I feel for people who have been over (or are) overweight. I've never been overweight myself, but I have been osterisized for different reasons. I moved around a lot growing up, I was always the "New Girl." When I was little the other kids would make fun of the way I looked or talked, the older I got, the more I grew into my looks, but still people would just ignore me because I was "New." Now that I'm out of school people just seem to be too self absorbed to really pay attention to anybody else.
It makes me feel even worse that, in gerneral, our society puts so much emphasis on the way people look, and how people mistakenly believe that if you're not overwight and moderately attractive, some how all life's problems dissappear, life is wonderful, life and happiness is handed to you on a silver platter, or something. People tell me that I pretty all the time, but it's never helped me in life, maybe because I don't buy into the mentality "Someone thinks I'm attractive, so I don't have to be a smart, or a decent human being." Thats one thing I've noticed, those of us who don't (or didn't) fall into the standard mold of how people are "supposed" to look, even if we eventually come into it, are at least sympathetic to those who still feel like they're missing out (and trust me, you're not).
If you're overwight, have crooked teeth, an overbite, an extra arm, or just feel that there is anything about youself that, if you could just "fix it" then every thing would be alright. Do it for yourself, so you can run a marathon, or close your mouth properly without pain, or buy a shirt with out having to add an extra arm hole. Don't do it because you think that some how it will make humanity "nicer." Even if they're nicer to you, they're still being jerks to someone else.
My Secret History
I may be thin now, but that doesn't mean I share your opinions about fat people.
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It's almost surreal how I find myself privy to the hushed conversations thin people have among themselves. I'm part of this insider group, but I carry a secret identity that renders me an impostor to some degree. I spent most of my childhood and the entirety of my adolescence overweight, and eventually morbidly obese (a very difficult health category to own up to). My core identity was once tied to being an outsider to this camaraderie of thin people. But my identity shifted rapidly in February of last year, when I underwent the kind of "medical intervention" that Star Jones recently acknowledged was the reason for her own weight loss. People I've met in the last year don't know me as I knew myself before I underwent gastric bypass surgery. They take for granted that my physical presence—I am now 130 pounds, having dropped 135 pounds after my operation—has always been this way, and I let them believe this myth because I see now, more than ever, how much judgment is directed toward the overweight and obese.
My best friend Bea places nannies in elite homes in Los Angeles, and more than once she has been explicitly asked not to send overweight applicants, no matter what their qualifications. Recently she had a candidate of the highest qualifications and glowing references, but this particular candidate wore size 16 jeans. When she found the courage to share this last detail with the client, the client immediately justified her prejudice by explaining that there were a lot of expensive antiques in her home, and narrow hallways. Fat, this woman believed, was simply unacceptable. If I had been there, I'm sure I would have simply nodded in quiet acquiescence.
I did as much recently when I went on a date with a young doctor. As I batted my eyelashes and enjoyed my newfound attractiveness, he recalled his morning spent helping in the delivery of a baby. "The woman was morbidly obese," he leaned over and whispered. Who, he wondered, would have wanted to have sex with that nine months ago? I said nothing and just let him buy into the illusion of me as someone who has only ever known a normal, healthy weight range.
I survived the day-to-day humiliations of obesity, the looks of pity and the "you have such a pretty face" compliments. In a moment I consider emblematic in the story of my struggles, I was once even stuck inside a dangling car tire six feet off the ground. I was 19 years old, participating in a ropes course retreat with my collegiate peer group. Somehow my assigned "bonding" group managed to hoist my 265-pound body up and into the challenge element (goal: get entire group through car tire) where my hips promptly announced themselves to be larger than the tire's opening. Bea (thankfully present for this ordeal) pushed from behind. The strongest male pulled from the front. Nothing. I was completely stuck. After a few more minutes of audibly difficult pushing and pulling by the group, I was free. Weeks later I still had the bruising around my hips to remind me of this embarrassment.
Two years ago Bea was also thankfully present when a nurse in the hospital yelled across the nurses' station, in reference to my need for a chair, "Has anyone seen the extrawide wheelchair? You know, the really big one?" Under her breath, Bea responded to her with, "Has anyone seen my friend's dignity?" We like to re-enact this moment from time to time, overexaggerating the extent of the nurse's yelling and complete lack of consideration for me as a human being. It's funny and we laugh, but we both know that this day, the day of my medical intervention, was the most difficult day of my life.
I've had nothing but success, healthwise, from the decision to have gastric bypass surgery. I've even run a half-marathon since then (not a superhuman feat by any means, but one almost unimaginable to that girl dangling in that tire). But every day I struggle with who I am and what this new membership to the normal-weight group means to me.
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