Tagged: fat

Doesn’t Ben Find You Disgusting?

One time, I was having coffee with my beloved grandma, and she ask “Doesn’t Ben find you disgusting, with all that fat on you?” One of the things I love about my grandmother is how honest she is, even when it’s really inconvenient. My favorite example of this is when she asked loudly “DOES THAT MAN KNOW HIS SHIRT LOOKS LIKE A DRESS?” while pointing to an obvious gang member in an over-sized sports jersey. I personally had a great time with that one because his shirt totally did look like a dress, and probably the only person that could have said something like that to his face and not get beaten to a pulp is my frail looking grandma. Being with her is like hanging out with a drunk drag queen, except all the time. And nice restaurants still let us in.

Anyway, terrible rudeness aside, asking if my boyfriend, who is as fat as I am, finds me disgusting is kind of hilarious (what if the answer was yes?!) but also kind of ridiculously indicative of the thought process I was raised with. Grandma is anorexic, so to expect her to have a holistic, body love attitude towards fat – a substance that positively horrifies her – would be ludicrous. But the fact that, having made the assumption that everyone else feels the same way about fattness that she does, she expresses more concern for my boyfriend than me (her own flesh and blood!) at having to deal with a fat sex partner is silly in the extreme. I can’t really tell if she’s asking me this because I’m a girl, or because I’m in her family. There is sort of a general assumption amongst us that anybody who wants to be with any of us is marrying down, and that we should be so lucky. So it’s not entirely unrealistic to think that she would ask me this question no matter what my gender, or what the gender of my partner was. Although I don’t discount the internalized misogyny inherent in the assumption that a woman has a responsibility to be physically attractive to her partner that a man does not have.

At the time of this coffee date, I had only recently stopped talking to my mother, but it hadn’t been so very recently that anybody still believed I was just fucking around. As a result, everybody was more than a little gun shy with me (who knows who she’ll cut off next!) So I knew that this would make the proper impact on someone as elderly and as tetchy as my grandma. I said very loudly “No, my boyfriend does not find my fat disgusting. I was fat when he met me and I have remained fat since then. I am a fat person, and if you don’t like having a fat granddaughter, you don’t have to. I will leave you here in this coffee shop and we will never speak again.”

After a couple of moments of everybody in the coffee shop out and out staring at the both of us, she leaned back and shrugged. “I was just asking.”

And it’s not like this little piece of drama came out of the complete blue. My entire life, she’d been hounding me for being too fat, and around that time, it had kicked it into high gear. Drastic action had to be taken if we were ever going to talk about anything other than my fat. And it totally worked. Oh, she still bitches about every other person with even an inch of extra meat on them, but she doesn’t bitch at me and that’s all I care about.

Feel free to use this tactic with anybody that has shitty things to say. The way I see it, I’m a complete package. If there’s something you don’t like about me, you better love it or leave it, because I’m the only person who decides what changes I make, and I am done taking suggestions.

Weight Loss Anxiety

Lately I’ve been feeling that I have a social obligation to dress a certain way. Namely in a way that would be less comfortable, but look more slick and fashionable. I’ve also been having bouts of some serious body-hate going on. Ironically, these feelings almost always come right when I’m being the most active and losing weight because if it.

I think the reasons are two-fold. On the one hand, the more active I am, the more active I know I could be if I was in better shape. On the other hand, people commenting on my weight loss always makes me intensely uncomfortable, and I’m not entirely sure why. I struggled with anorexia and bulimia, my mother and grandmother still suffer from disordered eating and probably always will. My radical views on body image and self-love go completely over their heads and I think they always will.

Losing weight changes the shape of me, and I think part of the despair comes from the fact that I worked to love every inch, and now all those inches are in a different arrangement. Maybe I’m too attached to loving my fat body and not attached enough to loving my body no matter what it looks like.

With my mother and grandmother’s irrational attachment to thinness, I came to view their goal as a nightmare. It’s a terrible kind of sickness to be so dedicated to lightness and smallness that any level of physical or mental damage is acceptable for this unrealistic goal. If you eat nothing but raw ginger root in water for 15 days, you’re going to slim down. Who cares if you’ve destroyed your digestive system, and who cares if you’re just going to gain that weight back plus 5 lbs. as soon as you start eating regular food again? For one brief moment, you were achieving weight loss, which is the only worthwhile thing any female can accomplish. No matter what.

So any noticeable weight loss on my part is usually followed by some combination of me stopping exercise, eating a shit ton of junk food I don’t even like, getting sick, or being afraid of getting sick. Because I don’t weigh myself, it’s hard to say what kind of effect this cycle has on my actual weight. But since I seem to have stayed generally the same size for the last 3 years, I’m going to say that I keep gaining back what I take off, which isn’t a bad thing as far as I’m concerned. My weight never mattered to me. What counts in my eyes is the activity level, and even though I have slips and I go through phases with it, my level of activity drops less and for less time on each cycle of weight loss and stagnation. The weight loss may still be influencing me, but I’m slowly but surely making it about my physical health, not what I look like or what size I am.

It’s difficult when it seems like the whole world wants me to become completely obsessed with the material effects of healthy activity, and pay no attention to the physical aspects I that I enjoy: increased energy, stamina, strength, mood stabilization, better sleep, the list goes on. Yeah, I worked really hard to love my fat body and not be disgusted by myself. And I’m going to work equally hard to nourish and take care of that body, but this isn’t a race. The way I see it, I have the rest of my life to get this stuff down. As long as I’m getting consistently better rather than worse, I consider myself on the right track.

Do you get weight loss anxiety? I sometimes wonder if I’m crazy for reacting like this. Even if I’m a proud fat woman, it’s just a couple of pounds. There’s plenty for me to lose and still be fat as hell, so I don’t know why it worries me.

ADDENDUM: I was talking to Ben in the shower about it this morning, and I think that part of the reason I have such an issue with losing weight is because I never got any formal treatment for my eating disorder. I just started eating whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted and in whatever quantities I wanted. In part, I think that my vegetarianism helped me get the feeling of control, without the side effect of weight loss, which would cause me distress. The reasons I feel anxious when people ask me if I’ve lost weight are the same reasons that we can’t have a scale in the house, and that I will wait until the very last moment to throw up if I’m sick, even if I know it will make me feel instantly better. I associate these things with the elation of disordered eating, of weight loss, and obsessive weight monitoring. I’m so afraid of the despair of that time that I’ve shut it out, and no amount of reason can help me to feel okay with it right now.

I used to think that I would never be able to look forward to exercise, that I would never be able to think about caloric contents when picking food, for years I didn’t even know my clothing size I was so freaked out about applying any numbers to my body. Little by little, my lifestyle is changing in ways that can be maintained over the long run. I was raised to hate myself, and to punish my body for being disgusting. It’s how my mother, and her mother, and her mother before her were raised. It’s a radical thing to think that I could love this body enough to nourish it and keep it healthy and strong.

What I Wore: Grumpy Old Gran

So this weekend was filled with lots and lots of activity. Grandma continues to be good. Ben and I went and visited her on Saturday. She was uncomfortable, and really tired. Every time she fell asleep, something beeped, or somebody came in and woke her up. I guess exhaustion makes my grandma a little bit xenophobic. Her nurse was a very nice older lady with an accent, and while she was explaining something to her, grandma turned to me and said “I don’t understand why they can’t get anybody who speaks English in this place.” I felt terrible for the poor nurse who was doing everything. I should have apologized when we left, but she looked busy, so I just thanked her. Lots of other stuff happened, this was a long weekend preceded by an even longer week. I had a lot of fun, but I’m actually a little glad to be going back to work.

Green polo shirt from the thrift store
Tan Skirt from Torrid
Merrell slip ons from REI

What I Wore: Business Uptown, Cheer Practice Downtown

I always feel like I sort of hate how this skirt looks, but then I see it in pictures and it’s so pretty!

Purple shirt from The Gap
Vest from Ross
Skirt from the thrift store
Socks from Target
Shoes from Vans

What I Wore: All My Old Clothes

a fat girl in a black sweater and black pants

I was doing some manual labor around the office today, so I wore some old grungy clothes. One thing I have learned is that vans with no socks are not such a good on-your-feet-all-day-lifting-heavy-things shoe choice.

Sweater was bought on the street in San Francisco
Patches are from various places
Dead Kennedys Shirt patched with plaid fabric and was given to me by Katy’s little sister Shery;’s high school boyfriend. Forgot his name
Blue undershirt is from Target
Black Corduroy pants are from The Gap
Skull patterned Vans are from the Vans store

Why I Dwell on Death in Times of Stress and Why You Should Do It Too!

a very old picture of a skeleton seated on a chair as if relaxing

Yesterday I had a headache, and as I was walking down the hall rubbing my temples, a random guy said “Don’t worry, it’ll be over soon.” So of course, I said “Yeah, eventually I’ll die,” and he was like “Oh, don’t be like that.” Which totally surprised me, because isn’t that what he was talking about in the first place? Whatever.

I remember one time, I was crying (literally sobbing) on the phone to my sponsor about some fool thing I’ve since forgotten, and she stopped me mid-blub with one simple phrase. “Well, eventually you’ll die.” You know I shut right the fuck up? Suddenly my stupid problem and my entire life came into rack focus. How could this shit matter when DEATH IS COMING?

How many years does the average human really have? Life expectancy in the US is 78.4 years. Add a couple for being a woman, college educated, and half white, lose a couple for being half Mexican, being fat, eating red meat, and living in Los Angeles and my personal life expectancy is roughly 78.4 years. I’m 27.4 years old now, so I’ve got 51 years left. Accounting for end of life sickness and frailty, and the fact that we spend 8 out of every 24 hours asleep, I only have 27 more conscious years. And that’s just if nothing goes wrong. Based on past experience, shit will ALWAYS go wrong.

So why am I wasting my precious little living time on petty fucking bullshit I won’t remember a week from now? No reason! Acknowledging my own mortality really keeps things in perspective. In 100 years will anyone remember me, let alone who made the first pot of coffee at the office every morning for a week? No. I’ll be forgotten, as I should be. No one should carry the burden of remembering my boring life when they have their own to live. And no one should carry the burden of petty day to day problems when we only have a few precious decades to eat and fuck and play and love and learn and be awesome. Everybody, think of death, feel it’s icy indifferent breath on your neck and remember: it’s coming. For you. Live your life while you can!

What I Wore: Professional Muffet

http://i.imgur.com/8mbByl.jpga fat girl with short hair wearing a striped wool vest over a flowered sun dress with a maroon button up shit and maroon leggings underneath.

This is the second outfit post in a row where I wore this dress. I really want it to be Spring. I mean, it is Spring, but it seems like I’m learning that Spring near the ocean means lots and lots of clouds, which is not what I think of as Spring. So I wear this dress and hope for flowers.

Maroon shirt is from the thrift store
Flowered dress is from ASOS, but I had to have it tailored
Wool Vest is from Ross
Maroon leggings are from K-mart, but I had to take them in.
Merrell flats are from REI

What I Wore: Fattest, Oldest Cheerleader at Earth Tone High

This outfit was incredibly fun to wear. I seem to be moving towards shorter skirts lately. That’s probably a good thing since it FINALLY feels like summer is coming.

Collared shirt is from the thrift store
Olive tank is from Target
Skirt is from the thrift store
Socks are from Target
Shoes are from Target
Locket was a gift from Ben, who purchased it at the Happa Collective in Seal Beach, Ca

maroon collared shirt under olive green tank with understated pattern of small metallic beads running in stripes diagonally across the front. Brass Locket. Maroon, taupe, burnt salmon, brown and copper vertically striped skirt with brown and dark brown horizontally striped socks and tan cloth mary jane shoes.