🐱 My Body Should Not Be Your New Favorite Coronavirus Quarantine Punchline

CatParty


As much of the globe has gone quiet with people sheltering in place to slow the spread of COVID-19, many have used this downtime for some self-reflection. I’ve been reading the thought pieces flooding the internet on how society should learn from its mistakes and how we must commit to doing better when the pandemic passes ― like sinners bargaining with God as they face a near-death experience.
But one thing shows little hope of changing when we finally emerge into our new world: fat phobia. And I’m not just fed up with it. I want to take you on a distance-learning journey about why this needs to stop once and for all.
In a time when we’re consuming media at record rates, there has also been an uptick in weight loss ads, frantic calls for us to begin home fitness routines, “The Biggest Loser” marathons and, of course, memes poking fun at the “Quarantine 15.”
The latter seems to be not only the most ubiquitous but also potentially the most harmful. Even friends I feel should know better are sharing “fat beach body” memes, counting calories or joking about “binging” on quarantine snacks, all during a period when we should just be grateful for life and focused on beating the coronavirus. (Please note that an extra scoop of ice cream is not “binging” and to suggest it is makes light of a real disease. Those with actual binge or bulimia disorders should seek professional help.)
It’s interesting to see that even in a pandemic, what a lot of folks are most afraid of is looking like me. As plus-size women have recently railed against the fat-shaming quarantine memes, we’ve been met with the same refrain: “Lighten up.” But it’s hard to take these memes as “harmless jokes” when you know that they’re perpetuating diet culture and may be fueling existing eating disorders or triggering women and men in recovery to relapse.
A few years ago, I became an ambassador for the National Eating Disorders Association, which was a natural fit with my work at the plus-size magazine SLiNK and my newfound role as a body-positive influencer. I knew I had a really messed-up past with diet culture, but what I didn’t know until I attended a NEDA event was that you can technically be anorexic while still being fat.


I have atypical anorexia, a subclinical disordered eating behavior, which means I fast for days on end ― barely consuming anything, even water. What’s more scary is that I tend to do this as a knee-jerk reaction to stress, often with no conscious awareness that I am parched and starving until I feel faint on day three or four.
Many of the same jokesters who are posting fat-girls-in-bikinis memes right now also seem to love a “lighthearted” nod toward anorexia and say things like “It would be so nice to forget to eat” and “Maybe now I can lose a few pounds in my quarantine.” Anorexia nervosa has a higher estimated mortality rate than the coronavirus. Gee, isn’t that “hilarious”?
I noticed all of this talk about bodies and eating and diets was triggering feelings of ugliness and worthlessness. I found myself having visceral reactions to these traumatizing “jokes” and I worried about my own mental health. And then, recently, amidst all the fat-trolling memes on Instagram, I came across a beacon of light called #MyQuarantineBody started by Anastasia Garcia aka @anastasiagphoto.
She asked influencers to post pics of ourselves in all of our curvy glory, as if the photos were divine offerings to our icon Lizzo. Models like Hunter McGrady joined the dialogue and I was also able to sound off on all of the cringeworthy and downright damaging content that we plus-size women are subject to. It was a much-needed campaign and it helped me feel immeasurably better about myself ― but it’s not enough. These fat-shaming memes need to stop.



I’m not just trying to wag a “woke” finger at the people who feel they’re simply offering some levity in dark times by sharing these memes. I’m here to tell you that by making anyone’s body at any size a punchline, you are potentially doing physical and mental harm.
It is estimated that nearly 30 million Americans will struggle with some form of disordered eating in their lives (including subthreshold disordered behaviors). Surveys show that when bullied, all genders are susceptible to meeting weight-based victimization with binging, fasting, substance abuse, depression and lower-participation in daily activities. So the next time you post a picture of a fat person and imply that gaining weight is the worst possible outcome of this quarantine, realize that you’re not just making a joke or motivating yourself or others to pay attention to eating habits ― you’re also undermining someone else’s self-esteem and overall health.
“I’m here to tell you that by making anyone’s body at any size a punchline, you are potentially doing physical and mental harm.
The deluge of fat-shaming memes is also setting a potentially dangerous example for adolescents, who are especially susceptible to these kinds of messages. In fact, 40% to 60% of elementary school-aged girls are already worried about their weight and/or being “too fat” thanks to the weight-loss-centric media that reaches them from the earliest of ages.
Not only does this show that fat phobia is impressed on us from almost the moment we arrive on this planet, but it raises the question of what children are truly being taught when the idea that thin equals beauty is perpetuated. We must realize the responsibility we all have to care for the next generation and we must work to stop this cycle of self-hatred and illness. Part of the solution is refusing to share these kinds of memes.
Perhaps you’ve made it this far in my diatribe and are thinking, “Wow, it’s not that deep! It’s meant to be funny. Just deal with it.” I admit that even in my own family, many people refuse to see or understand why fat shouldn’t equal funny. But since trolling usually says more about the troll than the target, I challenge anyone who wants me to “just deal with it” to consider a few things.
Not everyone will look the way you may want them to ― not even yourself. Quite often the most vitriolic attacks I’ve received as a body image influencer have come from people with overwhelming internalized hate and body dysmorphia. It’s tragic, really. I wish everyone could use this time to finally end the war on our bodies.
What’s more, maybe you should do yourself a favor and “lighten up.” Let go of your fear that you’re not maintaining arbitrary body ideals and just eat the damn cookie. Life is too short ― show yourself and others some compassion. We shouldn’t be expected to spend all this new “free time” in lockdown doing crunches, eating clean and worrying about what we’ll look like when we finally emerge.
So many of us are trying to go on with our lives “as normal” when nothing is normal. This is a time to stay as safe and sane and healthy at home as possible, not a time to feel guilty about food. We need to #FlattentheCurve, instead of worrying about flattening our curves, and we need to support each other, instead of sharing memes that can cause even more pain than we’re already experiencing.
Renee Cafaro is the New York City-based U.S. editor of the international body-positive magazine SLiNK and a plus-size influencer known as @foxyroxyfashion on Instagram. Statistics in this article are sourced from the NEDA website. To learn more about Cafaro, visit www.reneecafaro.com.
 
It's amazing how none of these fat bitches ever eats anything tho. Probably a Nobel Prize in it for whichever scientist discovers the secret to how hambeasts break the laws of physics (and chairs)

f11f1ab0a78090e65b033641b11cb54f4fd14839.jpg

I have atypical anorexia

If by "atypical" we mean "a fridge" and "anorexia" we mean "full of cakes and Yoo-hoo", then yes.
 
Imagine being obese and calling yourself anorexic:
View attachment 1259923
This is what an anorexic looks like. Sometimes she doesn't eat for days. And yet never loses a kilo!

Any time some tub of lard whines about how she eats nothing and doesn’t lose weight, I think of Angus Barbieri: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angus_Barbieri's_fast

Nigga got down to a healthy weight in one year by fasting under doctor supervision. He didn’t eat anything and unlike the bopo princesses, he actually lost weight and his health vastly improved.

In 1965, Barbieri, then a 27-year-old from Tayport, Scotland, checked into the Maryfield Hospital in Dundee. Initially only a short fast was planned, due to the doctors believing that short fasts were preferable to longer ones. Barbieri insisted on continuing because "he adapted so well and was eager to reach his 'ideal' weight".[1]:203[2] For 382 days ending on 11 July 1966, he consumed only vitamins, electrolytes, and zero-calorie beverages such as tea, coffee, and sparkling water, although he occasionally consumed small amounts of milk and/or sugar with the beverages, especially during the final weeks of the fast. He quit working at his father's fish and chip shop, which closed down during the fast. Barbieri's starting weight was recorded at 456 pounds (207 kg) and he stopped fasting when he reached his goal weight of 180 pounds (82 kg). After his weight loss, he moved to Warwick and had two sons. Barbieri died in September 1990.[2]

1588114469008.jpeg
 
We could do everything that you suggested in this latest diatribe porko... or maybe you could just

STOP EATING SO FUCKING MUCH

What I love about these fat chick articles is they never get the idea that some people enjoy working out as a pastime and not for attractiveness purposes. It doesn't even occur to them because obsessing over their weight and ugliness is what they do all day, so they project it onto others.

Honestly, they should understand a little better because eating is their hobby.

There's no way any of these land orcas wouldn't give their last slice of cheesecake to wake up thin.
 
what I didn’t know until I attended a NEDA event was that you can technically be anorexic while still being fat.

Uhhhhh you actually can't. The definition of anorexia nervosa includes as the first diagnostic criteria
A. Restriction of energy intake relative to requirements, leading to a significantly low body weight in the context of age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health. Significantly low weight is defined as a weight that is less than minimally normal or, for children and adolescents, less than that minimally expected.
The severity of the disorder is even determined by how low your BMI is lmao
 
It's amazing how none of these fat bitches ever eats anything tho. Probably a Nobel Prize in it for whichever scientist discovers the secret to how hambeasts break the laws of physics (and chairs)

View attachment 1259826


If by "atypical" we mean "a fridge" and "anorexia" we mean "full of cakes and Yoo-hoo", then yes.
She looks like she's planning to 9/11 a building by jumping up and down in an elevator.
 
See now I'm trying to think of a good joke involving COVID-19 and this cunt
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Sizzlin
I thought that this article was going to be about that one black dude with the monster dong.
goog.jpg
 
Atypical anorexia is when somebody fat loses significant body weight through unhealthy means, leading to potential organ damage, but honestly take it with a grain of salt because iirc the dsm removed transgenderism as a mental illness despite the fact that unlike homosexuality which is mostly harmless, transgenderism often leads to self mutilation, and it was done due to political pressure. Also I'd be more inclined to believe her if she weren't such a raging cunt about others being concerned about their weight gain, since y'know anorexia and eating disorders in part are about controlling weight and being anxious about weight. Kind of like how Hamber and Cuntal self dx with BED despite the fact they're just gluttons.
 
I have atypical anorexia, a subclinical disordered eating behavior, which means I fast for days on end ― barely consuming anything, even water.

It's a shame this disorder is 'subclinical' otherwise you could totally prove all the haters wrong with your medical records showing that ACTUALLY you were fasting due to this totally real disorder and those cakes you bought were totally for someone else

I don't know if fatties or troons are more oblivious to how transparent their lies are to people outside their echo chamber
 
I think people are missing out something when people say that you can be fat and anorexic. Anorexia is seen as being unhealthily skinny when it's really not that. You can dangerously underweight and not anorexic but it's understandable miss understanding as many but not all of physical issues are directly linked with underweight. Anorexia is an obsession in loosing weight and/or being skinny witch tends result in dangerous underweight but that part isn't actually mandatory. Not all cases look the same they just have same underlining aim. Some binge and purge, some calculate calories and keep that way way too down, some drow up, some exercise like crazy, some use laxatives, some only eat few "safe" foods and so on. It's completely possible be fat and go for those unhealthy weight loosing methods in unhealthy mindset. Still these tend be people who start as fat and if allowed continue would have ended dangerously underweighted or they are binders with inadequate purging. Yes being fat and anorexic is possible and does come with health risks, although not as bad as being underweight and anorexic.

That to be said having tendency towards extreme thinking isn't a good excuse to stay fat. Getting fat especially if you're young and not in control of what's available to eat is understandable. Life is hard, weight can creep in over time, healthiness of food can be confusing, medical issues can fuck with your metabolism, people make mistakes and so on. Loosing weight isn't be all of getting healthy, you also need to do right not hurt yourself. Figuring out what healthy weight loss is isn't easy but is still doable. If you are struggling, not getting results that you should be getting and especially if weight loss making you feel like crap considering going to doctors. They have programs that really spell out what to eat and what not eat, can describe supporting medicine and run test to make sure that your body is handeling your change of diet well. You might even find to be have condition that is fighting against weight loss and that normal weight techniques will not work. Those rare but do exist and can be helped with medical care so not really an excuse to stay fat but important to know.
 
Karen said:
Renee Cafaro is the New York City-based U.S. editor of the international body-positive magazine SLiNK and a plus-size influencer known as @foxyroxyfashion on Instagram. Statistics in this article are sourced from the NEDA website. To learn more about Cafaro, visit www.reneecafaro.com.
>New York City
>body-positive magazine
>plus-size influencer
Hi-fuckin'-larious. We're already seeing influencers go down in flames since there's no market for vapid Instagram whores shilling products in the middle of the pandemic, so here's hoping fat positivity goes along with them. Quit making excuses and lose some goddamn weight. You don't have anything better to do right now, especially not the Karen who wrote this. Shut down your pointless magazine, put down the ice cream cakes, and go take a walk.
 
Uhhhhh you actually can't. The definition of anorexia nervosa includes as the first diagnostic criteria

The severity of the disorder is even determined by how low your BMI is lmao
Atypical anorexia or EDNOS is a real diagnosis that is slapped on people that exhibit disordered habits/thoughts for a prolonged time but don't quite fit the criteria for anorexia/bulimia. Usually it's just fatties that crash diet but lack the discipline to actually get thin because they inhale junk food with the ferocity of a rabid raccoon inbetween dieting.
 
Back