The Mean Old Lady In The Elevator

This past week I was riding in an elevator to go to a meeting at a nonprofit I’m going to be doing some volunteer work for. It was an older New York City building, with somewhat smaller than standard elevators. A brunette woman in her earlier thirties got on after me, and then an older woman stood in the front.

The brunette was a large woman, dressed in a t-shirt and black pants. The older woman had long “blonde” hair and was wearing a tweed suit and pearls. His pink pocketbook matched her shoes. She was perhaps in her late seventies—older and thin, but by no means frail. She looked very proper and well-coiffed.

So the elevator reached the brunette’s floor and the doors opened. “Excuse me?” she said to the older woman, who was blocking her path to the door. The older woman didn’t move. The brunette repeated herself.

The older woman grumbled and huffed, then moved over. After the brunette left the elevator, the older woman turned to me and said:

Did you see her? She was so big she could barely fit through the door.

True, the girl was large. At one time I was probably close to her size. I’m not exactly petite myself now. But she wasn’t anywhere near having to stand sideways and grease herself up to be able to shimmy and squeeze through the doors.

I said nothing. I looked at that mean old lady with what I’m sure was shock and disgust, and then stared straight ahead. We both got off at the same floor. Thankfully, she wasn’t going to the same place I was.

Since then, I’ve been thinking about what happened. It’s been eating at me a bit. Continue reading

Stories of Substance: Body Image Round-Up

Internet insult-slinging can get vicious. But Meghan Tonjes, creator of  Project Lifesize doesn’t suffer trolls lying down. Check out her awesome video response to the people who called her “fat” here.

Can’t we all just get along? Somer Sherwood on xoJane discusses the harm of  prejudice based on body size in her article In the Fat Vs. Skinny Smackdown, Everybody Loses.

Do you have fat toes? Apparently toe-besity (and a surgery to cure it) is a thing now. Yup. Read about it here on The Gloss.

Refreshing to read how how the next generation of activists realize that body image and the issues surrounding it is a feminist issue (and are doing something about it). The Broad Side covers it here.

When stress increases, self-care decreases, leading to emotional eating. I could so relate to this article on A Weight Lifted and appreciated the helpful advice.

Smart and interesting article by Troy Roness on the Huffington Post about how body image, homophobia  and the LGBT community here.

Is no one free from the pressure to to lose weight? Great article on Alternet about eight beautiful stars who still get called fat.

I previously wrote about pro-ana/thinspiration website Skinny Gossip here. They’ve been getting a lot of heat in the media lately (and public outcry against them). In response, they took down their “starving tips.” Keep the pressure on! Check out this facebook group that mobilized in response. Skinny Gossip apparently has ads now, including from Ideeli.com. Let Ideeli know they shouldn’t be spending their advertising dollars on such a harmful, unhealthy site by signing this petition here. Sign this petition speaking out against  Skinny Gossip’s destructive message here as well.

Dumped For Being a Weight Loss Failure

Back in my single days, the pool of men willing to date me seemed to grow larger as I became smaller. Having gained and lost weight a number of times, I can speak with a certain degree of authority. I don’t want to over-generalize or stereotype men, some who prefer curvy woman, large women, while others  are more equal-opportunity daters. But I definitely found that when I was thinner, men responded to me more favorably.

You only need one, though, right? I tried to remain positive and didn’t give up. I did a lot of (far too much) online dating. Ultimately, I did meet my husband on Match.com, so there’s that. Before that though, I have some ugly stories, so I’m probably not volunteering myself to appear in any of their commercials any time. I tried a bunch of (too many) sites though, so I’m not singling Match out.

On these dating websites, men (and women) created “profiles,” checking off boxes like a shopping list, of the qualities they wanted and didn’t want in their mates. And so I had “answers” to the unspoken question always on my mind when meeting me in the “real world.” When reviewing a man’s profiles, my eyes immediately zoned in on what size woman he’d chosen. Would he date a curvy girl? How about a “few extra pounds”? Was he even (miracle of miracles!) open to a “full-figured” woman?

I reached out to those guys who seemed like they’d give me a shot. Often, I felt the men themselves weren’t a good match, but since they were being “open-minded” I tried to be too. When I didn’t hear back from some of them, I’d think liar! You aren’t really open to larger women. Forgetting that there are million other things that go into it. Maybe they met someone. Maybe they weren’t looking. Maybe there was something else in our profiles that didn’t gel for him. That was especially likely when my gut told me I was “compromising” and we weren’t really compatible.

Then I’d hear from guys who didn’t pick my body size in their profiles. Were they too ashamed to publicly own up to their predilections? Were they so bowled over my amazing profile that they changed their mind?

Needless to say, I made myself a bit crazy. I had issues. I mentally assessed my attractiveness on a continuum, based on where I was in my ever-changing weight loss and weight gain.

One time when I was still “reasonably” sized, (“curvy” or a “few extra pounds” at most, but by no means “full-figured”—horrors), I met a guy we’ll call Mike. Not because I’m trying to hide his identity, but because I’ve actually forgotten his name. So he didn’t scar me for life.

Mike had seen my pics and nevertheless seemed interested. He was decent-looking—muscular, a bit on the short side, starting to lose his hair. Kind of rough around the edges.

We went out and had a decent time. If he seemed slightly dim, he also seemed nice, and best of all, into me.

After several dates, Mike confessed with a mix of shy embarrassment and pride that he’d recently lost a lot of weight—over a hundred pounds.

We’d both lost weight! We both had the same issues! It was love, we were soul mates. I wanted closeness and intimacy too soon. I took his revelation as an opportunity to open up, perhaps overshare.

“Oh, I know, it’s so hard,” I told him. “I lost a lot of weight too. Twice, in fact.” Mike looked quizzical. I didn’t know when to shut up. I pressed onward. “You know, it’s so hard. It’s a process. You lose, you gain. It’s the maintenance part that’s tough.”

Mike’s face hardened. “I worked my ass off to lose the weight. I’m disciplined. There’s no way I’m gaining it back.”

“Oh sure, sure,” I jumped in, trying not to sound like I knew better. I swallowed the small, defeated, negative voice in me that wanted to pipe up and say yeah right, I used to say that too.

After that night, I worried I’d said too much. Last thing he needed was me telling him his weight loss was going to be all for naught. Nice going being supportive, I berated myself. I figured I wouldn’t hear from him again. Continue reading

Stories of Substance: Body Image Round-Up

Touching post on Still Standing Online Magazine called “Body Image After Loss” about body image after the author’s body “failed” her and she lost her baby and how infertility affects body image.

Are we afraid of people who eat a lot? What does gluttony trigger in us? Read about it here.

Fabulous post on Clutch Magazine about how street harassment growing up affected the author’s body image here.

Earlier this week I wrote about the Keep It Real Challenge going on to combat photoshopped images in magazines. Want to see examples of the types of photoshopped images that demonstrate the importance of this movement? Hop on over to the always-excellent Beauty Redefined and check out their Photoshop Phoniness: Hall of Shame here.  You can read the posts of some of the participants who wrote blog posts for Day 2 here.

I love comedian Margaret Cho! So I was even more excited to find her writings on body image here. She has a lot of smart, personal and thought-provoking things to say. Definitely check it out.

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