Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of you have gotten off easy if these are the MOST insulting things you've ever been told.
In high school, my male best friend said, out of the blue, "You're fat." I said, "What?", feeling bewildered. He clarified, "I mean, you eat a lot." The weird thing, though, is that he was in love with me, so I learned that people don't always make a lot of sense.
I had some douchebag frat boys make comments about my weight at parties in college.
After I had gastric bypass surgery, a crazy ex-boyfriend told me I'd always be a fat girl down deep.
Are you serious? Not to minimize the hurt you felt from comments that had been made to you, but there has been MUCH worse mentioned on this thread than "douchebag frat boys" calling you fat. That's just par for the course when you're fat, lady. And FYI, sounds like your male best friend was just stating the truth when he said "you're fat". Clearly his delivery/thought process was way off, but fat is not the worst thing to be.
From one fat woman to another (former or not), I recommend you look in to the fat acceptance movement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of you have gotten off easy if these are the MOST insulting things you've ever been told.
In high school, my male best friend said, out of the blue, "You're fat." I said, "What?", feeling bewildered. He clarified, "I mean, you eat a lot." The weird thing, though, is that he was in love with me, so I learned that people don't always make a lot of sense.
I had some douchebag frat boys make comments about my weight at parties in college.
After I had gastric bypass surgery, a crazy ex-boyfriend told me I'd always be a fat girl down deep.
Are you serious? Not to minimize the hurt you felt from comments that had been made to you, but there has been MUCH worse mentioned on this thread than "douchebag frat boys" calling you fat. That's just par for the course when you're fat, lady. And FYI, sounds like your male best friend was just stating the truth when he said "you're fat". Clearly his delivery/thought process was way off, but fat is not the worst thing to be.
From one fat woman to another (former or not), I recommend you look in to the fat acceptance movement.
Anonymous wrote:Not said but a stranger tried to spit on me.
Anonymous wrote:On a college admissions tour at Dartmouth many many years ago, one of the young men asked whether the girls were "hot". The tour guide pointed at me and said "She'd fit in. Do you still want to come?"
I am white and my son is biracial, and like many babies of color looked very white at birth, and then gradually got more color in his skin and curl in his hair. We were checking out at the grocery store one day, and the cashier, who I had seen several times before, asked me "Have you considered the possibility that his father is black?" When I replied "Actually, I know that his father is black" she must have realized that she just implied that I might not remember the race of all the men I had slept with because she started to stutter and apologize. I really think she meant "I wonder if his father is black", which still wouldn't be the greatest question, but sure beats what she asked.
Anonymous wrote:Most of you have gotten off easy if these are the MOST insulting things you've ever been told.
In high school, my male best friend said, out of the blue, "You're fat." I said, "What?", feeling bewildered. He clarified, "I mean, you eat a lot." The weird thing, though, is that he was in love with me, so I learned that people don't always make a lot of sense.
I had some douchebag frat boys make comments about my weight at parties in college.
After I had gastric bypass surgery, a crazy ex-boyfriend told me I'd always be a fat girl down deep.
Anonymous wrote:Hot camp counselor asked my awkward, bad haircut, 10 year old self "Does your face hurt?" when I answered "no, why?" he replied "Because it's hurtin' me."
Kids never forget the verbal cruelty inflicted upon them!