What Is Thin Privilege?

Submitted by Hardscrabble Farmer

Via Good Housekeeping

perryn ford illo

Throughout 2021, Good Housekeeping will be exploring how we think about weight, the way we eat, and how we try to control or change our bodies in our quest to be happier and healthier. While GH also publishes weight loss content and endeavors to do so in a responsible, science-backed way, we think it’s important to present a broad perspective that allows for a fuller understanding of the complex thinking about health and body weight. Our goal here is not to tell you how to think, eat, or live — nor is to to pass judgment on how you choose to nourish your body — but rather to start a conversation about diet culture, its impact, and how we might challenge the messages we are given about what makes us attractive, successful and healthy.

Having privilege does not mean that everything is dandy in your life or that things are always easy for you. What having privilege does mean is simply that you may have traits (perhaps that you were born with or that come naturally) that give you explicit and implicit advantages in society — some of the the biggies in this country are being white, male, straight, or able-bodied. Another big one? Thin privilege.

What exactly is “thin privilege”?

Thin privilege represents all the social, financial and practical benefits a person gets because they are thin or in a relatively smaller body, according to experts. Like all forms of privilege, the person who has it may not realize they have any advantage, because it’s simply normal for them to, say, not have to think about whether they can fit between tables in a tiny bistro, whether their size clothing will be readily available, or whether they can eat in public without being stared at. Public spaces and furniture — chairs, benches, tables, bus and theatre seats — are designed with smaller people in mind, and we wrongly judge each other by body size and shape as if it were a measure of a person’s moral success or failure.

This is why we can’t talk about thin privilege without a talking about fatphobia. For years, leaders in the fat acceptance and body liberation movements like the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) have been calling attention to the fact that people in larger bodies are harshly marginalized in our communities. Studies have shown that those considered “obese” are bullied, discriminated against in the job market, and receive lower quality medical care. Meanwhile, fat people in film and TV are often portrayed as rude, aggressive, and unpopular, instilling negative stereotypes in our psyches. “Being fat is seen as an expression of being dysfunctional or having an irresponsible lifestyle,” says Jürgen Martschukat, Ph.D., a professor of North American History at the University of Erfurt and author of The Age of Fitness.

The bogus corollary to fat people being assumed to have all sorts of negative traits is, of course, that thin people are examples of living life righteously, virtuously and reaping the rewards from having done everything right. The problem is, these are just assumptions we make based on our biases. There’s a load of older research that shows that even children perceive their thin peers as kinder, more clever and more friendly. One recent study found that a simulated jury held thin plaintiffs less responsible for accidents than fat plaintiffs.

People in smaller bodies don’t have to deal with any of this. As Christy Harrison, RDN, MPH, author of Anti-Diet: Reclaim Your Time, Your Money, Well-Being and Happiness Through Intuitive Eating writes, “The term ‘thin privilege’ is meant to highlight this systemic disparity, and to call out the fact that dignity and respect and equitable treatment shouldn’t be privileges reserved for smaller-bodied folks at all. They should be universal rights afforded to everyone, no matter their size.”


The total U.S. weight loss industry hit a new peak in 2018, growing to be worth $72 billion.

Who has thin privilege?

If you are perceived to be of “normal” weight or below, as determined by (relatively arbitrary) BMI cutoffs, there are certain harms in society that you don’t have to endure just because of your body size, and certain advantages you will receive and possibly not even notice. This is “thin privilege.”

“Thin privilege is being able to go through life without having to think twice about the ways that your body [size] is interacting with others and not be instantly judged [negatively] on what your body looks like,” says Natalie Sanders, a Health at Every Size informed IBBFA-certified Barre instructor. As for how that actually plays out, Kim Gould, LMFT, a therapist, certified personal trainer and owner of Autonomy Movement, says, “I wouldn’t call myself thin, but because I can walk into a store and find my size or order online and trust that it will probably fit, I have thin privilege.”

Sanders says, for example, people tend to see a person with flat abs and automatically think they are “disciplined” — or as a person who takes care of themselves. Positive judgements like these, true or not, can make it easier for a person to get a job, get more pay, make friends, network, date, and so on. (You can guess what being seen as “lazy, “weak-willed,” or “careless” for having a belly gets you.)

Is thin privilege the same for everyone?

Having privilege in one area does not mean that you don’t belong to other, less privileged groups. Thin privilege — like other types of privilege — is intersectional, says Justice Roe Williams, a male-identified trans personal trainer and founder of Fitness4AllBodies. This means that your race, your sex, your class and other factors can influence how you and your body are perceived.

Thin privilege is actually rooted in popular white aesthetics of the 19th century, according to Sabrina Strings, Ph.D., an associate professor of sociology at the University of California, Irvine, and the author of Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia. Back then, “Scientists suggested that Anglo Saxons were taller and slenderer than other races and that that was an asset,” explains Strings. “White women then were being pressured to be a particular body size and many of [these women] took this up as an expression of their whiteness.”

This explains why a white man with a big tummy may be thought of as cute for having a “dad bod” while a white woman with a big tummy would likely not, and even why a Black man with the same frame as a white man might be seen as more a threat. Black women face some of the most criticism and discrimination because of how racism, sexism, and fatphobia often go hand in hand. One only needs to look at our current beauty standards to understand that being dark-skinned and thick still doesn’t quite fly in the eyes of many.

And many people make assumptions about how capable you are, in part based on your body size. Sanders, who describes herself as apple-shaped, says, “There’s a lot of folks who would only train with someone who looks like what they’re trying to achieve,” says Sanders. “And so, a thin instructor might be viewed as more of an eligible person just because they have a body that looks like that, when I might actually have more training or knowledge on certain types of movements.”

What are some advantages thin privilege affords someone?

In additions to leading to easier interactions with other people, thin privilege is also built into the framework of our businesses and infrastructure. Here are a few of the many things people with thin privilege take for granted. They can…

  • Go shopping and not have to pay for the “extra fabric” used to make plus-size clothing
  • Board an airplane and not have to pay for an extra seat or ask for a seatbelt extender
  • See a doctor without worrying whether or not the appointment will be overly focused on losing weight or dieting
  • Walk into a gym and feel welcomed, supported, and taken seriously
  • Post a photo of themselves happily eating or relaxing on social media without being accused of “promoting obesity
According to a 2018 LinkedIn study of 4,000 workers in the UK, those classified as obese based on their BMI reported earning less than those with a “healthy” range BMI.

Why thin privilege is actually bad for everyone

Thin people also suffer under diet culture — the overwhelming environment we live in that celebrates thinness as a sign of health, status and moral virtue — although those in larger bodies suffer more. That’s because diet culture creates an arbitrary hierarchy which says that only certain body types are worthy of success, respect and love.

So if you’ve always had thin privilege, when your body changes over time, as is natural with age or childbirth, it becomes harder to accept; you may become afraid of gaining weight and spend a lot of time, money and energy to keep to a smaller size — even when that may not be healthy for you; and you may develop disordered habits around eating and exercise in an effort to maintain or gain thin privilege. “Thin privilege diminishes what self-love is for everyone,” says Williams.

What can we do to dismantle thin privilege?

Thin privilege is something that those of power and influence in Western society have collectively chosen over time. This means we can choose to create another reality — one that values equality and respect for all bodies.

Of course, creating a new balance takes time and a lot of conscious effort. Those who have thin privilege have an important role to play in making things more equitable for people of all body sizes. As Lindo Bacon, Ph.D., writes in their book Health at Every Size: The Surprising Truth About Your Weight, “You can use your privilege to make this a fairer, more compassionate world.” If you benefit from thin privilege, here are a few great places to start:

  • Challenge your current beliefs about weight. For example, “overweight” does not always equal “unhealthy” as most people would like to believe. “Once we learn more about how fat people can exist without ever getting diabetes or any of these [diseases] that we’re constantly worried about, that that’s how we start to unwind thin privilege a bit more,” says Sanders. And check the biases that fuel your behavior — even your well-intentioned actions, adds Sanders. Cheering on a stranger who is in a larger body at the gym may come across as patronizing and suggest that you are praising them for “taking care of themselves” by trying to get thinner.
  • Refrain from commenting on someone else’s body size — even if you think its a compliment. “Compliments” like, “you look like you’ve lost weight” uphold the notion that thin bodies are superior. Not to mention you don’t always know what someone else is going through. As writer Aubrey Gordon and author of What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat tweets, “Complimenting perceived weight loss may mean you are complimenting someone’s eating disorder, their grief, their depression/mental illness, their trauma and more. Weight loss isn’t always desired, and it can be the result of really tough times.”
  • Really listen and believe people who speak about experiencing fatphobia and anti-fat aggression. “Talk to each other because then these experiences become normalized and real,” says Williams. “There’s a piece of discussion that’s healing because as we are engaging with each other, we’re beginning to process, even if we’re not on the same page.”
  • Call out fatphobia where you see it. And if addressing it isn’t possible in the moment, talk to the person who was affected, denounce the fatphobic behavior and ask how you can be of support in the situation going forward.
  • Be a co-conspirator but let others lead, says Strings. Listen, read, and learn from fat activists, body liberation organizers, and allied scientists to understand their experiences and discover what needs to change. Amplify their voices on social media and mainstream media.
  • Call for equal representation in all visual media. If there’s a brand or magazine you like, for example, let them know what you want to see in their advertising or content, which encourages them to “represent people with different body types, fat and thin, people with disabilities and able-bodies, so that more of that is normalized in society,” says Sanders. Williams agrees: “This is about the depth of what it means to be inclusive. We all have to do the work daily because it’s a process to unlearn ideas rooted in competition and to allow ourselves to experience joy in the way that we’re allowed to.”
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70 Comments
KaD
KaD
April 25, 2021 4:16 pm

In the vast majority of cases being fat is a CHOICE.

This is typical communist tripe. Call good evil and evil good, bend the truth until it breaks, destroy everything of beauty.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
April 25, 2021 4:40 pm

My Gawd, obesity is the #1 health problem in the US, period. Rarely eat bread, switch to vodka from beer, walk 10-15 min/day, do some light weight training 2-3x/wk, cut down on portions. You’ll lose the gut in a year and feel great.

Rusty Pipes
Rusty Pipes
  lamont cranston
April 25, 2021 8:09 pm

Eat bread, drink beer, and get a real job that makes you get off your fat ass.

Known Associate
Known Associate
  lamont cranston
April 25, 2021 11:32 pm

Word Up Lamont! I’ve heard of the COVID 20, and seen it in some of my neighbors, who are now trying to “walk it off”. As soon as the plandemic hit, i recalled the SARS scare of years back and figured they were going to get it right this time with a more powerful bioweapon. Thank GOD and human immunity i was wrong, it was another dud.

Just the same, i chose to “shape up”, though i was starting from pretty good, and lost 20 by doing a bunch of digging and setting steps out back on a steep slope, splitting a few cords of wood, “just in case” you know, building a horseshoe pitch and an archery range and other necessary tasks for the “New Normal”.

Now running at my college form: 6’0″ – 170#. Not what i used to be at the 220 or 440, but i can catch anyone within 20 years of my 65 in 40 yds, and most of the rest. Hiked 5 miles yesterday to catch a fish. Didn’t catch him, but the hike was nice… }:o)

Health is a choice, not a fucking priviledge. See you on top of the mountain…

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 25, 2021 4:59 pm

What the actual fuck is this shit? Being fit is hard work. No one gave it to me for free. I exercise, watch what I eat, and make it a lifestyle choice. You choose the fat lifestyle, then suck it.

Yes, I get there are a few small percentage legitimate medical reasons. But certainly not affecting the 60% of the US population that is currently overweight.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
April 25, 2021 8:43 pm

I can handle different opinions, but I am not going to expose my mind to poison like this. The ravings of a lunatic.

fujigm
fujigm
  Anonymous
April 25, 2021 11:12 pm

Legitimate medical reasons for obesity? Must be genetic, as they don’t seem to exist in areas such as Ethiopia…

David
David
April 25, 2021 4:59 pm

Between my white, thin, and male privilege it is a wonder I am not a billionaire.

Of course it is then my privilege to pay taxes to cover the bills for those who have none of those. We have reached the point where poor life choices are not the fault of those making them.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  David
April 25, 2021 10:23 pm

Whites are responsible for all the things that Blacks refuse to take responsibility for.

nkit
nkit
April 25, 2021 5:03 pm

Through the first 4 or 5 paragraphs I thought this article was from The Babylon Bee….FMD..

javelin
javelin
April 25, 2021 5:04 pm

Very scarce mention of the fact that obesity is a health problem and leading trait of the largest killers: cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure ( strokes), diabetes… this whole article and movement are simply irresponsible.

PS: You’d have thought I’d be a billionaire with all of my “privileges”.. white, male, 130+ IQ, tall (6’2″+) a slender/fit 220, .. yet stupid me, I chose a career dedicated to caring for the sick and elderly and work long shifts, pay astronomical taxes/fees/insurances.. am required to update/renew my privilege to do this, take continuing education for life ( as long as I practice).. and when I die the government will confiscate 50% of my life’s labor before “allowing” my children/wife to have the rest… I am so privileged.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  javelin
April 26, 2021 5:42 am

Javelin should shrug and Now

Anonymous
Anonymous
  javelin
April 26, 2021 5:50 am

Put your assets into a trust right now to avoid those death taxes. Spend 2500 now and save multiples of that later. The rich dont stay rich by giving up half every time someone dies.

Melty
Melty
April 25, 2021 5:17 pm

Always about a 25-26 BMI. They say it’s overweight, but I don’t care. Love my beer and think it’s better for you that hard liquor as it’s been a staple in the human diet for millennia especially for my ancestors. But I do realize if I ever quit nicotine, then it will be time to really watch what I eat. By and far, people in this country are huge these days. Especially the wimmins. Fucking yoga pants need to be outlawed for a certain segment of them.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Melty
April 25, 2021 5:36 pm

A friend had a saying…..
Spandex is a privilege, Not a right.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
April 26, 2021 5:51 am

Play the accordian, go to jail. Thats the law.

Same thing.

Bob P
Bob P
April 25, 2021 5:21 pm

I’ll bet this garbage was written by a fat, ugly bitch. Such creatures have a stake in disparaging beauty. They have none themselves, and are thereby devalued and threatened in its presence. Their notions are as ugly as their bodies.

Melty
Melty
  Bob P
April 25, 2021 5:40 pm

Or probably pierced and tatted up with blue hair.

I have run across “big boned” girls that were drop dead gorgeous. But they weren’t layered with tons of flab flopping out their front below the waist. Just healthy looking gals.

JimmyTorpedo
JimmyTorpedo
  Bob P
April 25, 2021 7:47 pm

No, this article was written by your typical race baiting, hetero-hating, fat, under achieving, power-hungry woke dysfunctional millennial..
Hate everybody who produces/achieves/lives without a phone in their face.
Their notions are as ugly as their minds are dysfunctional.
Just saying,.. my sister is one. She stopped talking to me after I sold the business (I gave to her) for her.
Nincompoop,.. now she wipes butts for a living instead of importing coffee.

i forget
i forget
April 25, 2021 5:37 pm

Words (cooked up in mad science labs for enhanced virulence) ….inherent advantages are inalienable advantages & yours by right (as are disadvantages): everybody gets what they get. But change “right” to “privilege” & presto there goes “inalienable.”

Privileges implicitly are things that do not belong to you & that can be revoked – by who they implicitly do belong to. s’all bs, s’lidin’ down that s’ame ol’ s’hill.

Goldilocks perfection to be found sleeping in Procrustes bed of torture, at the Harrison Bergeron Hilton.

But going forward all tldr’s & other snipes some of my girthier posts get, I’m gonna’ sic the fat parity patrol.

Ghost
Ghost
  i forget
April 26, 2021 8:17 am

Interesting scene.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 25, 2021 5:41 pm

Welp, guess I’m hosed.

White. Check.
Male. Check.
Straight. Check.
IQ higher than an Amazonian weather forecast. Check.
170 lbs. and athletic. Check.
Single dad (no GF). Check.
Established professional. Check.

All the reasons my home, family, and security are being threatened over. Check.

TwoBuckChuck
TwoBuckChuck
April 25, 2021 5:57 pm

Funny thing, you never heard such tripe as “Health at every size” until the modern soy-filled era. When I was a boy well into the last century, every housewife knew that “starches” were the culprit for overweight, and they cut out bread and cake and sugary carbohydrates to stay lean. My own mother swore by a popular diet book of the times, called, “Eat Fat and Grow Slim”, an Atkins predecessor that made a strong case against overly-processed , easily-digested factory food.

But then the low-fat tyranny began, and suddenly it was good old eggs and bacon, Sunday leg o’ lamb, steak and potatoes that were vilified. No less an authority than the all-knowing, benevolent goobermint pushed the woefully misguided and flat-out dangerous “food pyramid”, with heavily subsidized grains, sugar and soy as its solid foundation.

I had my own low-carb epiphany a decade ago and haven’t looked back since. I weigh ten pounds less now in middle age than I did as a senior in high school. And I eat like I always wished I could back when I was choking on “healthy whole grains” while jonesing for the beef and cheese we were warned would kill us.

Ignore the obese, blue-haired feminists who insist that “meat is murder” or that “Health at every size” is a realizable dream. Remind them instead that the single most consistent co-morbidity for Covid deaths is obesity. And it looks like shite, too.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TwoBuckChuck
April 25, 2021 6:24 pm

I had an argument with a friend years ago.

MY diet:
Kills Asian men in the thousands from hypertension.

THEIR diet:
Kills me in 60 minutes from Anaphylaxis.

Know your body. It’s the only one god had to give you.

Melty
Melty
  Anonymous
April 25, 2021 7:05 pm

Seriously, I don’t really get hungry. I just know that my body needs food. I could go without eating for days. By then I would be out of whack and losing mental function. I eat heavy dense foods with carbs, fat etc in small portions. I think it’s called getting old.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Melty
April 26, 2021 1:27 am

That’s a blessing. I could ribs and a pizza for every meal. I don’t, but I could. Maybe the occasional reuben.

Auto-spell wanted to capitalize reuben, but that would be gay.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Melty
April 26, 2021 1:57 am

Sounds more like you eat for utility and not entertainment Melty. You *do* eat, cuz if you don’t, you’ll die.

Gammer
Gammer
  Melty
April 26, 2021 12:03 pm

No, if you fast by day three you will be thinking clearer as your body is prepared to be a better hunter. Record is 380 days fast by 600lb male. The 3rd day hump is the hardest once past this your body is ready to go, senescent cells get consumed, fat is the main fuel, muscle is 97% protected, etc. Best longevity practice is to fast one week per month or take rapamycin once per week.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Gammer
April 26, 2021 1:19 pm

I can’t get past day 1.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TwoBuckChuck
April 25, 2021 8:47 pm

Your gut is not a fucking bomb calorimeter, so that processing matters. Whole grain just means your diabetic indulgence has a bit of fiber.

Doug
Doug
  TwoBuckChuck
April 25, 2021 9:09 pm

Feminista’s are fools.

timinillinois
timinillinois
April 25, 2021 6:48 pm

I believe they are working on a solution to the problem, it’s called starvation.

80% Fraud
80% Fraud
April 25, 2021 7:26 pm

So then black men have penis privilege,wtf

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 25, 2021 7:54 pm

Thin privileged, says the wide supremacist.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
April 25, 2021 8:02 pm

Thin privilege can result from working 12 hr. days with one meal…..

no one has to be told to clean their plate

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <—-====

Anonymous
Anonymous
  ordo ab chao
April 25, 2021 8:49 pm

I have never been to Africa, but if I do visit, I will point to my belly and say “I did this for you.”

-Ismo

motley
motley
April 25, 2021 8:03 pm

As Dennis Leary once said (I’ll clean it up) … ‘ PUT THE FREAKIN’ FORK DOWN!’

Stucky
Stucky
April 25, 2021 9:16 pm

“but rather to start a conversation about diet culture, “

Oh shit! Fuktard Alert!! Whenever you hear the words start a conversation, this is what you need to know;

— 1) you are talking to a libfuk

—2) the ONLY conversation will be THEIRS

—3) you are wasting your fucking time

—4) fart in their general direction

—5) RUN, do not walk, to the nearest Exit

Stucky
Stucky
April 25, 2021 9:19 pm

“being white, male, straight, or able-bodied.”

That was in the first paragraph.

How could anyone read that article any further after that nonsense? HOW???

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Stucky
April 25, 2021 9:36 pm

“We all have to do the work daily because it’s a process to unlearn ideas rooted in competition and to allow ourselves to experience joy in the way that we’re allowed to.”

Right through to the last line.

Known Associate
Known Associate
  hardscrabble farmer
April 25, 2021 11:54 pm

}:o)

falconflight
falconflight
April 25, 2021 10:35 pm

I remember quite well, and mentioned to my spouse the other night that while attending Bellevue High School (Neb), circa 1975, I could count on one hand the number of students (Oh about 2,000) who were FAT and/or obese. Her experience was similar. Something other than a sedentary lifestyle accounts for the fat and morbidly obese ubiquity that defines today.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  falconflight
April 26, 2021 12:03 am

I believe the majority of it is the high fructose corn syrup, which adds belly fat, along with the hormones in the food. I also remember when in high school, the girls had normal-sized breasts, usually B and C cups. Girls with bigger boobs were rare and were quite popular with the guys. Now every teen I see has big breasts.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Vixen Vic
April 26, 2021 2:00 am

I remember in the 70’s when pork had taste. Even the cheap cuts.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Anonymous
April 26, 2021 2:25 am

I do, too. But I’ve found if you buy meat from pigs raised in pastures and woods, and on nuts, and veggie and fruit scrapes, even milk, cream and eggs, the taste really hasn’t changed at all. It just depends on what you buy.

falconflight
falconflight
  Anonymous
April 26, 2021 1:15 pm

Chicken too.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  falconflight
April 26, 2021 1:32 am

Food is cheaper on an inflation-adjusted basis, I think. Also, it’s much more varied. There was no Thai food then. God hadn’t invented Thais yet.

Two if by sea. Three if from within thee.
Two if by sea. Three if from within thee.
April 25, 2021 10:46 pm

How do you come up with this shit ,HSF?
I mean, is someone at home subscribed or was it in a trade magazine? I’m astounded and grateful I don’t stub my toe on these articles.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer

I have my sources.

Like the weather there’s nothing you can do about it, but you’re a fool if you don’t keep your eye on it.

Forewarned is forearmed.

Fish
Fish
April 25, 2021 10:50 pm

I started laughing like crazy when I got to the:”What does the thin privilege mean”.
I stopped reading after the next few sentences because it’s such a bulshit I can’t believe anyone can read this with a straight face.
I’m so privileged because I chose to be thin. Also when I was really thin I couldn’t find clothes , so fuck you libshits for your stupidity.

fujigm
fujigm
April 25, 2021 11:14 pm

Obesity, like addictions, are often a self solving problem.
No fucks given here….

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
April 26, 2021 12:40 am

Some people do have medical conditions that can make them gain weight, like Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis. Some people have slow a metabolism which makes them gain weight. But I think a lot of obesity is due to the processed foods and junk food people eat and the amounts they eat. If you’ve ever observed the grocery cart of someone on food stamps, you’ll see exactly why they are obese.

I’m 5’2″, and the most I’ve ever weighed was 105. And I’ve done nothing dietwise to get this way; I get it naturally. My father was very tall and very thin. One of my brothers is the same way but the other takes after my mother and is “average” sized. I took after my father on thinness but I’m very short.

I have a high metabolism,, and I can’t eat a lot at one time because I get too full. My father used to take us out for pizza after my parents divorced. I would eat my salad and, when the pizza arrived, I’d take two bites and be finished because I was full. My father told me I ate like a bird. And I still do, but I also eat a healthy, organic, grass-fed diet. (No hormones or high fructose corn syrup.)

Plus, I was always active when young, running, biking, walking, sports. Then I got into cheerleading in junior high and high school. I had huge legs from jumping, somersaults, etc. That’s when I weighed the most. After high school, I got into aerobics and stayed in shape. On top of that, I’ve been a smoker since 11th grade.

My weight now usually fluctuates somewhere around the mid 90s. I haven’t really worked out since my son was born and I now weigh less. I have no fat on me, according to my last doctor many moons ago. And when I lose muscle, I lose weight and get skinny. I think it’s just my genes.

I just bought a bicycle (stimulus check) so I can start getting more exercise and put back on some muscle and weight because I need to make sure I can handle the kick back, if you know what I mean.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Vixen Vic
April 26, 2021 2:03 am

Oh, I forgot to say, the author of this article is full of shit. Obesity is a health issue, not healthy.

PB
PB
April 26, 2021 1:03 am

Why are wimminz endlessly demanding that we have to have all these conversations that are really about them lecturing us while we sit quietly and don’t interrupt.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  PB
April 26, 2021 1:35 am

“We need to talk”.

Can’t you just murder me instead?

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Iska Waran
April 26, 2021 2:16 am

I’ve never done the “we need to talk” talk. My ex and I used to have spontaneous arguments not talks. Now that we’re divorced, we’re best friends, believe it or not. Our son has always kept us in communication and working together because we wanted the best for him. The best thing is we agreed on values, how to correct a child, and training up our child for a good future of hard work equaling prosperity. He’s in college and already engaged and will be married next year. He just got an internship that guarantees a great job when he leaves college.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 26, 2021 1:42 am

so, this kept on striking me as so absurd, a ‘who makes up this kind of shit?’ feeling, but then i had to remember that ‘white privilege’ and all the rest of the woke stuff, also elicited a ‘who makes up this kind of shit?’ feeling and yet they are trying to force that onto everyone.
the modern world hast lost its marbles. years ago. it’s deep into senility now. maybe biden is the perfect president for that, probably cant even remember his own name.
the whole issue is how will enough actual normal functional human beings survive this insanity.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 26, 2021 5:38 am

Sweat never killed anyone, Lack of sweat of the other hand……
I keep seeing these morbidly obese people in Battery powered, seated wheelchairs.
Some are that far gone that they would need 5 pounds of melted butter to get them released from the seat /arms.
And where do you invariably see them…..
Shopping for calories.
As They go past I say out Loud … You will never walk again, so sayeth the Lord.
Thankfully Three point turns are hard in supermarkets

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 26, 2021 5:45 am

Satire is dead in america.

When shit like this isnt a joke, comedy is dead. Thin privalege. Insane. There are obvious perks for taking care of yourself and looking good. How about “not fucking ugly” privalege? Lets ban women wearing make up because it makes them more attractive. This drivel was drivel.

Anonymous grapefruit
Anonymous grapefruit
April 26, 2021 5:58 am

So my friend we call ‘fat bastard’ claims some health problem makes him fat. Well i went out to lunch with him and he ate three meals. Literally. He had three entrees. For lunch. One was pasta fazoul. I had chicken parm. He had chicken parm as well, and my leftovers.

S

PB
PB
  Anonymous grapefruit
April 26, 2021 6:51 am

That’s food addiction.

Old School Counselor
Old School Counselor
April 26, 2021 7:06 am

This stuff motivated me to do a video:

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Old School Counselor
April 26, 2021 8:20 am

Enjoyed watching that very much. You must be a lightning rod for the crazies with that approach. 25 years ago you were in the mainstream with your approach, today you’re a reactionary.

Crazy times- oops, triggering language warning.

MistaShapeShifta
MistaShapeShifta
  Old School Counselor
April 26, 2021 12:57 pm

Thanks for creating that! You therapists certainly have no shortage of raw materials to work with these days. Like surfing a wave of insanity.

That person (I won’t call her a therapist) you spoke about is doing one of the things that drive me nuts: calling an opponent phobic when they merely don’t like or agree with you. The narcissist tries to rationalize their position and make yours weaker by assigning an irrational fear to you. Gay people do this all the time, calling straight people homophobic. Personally I find their behavior alien and disgusting, but I don’t fear them or hate them. I just don’t care.

Ghost
Ghost
April 26, 2021 8:29 am

Has there EVER been a society kill itself off in this way? Really… I’m asking for a friend of a friend.

RiNS
RiNS
April 26, 2021 9:21 am

Thin privilege isn’t a fact.

i
i
April 26, 2021 10:40 am

Degradation, “down regulation,” began long before mRNA “vaccines” were implemented.

Most know what’s been done to testosterone levels, for one example. Fewer are aware of the ever tightening coils of medmafia caduceus/rod of Asclepius when it comes to trying to do something about testo levels.

The environment is flooded with oestrogenic compounds, plastics, chemicals.

“Medications” are hung off people, plate by plate, weighing them down.

The Milgram experiment wasn’t just theoretical confirmation of the human penchant to seek out & be obedient to “authority.” People are steered toward castration a lot easier than soon to be steers are (& how many steers best their fates?).

And there are many more prongs besides medmafia.

So…blaming the fatties, blaming the decreasingly muscled (including mentally/psychologically) “thin-privileged,” is more an aspect of the overarching divide & conquer strategy that continues to work so well…while the herd continues to be ever less slowly poisoned.

i forget
i forget
  i
April 26, 2021 3:36 pm

Just started listening to this guy Huberman. He talks about the feedback/feedforward loop of competition begetting testosterone begetting competition.

Consider the near seamless forces colluding to minimize competition. Consider how common the credo voiced by paypal boytoy peter thiel “competition is for losers” actually is (& let loose the hounds, take it wide…patents, IP, cartels/monopolies, regulation, on & on down to participation trophies & gold stars for everybody, “self-esteem” decoupled from achievement…).

Many prongs.

Gammer
Gammer
April 26, 2021 11:56 am

Only eat one meal a day anything you want. Only black coffee or green tea or water all other times. Insulin is the problem, insulin blocks the use of fat for fuel so keep it as low as possible as long as possible. If you are still insulin resistant then you may need to water fast for a week or two. If you are on meds you need a doc to help. Look up Dr Jason Fung he cures Ty2 diabetes. If your doc can’t cure it, run as fast as you can and find a doc like Fung.

Twisted Root
Twisted Root
April 27, 2021 2:16 am

The same tedious template from the same tedious people.