Anonymous wrote:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
Anonymous wrote:I do not disagree with anything OP has to say. However, do not assume that someone who is slender is this way because of a restrictive diet or even diligent exercise. And if you comment on my body or what I am eating, I will take it as permission to comment on yours.
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:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
This. A 2 or a 4 isn’t even skinny. I’m a size 4 and could easily lose 30 lbs
Anonymous wrote:In a natural size 2-4..so don’t really think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
This. A 2 or a 4 isn’t even skinny. I’m a size 4 and could easily lose 30 lbs
Honestly though, how- are you SUPER short? Size 4 is a 26 inch waist, I mean Gisele and other fashion models of the highest order have 24-25 inch waists but are 5-10 to 6 feet. There is no fat on them at all. Do you have an exaggerated pear shape? 30 lbs is a LOT of fat to lose, if you fit into size 4 and carry 30 lbs wouldn't you have to be about 4'10" or a super outlier in some way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
This. A 2 or a 4 isn’t even skinny. I’m a size 4 and could easily lose 30 lbs
Honestly though, how- are you SUPER short? Size 4 is a 26 inch waist, I mean Gisele and other fashion models of the highest order have 24-25 inch waists but are 5-10 to 6 feet. There is no fat on them at all. Do you have an exaggerated pear shape? 30 lbs is a LOT of fat to lose, if you fit into size 4 and carry 30 lbs wouldn't you have to be about 4'10" or a super outlier in some way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
This. A 2 or a 4 isn’t even skinny. I’m a size 4 and could easily lose 30 lbs
Honestly though, how- are you SUPER short? Size 4 is a 26 inch waist, I mean Gisele and other fashion models of the highest order have 24-25 inch waists but are 5-10 to 6 feet. There is no fat on them at all. Do you have an exaggerated pear shape? 30 lbs is a LOT of fat to lose, if you fit into size 4 and carry 30 lbs wouldn't you have to be about 4'10" or a super outlier in some way?
Anonymous wrote:I am also a thin woman who has gotten lots of negative comments about my eating over the years. I am naturally thin and have never dieted. I do try to "eat healthy" in that I make sure I'm eating a balanced diet, including lots of green things. But if I want a burger and fries, I eat them. I don't think of any foods a "bad" and never calorie restrict.
People have been sold a lot of unhealthy ideas about eating. They believe that thinness is something that must be earned (it's not, I am thin and don't do anything to earn it). And that leads to the belief that people who diet and exercise are somehow morally superior to those that don't. And they think people who are heavier must be "bad" in some way, thus all the attitudes about fat people being lazy or undisciplined. All of these are just stories though, sold by the diet industry or perpetuated by women's fashion and then reiterated in families and peer groups.
So when people comment on my eating, I just remind myself that it comes from a place of shame because they have been taught a false narrative. I challenge that narrative because my eating is "bad" but my body is "good" (again, I don't think this, but it's what people are conditioned to think). So they lash out at me because they have structured their lives, their self-perception, their eating, and their morality around ideas that my eating and body prove to be false. That feels bad to them, so they push those negative feelings onto me.
It sucks, but at least I know it's not really about me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop normalizing obesity as "curviness"
This. A 2 or a 4 isn’t even skinny. I’m a size 4 and could easily lose 30 lbs