I’m not on board with Fat Acceptance and Here’s Why
Fat Acceptance as a concept has always seemed like a great idea to me. As someone who grew up overweight and gradually became obese, I know the sting of body judging all too well. It’s also no surprise that this movement has worked in tandem with 3rd wave feminism to break down our culture’s fixation on women’s bodies. So as a feminist, I see why it’s needed and important. Because simply by existing these people are committing two unforgivable societal sins: being fat and being female. This relegates them to the outskirts of society, unrepresented in our media beyond the headless fatties on the news with captions that read: “IS AMERICA EATING ITSELF TO DEATH?!”
We need to see fat women. Fat women exist. We need to see them living life, dressing the way they want, and feeling confident. The core of Fat Acceptance is restoring fat people’s humanity and in this way it has my full support.
I’d like to specify that I’m speaking about Fat Acceptance as expressed by white women. In my experience, the Fat Acceptance movement is made up almost entirely with women who are white and middle class. Women of color have their own brand of Fat Acceptance, but I’m not familiar with it and therefore can’t comment.
But then I see articles on Buzzfeed about how women are beautiful in bikinis no matter what their size.
I can see that these article is well-meaning. Bikini season is approaching and it’s a time of anxiety for a lot of women. Many of us struggle to lose weight fast enough in order to fit in (literally) while others feel left out completely, accepting baggy t-shirts as their only option.
In reality, these types of articles are extremely patronizing. They infantilize grown-ass women by telling us that we’re all special and all beautiful. This is, of course, impossible. When everyone is special, being special becomes meaningless. Same with beauty.
Now beauty is complicated. Certainly no one is arguing that fat people don’t have inner-beauty. Unless you’re one of those sad sacks over at fatpeoplestories on Reddit, in which case: what the fuck are you doing with your life?
But the issue I take with this Buzzfeed article is what seems to be a growing trend within the Fat Acceptance movement. The claim that fat people’s bodies are inherently as attractive as thinner, healthier bodies. Beauty is a broad concept and is not the same as sexual attractiveness.
Obviously, there is a spectrum of being overweight. Being a little curvier or having some extra fat is trivial and rarely interferes with people’s attraction. Women are beginning to celebrate curvier frames more in recent years and that’s good. But there’s a limit. There comes a point where fat begins to overtake your body. It hangs and sags, hiding your real curves and facial features. Especially if you’re short like me, being obese can completely consume your appearance. At my highest weight I can barely recognize myself.
And that just isn’t sexy.
There is a growing denial in Fat Acceptance about beauty standards. It is difficult to argue against the Fat Acceptance claims against of traditional beauty standards. Beauty standards are problematic. Yes, our culture is undeniably hateful toward fat bodies. Yes, women are the main target of this hate and are scrutinized within an inch of our sanity. Our bodies are a social battleground and that is beyond fucked up. It has to stop.
But the answer is to take control of our bodies, not to cover up the problem with airy platitudes like, “real women have curves” or “men like something to hold onto!” These are emotional band-aids that need to be ripped the fuck off.
The hard truth is that being obese makes sexual relationships more difficult. Stamina, joint problems, blood flow – all of these become relevant. Does your stomach hang over your genitals? Doubly so. What your partner probably won’t tell you is that these are all barriers that make attraction a struggle. That doesn’t mean they don’t love you. This does mean that your inability to control your weight will make sex harder.
It’s strange to me that so many people who talk about “body positivity” do so without a single thought for the negative affects of being fat. Please don’t send me your essay about Health at Any Size as I find the entire concept to be intellectually bankrupt. If you’re looking to be the magical fat unicorn that’s perfectly healthy at 350lbs, odds are you aren’t that unicorn. Focusing on the legend of such people actually does a lot of damage to others in the long run. Because, in the real world, most people who are obese are that way due to an unhealthy lifestyle. And it’s a hell of a lot easier to rationalize that you’re healthy at any size than to reevaluate your habits. I know, I’ve been there.
You may think you’re sending out positive messages to those who need help salvaging their self-esteem in a world full of fat hate. And to some that’s exactly what you’re doing. But what we don’t see are the people who are addicted to food and covering with Fat Acceptance ideals. There are people in the Fat Acceptance movement who are killing themselves slowly with food and sedentary living while others applaud and tell them they’re flawless. There is- and I’m being totally serious here– an ongoing search by Fat Acceptance activists for doctors who will ignore weight problems when treating illness. Those doctors are then reviewed favorably online and passed around to others who have been “fat shamed” by their doctors.
Just in case you haven’t noticed: that’s fucking insane. If 5 doctors tell you that your weight is a contributing factor to your health problems, the answer is not to find another doctor. This avoidant behavior is at the core of where Fat Acceptance has gone off course. It’s blatantly ignoring health, to the detriment of it’s own community, in order to create an accepting environment. What’s shocking to most is the best example of this is in the Pro-Ana movement.
Pro-Ana (also called “Thinsperation” or “Thinspo”) is objectively heartbreaking to anyone outside of its community.
Young women support each other in their search to starve themselves in the name of Fashion, beauty, and a feeling of control. They give each other tips, tricks and even help each other hide their disorder from family and friends. It is both the completely opposite of Fat Acceptance and its greatest parallel. Feminists have condemned Thinspo as degrading, horrific and a symptom of living in a world where women’s worth is based on their dress size. Women everywhere cry out, “This is awful! How could she think this is sexy? Can’t she see she is hurting herself?” And they’re right. Regarding the physical component of sex drives- bodies that are physically unhealthy or malnourished aren’t as attractive as healthier bodies.
These women take their weight to extremes which objectively hurts them. Yet the Thinspo community eagerly jumps to their defense, swaddling them in a blanket of comforting platitudes, reinforcing their feelings with validation. They are enablers, just as addicts of all sorts enable others.
On the other side, Fat Acceptance communities are doing their version of the exact same thing. They create online communities that encourage people to accept their bodies without any knowledge or consideration of their health. A popular saying with this crowd is, “You can’t look at someone’s size and know their health”, which has a grain of truth but it goes both ways. No, you can’t always know if an overweight person is healthy or not. They could, in fact, be dangerously overweight. They could be only a few years from losing their mobility or even a limb to diabetes. But the need to enable each other overrides any health concerns. Perhaps it’s easier to get behind Fat Acceptance because of its foundation in feminist thought. Pro-Ana is a clear example of damage caused to women by living in a patriarchal culture. It sends the strong message, “This is what happens when men control women’s bodies.” Fat Acceptance, in theory, should be about women taking back that control.
I’ve noticed that the vast majority of people in Fat Acceptance are young women, mid-twenties to early-thirties. Very few men, unsurprisingly. These women are at an age where serious weight-related maladies may have not yet presented. The decline of their health may not be fully apparent yet. Unfortunately, the reality is that it’s only a matter of time and both Thinspo and Fat Activists need to realize the limits of the human body…
You can get to a point where you are too old and unhealthy to fix your body. People can, and do, get stuck. Some damage is unrepairable. There is nothing feminist or empowering about becoming trapped in your body. Nothing at all.
Feminists want equality. But that also includes taking responsibility for ourselves and accepting reality. We can’t demand equality while expecting everyone to pretend that someone who appears unhealthy is as sexually attractive as someone who takes better care of themselves. It’s the same thinking that leads adults to tell their children that they can be dinosaurs when they grow up. These placating white lies are meant to soothe egos but ultimately only infantilizes women, keeping us in a place of inferiority. The trade off for equal treatment is that we can’t expect to be handled with kid gloves. Thems the breaks.
I still firmly believe that Fat Acceptance at it’s core is a positive movement. I’d like to see it move away from comforting platitudes about sexuality and focus on the capabilities of fat people. I want to support those efforts to humanize and to push for representation. You have a right to take care of yourself as much or as little as you want, no one can force you to gain or lose weight. But I’m not going to lie to you and tell you that it’s sexy when you don’t care for yourself, it isn’t. We are grown ass women who can handle ourselves, and it’s time we act like it.
Instead of concentrating on the symptoms of fatness - we should look at the root cause.
A food supply in America that makes it difficult and expensive to get fresh food. It's much easier, more convenient and often cheaper to buy crap at a fast food restaurant - than to cook your own healthy food. Furthermore highly-sugarry, fatty foods are very profitable. So supermarkets fill shelves with high-fructose corn syrup mascarading as juice, and breakfast cereal that's full of sugar. It's all crap. It's addictive too.
There's also an emotional root cause component. The culture is so spiritually, culturally, emotionally void in America that people eat to cover up feelings. It's like the fat is a buffer of armour that stops you from tapping into your body's energy.
Instead of judging people for being fat, we should look at how we can make fresh, nutritious, cheap, tasty, healthy food mainstream, and how we can help people do the inner work on their issues
@magdalen it is not the fat persons fault for being fat , (they are being poisoned by hidden sugar to be fat ) they have tried everything for years to loose weight & fail so eventually they quit and want to be accepted for something they can't change. This is the only true way to loose fat forever because its the opposite what you thought weight loss was please read my post & be ripped in a few months even if your 400 lbs. Thats how good this is. https://steemit.com/weightloss/@ultramari0/how-to-lose-1-5-lbs-of-pure-fat-a-day-just-for-steemit-users-only
Great post and I agree. I'm all for the fat acceptance movement...up to a certain extent. Loving your body, that's a good thing. expecting OTHER people to love it, no. I also have a problem with people in the movement outright ignoring facts, such as the health related issues that occur at bigger sizes. Glad to see this post here though, good going.
I very much agree. A while back I wrote something related here: https://steemit.com/yoga/@sean-king/yoga-body-image-issues-and-waking-up
Great post, sean-king!
Very well written, thank you. This is a very delicate topic, and you communicated important aspects of it in ways I hadn't considered quite that way. Eating and living healthy is beautiful. I hope more people can celebrate that without having to justify it.
YES! I absolutely agree. I am an overweight woman in my late twenties, but I have health issues that cause weight gain. I've also struggled with food addiction in the past. I don't post pictures of myself in bikinis or scantily clad clothing, but I'm on the path to self acceptance because I exercise and do everything I can to try and be healthy. It's a work in progress! I think it's great that people are so secure in themselves, and it often makes me feel good when I see another curvy woman who is secure in herself. If she's beautiful and self confident, maybe I can be too! But I also think that fat acceptance has gone too far. There is a point where it's not healthy anymore, and we are teaching people that it's okay. I think we need to change the mindset from "fat acceptance" to "healthy acceptance". Being secure because you know you're working to be healthy, whether that means you weigh 100 or 300 lbs. Everybody's version of health is different. Let's support women because they are trying to make themselves the best they can possibly be, not just because they wore a bikini. Excellent post!
PS: "Magical fat unicorn" is the best phrase ever.
Don't be her.
My personal opinion about a 'fat acceptance movement' is that it's all BS.
You partly judge people on their appearance for what you find attractive in looking for a partner or whatever.
You do not judge whether someone is a good person based on their appearance, but just in their actions, making fun of people for being fat in a friendly matter is ok, but bullying is wrong, obviously.
Though appearance can tell you a lot about the person, even the expression in someone's face can tell you what kind of person that someone is.
But back to fat people, when you're obese you're not living a healthy lifestyle, perhaps, in most cases, even an immoral lifestyle (though most people these days unfortunately view animals as commodities, rather then sentient beings).
Basically every major western disease can be reversed and prevented by consuming a whole-food plant-based diet, low in fat and high in carbohydrates. You can eat as much as you want, eat until full, every aspect of your health will improve.
I recommend checking out 'forks over knives' and in general the work of people like dr. Neal Barnard, John Mcdougall, Caldwell Esselstyn, Colin campbell etc.
If you are fat i would never recommend you to accept that, i would never recommend you to starve yourself, i would recommend you to change your lifestyle and consume a diet that you're physiology tells you to eat, no restriction, just eat what is actual food and that is plants, as found in nature, no oil, no dead animals, whose bodies you are able to recycle in a survival situation (though not without negative consequences).
And don't fall for all these BS things like blood type diet or whatever, you don't see cows with different blood types eat different things.. they all eat grass, a species specific diet.
i agreed.https://steemit.com/life/@watcheronhill/saturated-fat-doesn-t-make-you-fat
I believe you are right and i would say more, if you have more than 20kg from your ideal weight then you have a health problem, period. You have more chance to heart desease, more chance to have diabetes, etc. Then don say you can be healthy and fat because it not true.
Also people say all women are beautiful, then ask: is your gf or wife fat or thin? probably thin and they say fat is ok because it is pollite to say that, but they dont mean that, so lets be true and honest, no one likes fat, rolls, double chin, etc. If people want to lie to themselves so ahead but I preffer to be truthful even if it is not pollite