I distrust most conversations about who gets to be in [whatever] camp and who doesn't, and what's the "real" way of doing something and what isn't. Mostly I think they cause more harm than good. So I feel uncomfortable with the comments I'm going to make, but I'm going to make them anyway.
http://www.ficklefingeroffat.com/ is a new blog by a person who was a famous spokesperson for fat acceptance. The person is now blogging about her attempts to lose weight. This has caused some controversy at
shapelyprose and among some other fat-acceptance bloggers.
There are various takes on the subject, and I'm not going to list them all here. I'm going to discuss just one of them that came up in a friend's locked post. It was said that size-acceptance is about "live and let live," and suggested that it was hypocritical for size-acceptance advocates to criticize "a personal decision."
My comment was:
therotund put it better here (emphasis mine):
http://www.ficklefingeroffat.com/ is a new blog by a person who was a famous spokesperson for fat acceptance. The person is now blogging about her attempts to lose weight. This has caused some controversy at
There are various takes on the subject, and I'm not going to list them all here. I'm going to discuss just one of them that came up in a friend's locked post. It was said that size-acceptance is about "live and let live," and suggested that it was hypocritical for size-acceptance advocates to criticize "a personal decision."
My comment was:
Thing is, it's not just "a personal decision" when it's undertaken in a public blog by a famous spokesperson for fat-acceptance.
The person has every right to do what they are doing, but writing a blog about their deliberate weight loss attempts discredits them as a spokesperson for fat-acceptance, in my mind.
A lot of the comments I have seen, both here and at Shapely Prose, seem to want to define Fat Activism as doing whatever the hell you want to do with your body. But that isn’t Fat Activism. That is body autonomy, which is a component of Fat Activism.and
Does this mean [people who are dieting] cannot work toward changing social perceptions of fat people? No. But if you are a fat person who is publicly dieting, that is going to inform your message and reinforce the idea that fat people can and should lose weight by just trying hard enough. Does this mean you cannot appreciate and love other fat people? No. But it does send a message of “fat is okay for you but not for me” which kind of undermines the message of acceptance.
Re: An odd thought
Date: 7 Sep 2007 11:42 pm (UTC)I see what you're saying, and I don't entirely agree with that statement for various reasons. It implies if you're big you will have knee pain. But I think knee pain a combination of genetic luck, muscle strength (as you point out), and how the joints are used.
I know lots of heavy people who don't have knee pain and I know lots of light people who do have it. I agree that being heavy will often contribute if a person is prone to it or has already been injured, but I also know people who've gone from being heavy to being light and their knee pain didn't go away, or got worse.
I also know that knee pain or the risk of future knee pain is frequently given as a reason for big people to get smaller. But I don't usually see it given as a reason for people to avoid athletic activities even if their games of choice involve movements likely to cause knee injury. I think there's something to ponder in that.
The health problem I was thinking of when I wrote the previous post was high blood pressure. In fat people high blood pressure is actually far less dangerous than in thin people, according to some studies.
I don't think it's a bad thing to decide, at some point, that it's worth a change to avoid a consequence.
Not in the abstract. But what change, and whether the change really does what it is purported to do, and whether the consequence really is what it's purported to be, and whether one can really know those things in a society that ties the change in question up with a whole lot of morality issues - those are really big questions here.
Re: An odd thought
Date: 8 Sep 2007 07:27 am (UTC)So, yeah. I have never believed that knee pain is all, or even mostly, or even partially, about one's weight/size.
Re: An odd thought
Date: 8 Sep 2007 10:13 am (UTC)Oh, and I'm fat. Incidentally, when I stopped eating gluten I temporarily gained about twenty pounds and then lost it again (without trying either way), and the knee pain lessened while I was gaining. The weight was not the cause of the pain. My immune system attacking my joints in response to gluten was the cause of the pain.
Re: An odd thought
Date: 9 Sep 2007 01:59 am (UTC)Re: An odd thought
Date: 9 Sep 2007 02:05 am (UTC)Telephone: 415-699-5797
Email: CinderErn@aol.com
http://www.cinderernst.com/index.html
Re: An odd thought
Date: 8 Sep 2007 07:27 pm (UTC)