if they decide someone is overweight (and it doesn't sound like OP is talking about people with obvious weight issues -- she's talking about average weight women).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So people can only want to lose weight if it’s “affecting their heart health, causing joint problems, or limiting their mobility and ability to live active lives.”? So people can only try to lose weight when you approve of it? This is weird.
People can do what they want with their own bodies. But passing off your restrictive fad diet as “eating healthy” and criticizing others who don’t have your same disordered eating patterns (or don’t exercise obsessively or take stimulants) is obnoxious.
... and had that been the point of the OP, most people would agree. To me she sounded just as disordered and delusional as the fad dieters.
I am the OP and this is indeed my point. I don’t have disordered eating issues. I eat relatively healthy while also indulging in foods that taste good to me and not worrying a lot about it. I am active and feel good, so I don’t view those indulgences as an issue. I am tired of judgmental comments from my sister, my mom, and a large group of colleagues, all of whom feel comfortable telling me how “bad” my diet is and will make comments about my “weird” food or accuse me of binging because I ate dessert. I feel incessantly judged for my eating habits, specifically because I’m not on some permanent restrictive diet, and a lot of the women in my life are.