Zeng Jing (曾晶) – Chinese plus-size model
“I think someone needs to stand out and demonstrate our beauty because it’s not easy to be appreciated by society. And I think I can be the one.”
[SOURCE]
LOOK AT THIS HEARTBREAKER.
Added images of a bunch of my convention wares to my DA over the last couple days, so here they are as well. :)Â Everything can be purchased at http://store.alexheberling.com.
Our very own Amanda Levitt (RBI mod and blogger at http://www.fatbodypolitics.com) was a part of this HuffPost LIVE segment: Fat Stigma Starts Young.
Other notable contributors include Jenn Levya (http://fatsmartandpretty.com) and Rebecca Golden (http://butterbabe.blogspot.com), who speak authentically and with immense knowledge while combating comments like “oh but racism isn’t a thing anymore” and “oh but you HAVE to lose weight to be healthy”.
I’m also super impressed with the host Alicia Menendez for keeping everyone on-topic and providing a space for such important discourse. Brilliant.
Seriously, WATCH IT.
Hey! I did this yesterday. Jenn and I did really well considering we were the only fat activists on.
You did really great! I only cringed at the other folks on the panel a couple times, so that’s overall a lot better than how a lot of these roundtables usually go. :D
This is the last round of fatshion art! PHEW. Every piece of OOTD art I’ve ever done (up to this point) is now in the store. :D
10% off and free shipping for the month of April!
COUPON CODE: APRIL13
Don’t use fat people as your exercise motivation.
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Don’t use fat people as your weight loss motivation.
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DON’T USE FAT PEOPLE AS YOUR EXERCISE MOTIVATION.
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DON’T USE FAT PEOPLE AS YOUR WEIGHT LOSS MOTIVATION.
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Believe it or not we are complex and emotional human beings who deserve more than to be your body porn to motivate yourself to be less disgusting. Because let’s face it, that’s what you reduce us to when you slap a fat person’s photo on your fitness or weight loss related “inspiration” post.
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My fat body does not exist for your public revulsion inspiration.
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It is my actual body and it serves me quite well. I wear it every damn day and love every fat inch of it.
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STOP DEHUMANIZING FAT BODIES SO THAT YOU CAN BE “INSPIRED” TO HATE YOURSELF ENOUGH TO COMFORM TO SOCIETY’S FUCKED UP BODY STANDARDS.
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Our bodies are worth more respect than that, and quite frankly, so is yours.
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Don’t use fat people as your exercise motivation.
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Don’t use fat people as your weight loss motivation.
Having a hard time with some people on Twitter doing this lately. Happy New Year to me. u_u This was precisely what I needed to read right now.
“Body acceptance” is the most terrifying two words I think I’ve heard any young person say. It essentially boils down to, “Extremely arrogant”. No, really, it does. To say to yourself, and the world, “My body is just absolutely fine as it is, it needs no work whatever, I am perfect. I am great” is so arrogant, it blows everything else out the water.
I’ve never met an athlete, or someone who does sports, who’s said: “You know what? That’s enough training. My body is great. That’s all the muscles I need.”
How terrifying is it that people out there are so complacent and scared of exercise that they’ll actually come up with a philosophy so they can say: “fuck it, fine as I am.”
I cannot imagine looking at myself and not wanting to keep an edge. I just can’t do it. How could you say, “Well, I did sweat as I walked up those stairs” and then follow up with, “Well I guess that’s fine.”
Just…how…
Body acceptance does not mean ” I give up”. Body acceptance does not mean “I’m never ever ever going to do anything to change my body again”. Body acceptance simply means that you accept your body. It’s right there in the name. Body acceptance means that you will love your body unconditionally, no matter the changes that occur. It’s not vanity, it’s not conceit and it’s not giving up.Â
Body acceptance has nothing at all to do with exercise. Surprise, I accept my body and I still exercise. I don’t see why what another person chooses to do with their body is any of your concern and why it terrifies you so much. Thinking you can dictate how another person should feel about their body or treat their body is arrogance.Â
So here’s what I’m thinking you REALLY meant to say ( Ya know, since we’re boiling stuff down) : How dare people be comfortable with themselves? Fat people are disgusting. How could they even try to stop hating themselves over not having a perfect body, even though these ideals are completely unrealistic and unobtainable? I do not realize that another persons body is none of my business. I do not care about your struggle and I think your acceptance of yourself is stupid even though it quite possibly has come out of years of mental abuse and degradation at the hands of a society that photoshops the men and women that are supposed to be “perfect”.Â
Fat is Officially Incurable According to Science
Let’s get this straight: The number of people who go from fat to thin, and stay there, statistically rounds down to zero.
Every study says so. No study says otherwise. None.
Oh, you can lose a ton of weight. You’ll gain it back. Here’s one study running the numbers. Here’s a much larger analysis of every long-term weight loss study they could find. They all find the exact same thing: You can lose and keep off some minor amount, 10 or 15 pounds, for the rest of your life — it’s hard, but it can be done. Rarer cases may keep off a little more. But no one goes from actually fat to actually thin and stays thin permanently.
Except the person in this Google banner ad, who lost weight and then became white.And when I say “no one,” I mean those cases are so obscenely rare that they don’t even appear on the chart. They can’t even find enough such people to include in the studies. It’s like trying to study people who have survived falling out of planes. Being fat is effectively incurable, every study shows it, and no one will admit it.
So the guy or girl you see in the “Before” and “After” photos in weight loss commercials, who completely changed body type with diet and exercise? You know, like Jared from Subway, who lost 230 pounds? Either they’re about to be fat again in a couple of years, or they’re a medical freak occurrence, like the sick guy who was told he had six months to live but miraculously survives 20 years. That guy exists, we all know famous examples. But it’s a rare, freak situation, living in defiance of all of the physical processes at work.
Hey, this guy lost 410 pounds on the infamous “Herbalife” diet. Amazing!How rare? Well, this person did the math, and as far as they could tell, two out of 1,000 Weight Watchers customers actually maintain large weight losses permanently. Two out of a thousand. That means if you are fat, you are 25 times more likely to survive getting shot in the head than to stop being fat.
Meanwhile, here’s an article where scientists marvel at the amazing success of Weight Watchers, because a study of their most successful customers showed they permanently lost 5 percent of their weight. Wow! You come in at 300 pounds, you stay at 285! Next stop, thong store!
So please remember this the next time the subject comes up at the office or on some message board and you get bombarded by thin 20-year-olds insisting the obese need to just “cut out the junk food” or “take care of themselves” or “do some exercise.” The body physically won’t allow that for a formerly fat person.
Except for this guy, who lost 100 pounds and got totally ripped in four weeks.
If we could only see his face, we’d see it’s totally the same person!“Well, just stop eating so much!” Sure, kid. To feel what it’s like, try this: Go, say, just 72 hours without eating anything. See how long it is until the starvation mechanism kicks in and the brain starts hammering you with food urges with such machine gun frequency that it is basically impossible to resist. That’s what life is like for a formerly fat person all the time. Their starvation switch is permanently on. And they’re not going 72 hours, they’re trying to go the rest of their lives. Don’t take my word for it. Here’s a breakdown of the science, in plain English. It’s like being an addict where the withdrawal symptoms last for decades.
As that article explains, the person who is at 175 pounds after a huge weight loss now has a completely different physical makeup from the person who is naturally 175 — exercise benefits them less, calories are more readily stored as fat, the impulse to eat occurs far, far more often. The formerly fat person can exercise ten times the willpower of the never-fat guy, and still wind up fat again. The impulses are simply more frequent, and stronger, and the physical consequences of giving in are more severe. The people who successfully do it are the ones who become psychologically obsessive about it, like that weird guy who built an Eiffel Tower out of toothpicks.
Statistically, the only option with any success rate is a horrible, horrible surgical procedure. I can find no data whatsoever that says otherwise. Keep all of this in mind the next time you see a Jenny Craig or Bowflex commercial.
Did we mention that Jared got fat again?Not that we needed “science” to tell us how fucked up diet culture is, but this sure is a nice article. Tell your friends!Â
I am shocked to see this came from Cracked, of all places, but yeah, great article.
Health is between a person and their doctor. You can’t often tell health by looking at people, and other people’s health is not your business. “Health” is also often used as an excuse in our society to put down certain body types and people with those bodies.  If you say “ew fat people gross me out”, many people will say “wtfno”, if you say “fat people are really unhealthy and we shouldn’t encourage or support that behavior” then it’s a different reaction, even if the actions that come from both reactions end up being the same (shaming, not representing in media, jokes, feeling as if you can tell them about their bodies and their choices without them asking you for your opinion, etc.) It’s the “acceptable” way to put down fat people because after all you’re just looking out for their health right?
I know and have heard stories of “fat” people at the supermarket being told out of the blue by a stranger that they should choose the “diet” product, or that they should buy the skim milk. They didn’t ask for any advice, but the person felt okay just telling them what they should eat because, well they’re fat, so they must be unhealthy and we’re just trying to help them! But it’s rude, and it’s demeaning, whether it’s because the person only wanted to help them to be “healthy” or whether the person just wanted to be mean to a fat person and point out that “haha you’re fat.”
When you’re different from what’s considered the “norm” and “default” in society, people feel like they have a right to comment about your body or about you. In some cases, they feel they can touch you. My black friends have had people ask to touch their hair to see if it feels like “white hair”, some people touch without permission. As a trans girl, I’m a constant object of fascination with people wondering what’s between my legs. As an East Asian girl, people feel like they can ask me “where do you come from” with impunity (followed by “no where do you REALLY come from?” when I answer “Canada”), and make assumptions about whether I’m a citizen. And one of my fat friends had somebody grab her stomach without her permission and jiggle it saying “but don’t you want to lose this?”
What’s “different” about our bodies is treated as public space.
Whether or not a person is healthy or not can’t be known by looking at them and more to the point, isn’t our business. It’s theirs.
This is not about the original artist or her comments, this is about the context in which the critics are reacting from, that fat people are seen as okay targets to disrespect or to make assumptions of under the guise of “health.” Their health is their business. Kinda like what’s between my legs is mine.Â
(Also for the anorexia stuff. Yes anorexia is unhealthy, but we shouldn’t assume it based on body type. There are many women you’d never expect to have severe eating disorders because of how they appear that do.  Also, anorexia isn’t exactly a “choice”, it’s complicated… it’s affected by social messages, but it’s also a mental illness, and often can have many other things involved too. For me, social messages are where my brain latched onto, but it was triggered by PTSD.)
 I’m glad this post came along.
The new Body Love Buttons are now in stock! Click through to see this set, as well as the previous set of BLBs. You can buy them in packs of five, or mix and match to your heart’s content. <3
I will have these for sale in the Dealer’s Room at WisCon this weekend, as well as the other items in my online store!
(And I’m also taking slogan suggestions for the next series. I have a few ideas already, but it’d be awesome to hear from others, too!)
[Image: Five button designs in tattoo-inspired script/designs reading: Death Fat, Fat Butch, Rack of Doom, Fat Femme, and Fat Life.]
I’ve finally completed the second series of Body Love Buttons! These are tattoo-inspired, and I will have them for sale at WisCon this weekend. ^_^
I’m going to sleep on these designs and look at them with fresh eyes tomorrow before I start assembling them, and then I’ll soon add them to my online store for purchase.