Fat Acceptance Movement / Fat Girlcows

Kristin Chirico is the latest fat girlcow to get struck by Lord Beetus. For those unaware, she used to work at BuzzFeed and used to be the regular, every-day sort of obese. Her fat fetishist husband trooning out has probably had something to do with her mental breakdown and enormous weight gain over the past few years.

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In a fairly recent video she posted last month, Kristin reveals she got diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes two years ago. The video is full of classic fatlogic, as Kristin reveals her case of diabetes is totes due to covid and being old, and definitely not because of her atrocious diet and morbid obesity.

She's on Ozempic for the glycemic control, but only lost 15 lbs. And she is also definitely not butthurt at all that the haydurs haven't noticed her weight loss.
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It also turns out her post-covid "POTS" (classic Munchie illness) turned out to just be due to dehydration (and being a fat lazy deconditioned lump).

Her creepy AGP husband Brie appears in this video. He is now using a falsetto voice and has his fake troon moobs pushed together. (He has also had a BBL and lipo)
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One astute commentator notices he is skinwakling her. Apparently he will get FFS soon
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She has also made multiple videos about her anal sphincter tears which have required surgery.

For anyone concerned that her diabetes diagnosis will stem the tide of videos where she rates the latest Trader Joe slop to hit the shelves: fear not. Kristin reassures us that this was not a wakeup call and her lifestyle hasn't changed.

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I worked out right after I posted that. She showed all her grocery bags that lasts 3-4 days. We know she was lying about the fruits and vegetables.
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That's like what my wife and I would go through in three months minus of course all the crap. Where the hell is she getting the money to buy all this?

I don't think I've ever seen such a confusing backside.
Why do you think I called it "Lovecraftian". Trying to figure it out will drive you mad.
 
In a fairly recent video she posted last month, Kristin reveals she got diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes two years ago. The video is full of classic fatlogic, as Kristin reveals her case of diabetes is totes due to covid and being old, and definitely not because of her atrocious diet and morbid obesity.
She said she's 40 this year. I swear I recall her saying she was in her early mid 30s in a relatively new video. Did she lie about her age at some point?
Anyway to quote my post from two years ago:
I used to watch buzzfeed at its height and I always hated her. She had such a shitty attitude towards everything.
She's 100% a straight women and was dead set on getting herself a husband and kids so I'm sure she's deep down very unhappy with her husband trooning out. Not that she's able to complain as she's too woke for that.
He's probably ruined her slim chance of conceiving a child with his trooning. In fact her last instagram is her shilling a fertility kit + bitching about PCOS so I do feel a bit bad for her, although she and the troon would both be terrible parents.
She's definitely not getting kids now. All she had to do was slim down and marry a regular dude but no this is what happens when fatties marry enabling fat fetishists. You get no kids, diabetes and a gross manchild who wants to play lesbian. Any other decade she would've been the normie PTA bitch that had bratty kids that you and your kids try your best to avoid.
 
In her million story pityfest Evie said she was afraid to leave the house because her legs tend to gush out fluid. The fuck?!
Well, she was exaggerating like hell in those whine-fests but with lymphedema, it can happen. There was someone on M600PL who had it really bad and Dr. Now put them in the hospital. They had to put towels down around the bed because lymph fluid was leaking everywhere. I think at one point Amberlynn even admitted her legs leak fluid sometimes. It's really gross.
 
She said she's 40 this year. I swear I recall her saying she was in her early mid 30s in a relatively new video. Did she lie about her age at some point?
Her birthday was June 14th. She was born in 1984. She’s also now calling herself a “Native comedian” and is apparently doing standup. Had to cap this because my god why would you get up on stage like this:
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Some real “I’ve written a letter to Daddy” energy coming from this. It would be hilarious if she and Brian found themselves in a Baby Jane scenario.
 
Her birthday was June 14th. She was born in 1984. She’s also now calling herself a “Native comedian” and is apparently doing standup. Had to cap this because my god why would you get up on stage like this:
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Some real “I’ve written a letter to Daddy” energy coming from this. It would be hilarious if she and Brian found themselves in a Baby Jane scenario.
The pink Crocs are a nice touch
 
She looks exactly like Candy (HFC)! Same hair, same chins, same face. I'm not sure about the body shape cause I never saw how she looked "moonlighting", but everything else is spot on. Her voice is similar. She even does "sex work" like Candy.

I'm getting real Feed (2005) vibes from these two and BBQ Veronica. Why is "BBW" and "BOPO" always about women who struggle to move and breathe and not like Ashley Graham or someone similar?
 
I've never heard of her, but apparently, this fatty died. They're asking for $30k to transport her body. @kasstheblast

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Good god, her lower half. :cryblood:

I've been seeing social media posts about another fatty who just died. She was 850 pounds and the family couldn't get her body out of the house or find a funeral home to take her. Eventually the fire department and a funeral home came to get her but it took up to 30 people.

Link for those interested: https://www.fox6now.com/news/850-pound-cudahy-woman-dies-funeral-arrangements-challenging
 
Good god, her lower half. :cryblood:

I've been seeing social media posts about another fatty who just died. She was 850 pounds and the family couldn't get her body out of the house or find a funeral home to take her. Eventually the fire department and a funeral home came to get her but it took up to 30 people.

Link for those interested: https://www.fox6now.com/news/850-pound-cudahy-woman-dies-funeral-arrangements-challenging
Not just that- after the fireman had got her out of the house but not where she was going, when they had to leave to go actually fight a fire. The article doesn't go into specifics but it's basically implied the body got gross as hell, sitting in the funeral home's van overnight because they had no way to get her out and no table they could put her on.

"With her having sat so long in the bed, and having sat so long in the van, even if we wanted to, we couldn’t do a funeral.," she said.
 
Here’s a quote from the mother of the deceased:
Alverio urges other families to pre-plan arrangements.

"With her having sat so long in the bed, and having sat so long in the van, even if we wanted to, we couldn’t do a funeral.," she said.

She wants the state of Wisconsin to have a protocol for situations like her daughter's, so no family has to deal with a challenge during an already difficult time.

"Something’s got to be put in place,"Alverio said.

I guess from a public health stand point this may need to be addressed, but on the other hand, what exactly did this woman think was going to happen? Her adult daughter weighed 850 lbs. EIGHT HUNDRED AND FIFTY POUNDS. Why didn’t she, her daughter, and her family pre-plan any arrangements because needless to say you don’t live very long at that weight. Did she think they were just going to put her daughter’s corpse in a wheelbarrow and push her out? She’s the size and weight of a golf cart.
 
On a related note, Jake Alley/Secret Gamer Girl recently reposted this on tumblr:
Scientists confirm: Jake is fat:
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A fat fujo named lestatscock takes time from simping for Hannibal Lecter to whine about this article:

Donating your body to science? Nobody wants a chubby corpse (Archive)

In a country where more than a third of adults are obese, the impact of extra weight extends, it seems, even beyond death.

Officials at some whole body donation programs in the United States tell msnbc.com they’ve turned away corpses that are too fat for scientific study. Others say the bigger issue is that potential donors simply don’t sign up once they learn of weight limits that can be as low as 170 pounds, but generally top out at 300 pounds.

“Family members, or the person themselves, sometimes they’re a little taken aback,” said Stephen D. Anderson, coordinator of the Willed Body Program at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky. “They didn’t assume there were any restrictions.”

That surprise could be a problem, considering that a 2004 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine study found that about half of adults surveyed would consider donating their bodies to science.

But officials at the university-affiliated programs that supply perhaps 10,000 to 15,000 dead bodies each year to the nation’s nearly 140 medical schools say that weight and height limits are an unavoidable part of the process.

“The embalming process adds considerable weight. Generally, a 250-pound person might weigh 350 to 400 pounds when embalmed,” said Richard Dey, professor and chairman of the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy at West Virginia University in Morgantown. His program receives about 275 bodies a year and turns away at least a few.

To be frank, bodies taller than about 6-foot-4 or heavier than about 300 pounds simply don’t fit on the trays that are sometimes stacked six high in the coolers where the deceased are kept, experts say.

It can be difficult for technicians to handle huge corpses, which have to be lifted and transferred frequently, often by slim technicians or students, said John Lee Powers, curator of anatomical materials at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C. That program limits donors to between 170 pounds and 180 pounds, though an exceptionally tall donor might be allowed at 190.

“It’s the maximum our equipment will handle,” Powers said.

There’s also the educational aspect to consider. Donated bodies are used primarily for first-year anatomy students, who need to learn how the human body is supposed to look, said Ronn Wade, director of the Anatomical Services Division of the University of Maryland Medical School in Baltimore.
Thin cadavers are so privileged!
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The Fatlip Podcast also complained about it:
Fatlip TRANSCRIPT: Let’s Talk About (Fat) Death
One option that I have always been curious about is donating my body to science. I have always had huge misgivings, though, because again it’s hard to trust that my body would be properly handled after i’m not around to protect it. But in theory it would be amazing for fat bodies to actually receive thorough study. We know very well that fat people and fat health are dangerously under-researched and it would be amazing to know that my body could help fat people even after I die.

However. In researching for this episode I found again and again that most research facilities that accept bodies donated to science do not accept fat or very fat bodies. Some facilities say that they only accept bodies between 170 and 180 pounds. The highest limit I found was 250 pounds. Which is so discouraging.

From what I read, most facilities say that fat bodies are too difficult to transport and store. I also read from one director of a medical research school that bodies donated to science are mostly used for first year medical students to dissect so they can learn what the inside of a body is quote “supposed” to look like and that ideally they need to see “perfect” bodies to learn.

When I read that I found it incredibly telling. Like NO WONDER fat people receive such poor treatment from the medical community. They are literally never taught about fat anatomy. The medical community only values quote perfect bodies as educational tools. No fucking wonder.

So in summary, if you’re a fat person who dies right now, there is little to no chance that your body could be donated to science.

Well, that’s not entirely true. The alternate option is to donate your body to a forensic body farm. These facilities study human decomposition and teach forensic investigators how to determine how and when a person died. Which won’t exactly help living fat people. But it is an option if you’d like to have your body donated to scientific research. Most body farms, though, also have weight limits. Another thing to research for your death plan.
Demented feminist site Yourtango also has an article about it:

Donating Your Body To Science Can Help Save Lives — Unless You're 'Too Fat'

My mother would rise up from the grave to haunt me if I publicly announced how much she weighed, but suffice it to say, she struggled with her weight her whole life. To make matters worse, she'd spent much of the last year of her life sitting on the couch due to a multiple-fracture ankle break, gaining even more weight before her death.

But my mom was hardly alone in that. America is getting bigger.

According to data collected by the Centers for Disease Control, 39.8 percent of adults in the U.S. were considered obese ("defined as BMI greater than or equal to 30.0, based on the NHANES variable Body Mass Index") as of 2016, with 71.6 percent considered overweight or obese ("defined as BMI greater than or equal to 25.0"). This is a significant increase from the 22.9 percent considered obese and 56 percent considered overweight or obese as of 1994.

And yet, many doctors don’t seem to want to see or learn how to treat fat people. Fat-phobia in the medical community is a real and well-documented phenomenon.

And while I could write a whole article on weight bias in healthcare, I’ll save it for another day and simply say this: many doctors treat fat people differently ... if they treat us at all.

At the same time, medical cadaver programs have traditionally struggled to find donations.

Paying for a dead body is illegal in the United States, so these programs have to rely on volunteers who either sign a bequest while still alive or whose next of kin or legal conservator may make a donation following their death (laws vary by state within the U.S.).

According to The Living Bank, a cadaver and organ donation program that just celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2018, “Whole-body donation helps medical researchers and doctors to research and identify better ways to treat a comprehensive range of illnesses and conditions. Whole-body donors contribute to advances in medical and physician training; development of surgical procedures; treatment breakthroughs in areas such as gynecology, colon and liver illness, diabetes, and HIV; improved understanding of how diseases progress; development of life-changing medical devices; cancer protocols; treating spinal injuries; and enhanced drug delivery mechanisms."

My mom wanted to help. She wanted to be one of those people who did some good after she was gone.

But if you’re fat, you can't.

When I was a little girl, she once told me that when she died, her body would just be the shell of who she once was, and we should try to help others with it. I never forgot that lesson or her wishes.

Neither will I ever forget my father walking away from my mother’s body for the last time.

One of the last things he said to her was, “Goodbye. Go teach a medical student a thing or two.”

In my overwhelming grief, and with increasing frustration, I struggled to fulfill her final wishes.

I wound up calling four different cadaver programs in Northern California, where we live, desperately trying to find someone who would accept her body for a study or a class.

Each and every time, her donation was turned away because of her weight.

It was the ultimate fat-shaming experience. No one even wanted to look at her dead body. It felt like we were stymied again and again by arbitrary, sizeist requirements.

I was told over and over that medical cadaver programs will only accept donations of bodies weighing less than 250 pounds and under a certain height. One woman even got us halfway through an extremely long application process, only to hear my mother’s weight and immediately end the conversation.

“I’m sorry but we can’t accept this donation,” she told us and quickly hung up.
The writer, Robin Epley, unironically wrote an article about how hard it was to come out as demisexual.
 
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