Fat Acceptance Movement / Fat Girlcows

If you truly loved and accepted your body the way it is then you wouldn't get so offended when somebody else decides they want to change theirs.
And if other people's decisions to lose weight or get in better shape makes you this upset then your the one who needs to see a therapist
"How fucking dare you want to look aesthetically presentable, that means you think I look bad and that makes me feel bad!"
 
Maybe.... she's a troon. But hey, at least she's coming out with some music instead of mukbangs for once.

Screenshot_20210806-121422_Instagram.jpg
 

Arc words: "you can't rush your healing", i.e. yet another way to excuse her 9 month weight stagnation.

April says she rewatched her very first videos and isn't shocked by how she looked back then, most likely because she still looks almost the same. Then, she makes a list of "why" she's losing weight.
1. To have children
2. To not be at high risk health-wise
3. To move freely (she admits she still struggles to move around)
4. So her husband can pick her up
5. To go back to rock climbing & other activities
6. To be able to go to any clothing store
7. To be able to wear her wedding ring

If she weren't so disingenuous and already a year and two months into her weight loss journey, I would've felt sympathy for that list.

Next is another list - her plan for the coming year
1. Tracking her food. She says she can't track without being triggered. (Maybe don't eat fatty shit then?). She says she'll try to track "80% of the food" she eats lmao.
2. Strength train 4 days a week, yoga 4-6 times, walk every day.
3. Drink a gallon of water a day.
4. Share weekly reports via Weigh-in Wednesday
5. Not make changes mid-month

The rest of the video is just April tearing up about how her life is with some "emotional" instrumentals in the background.

There's so many comments under that video, given that it premiered only 10h ago - 170 already, and all of them are positive, so I guess she's been moderating.
 

Arc words: "you can't rush your healing", i.e. yet another way to excuse her 9 month weight stagnation.

April says she rewatched her very first videos and isn't shocked by how she looked back then, most likely because she still looks almost the same. Then, she makes a list of "why" she's losing weight.
1. To have children
2. To not be at high risk health-wise
3. To move freely (she admits she still struggles to move around)
4. So her husband can pick her up
5. To go back to rock climbing & other activities
6. To be able to go to any clothing store
7. To be able to wear her wedding ring

If she weren't so disingenuous and already a year and two months into her weight loss journey, I would've felt sympathy for that list.

Next is another list - her plan for the coming year
1. Tracking her food. She says she can't track without being triggered. (Maybe don't eat fatty shit then?). She says she'll try to track "80% of the food" she eats lmao.
2. Strength train 4 days a week, yoga 4-6 times, walk every day.
3. Drink a gallon of water a day.
4. Share weekly reports via Weigh-in Wednesday
5. Not make changes mid-month

The rest of the video is just April tearing up about how her life is with some "emotional" instrumentals in the background.

There's so many comments under that video, given that it premiered only 10h ago - 170 already, and all of them are positive, so I guess she's been moderating.
I had a look and she lost a whopping 1.2lbs and is just under the 300lbs again. Clearly whatever she isn't tracking is very high in calories because that weight loss on somebody her size is a joke.

How her audience can't see past the crazy eyes and artificial smile and realise she is talking total bullshit is quite remarkable. But like previously hypothesed, they are probably all just like April and have the same exact excuses
 
View attachment 2415170
Danielle, yet again, is bitching at clothing companies to be more size-inclusive.
She is a self-admitted size 5X, up to 7X depending on the brand.

Yet again
you ask?
Why yes, she has a history of doing so:

3x Is NOT Size Inclusive | Danielle McAllister
View attachment 2415113
Skinny people are the problem and companies must size tarps garments to cater to my needs.
It's the only option---losing weight is not!
..but remember: she's not complaining.:gunt:
She also states in another video that "thin privilege" enables skinny shoppers to buy the precious deathfat clothing (for an oversized look):
Plus Size Thrifting | A Rant About Buying Plus Size Clothes When You Aren't Plus Sized
View attachment 2415165

I've already called bullshit on thins buying super-plus sizes (or even smaller plus sizes) so they can get the "oversized" look. The clothes don't work that way. If skinny shoppers are sizing up, it's into straight sizes.

Danielle proudly displays her entitlement whilst complaining that clothing companies should include size 5X.
According to Danielle though, depending on the brand, she needs a size 7X.
"If you want to be an ethical business, you'll make clothing for all sizes!"
Forget trying to lose weight.

Make This in Size 5x please! Zara, Anthropologie, Smash + Tess, Veromoda, Urban Outfitters
Archive


She wants to talk about what's ethical? She can start with not consuming enough resources and creating enough waste for five people. She can start with not demanding an abundance of cheap, trendy clothes, made with environmentally-destructive synthetic fabrics, using exploitative labor practices. Until she confronts her own lack of ethics, she can fuck right off with lecturing anybody else, or any business, for theirs.

*embedded video archive is processing
View attachment 2415070Her eyebrows are tragic...
View attachment 2415071She loves to police the comment section:
View attachment 2415068
She also loves to disable her likes/dislikes due to a disproportionate ratio:
View attachment 2415069
...only about 20 comments survived, including these, which surprised me quite a bit:
View attachment 2415066
Where does it end?
View attachment 2415073

View attachment 2415072
View attachment 2415157

(:_(So...we've labelled HAES/FA as a death cult, right?

The best thing about Danielle McAllister, and the greatest comfort I get when seeing her bullshit, is that she's a miserable, angry cow trapped in a prison of her own making, and she'll never get out. She already suffers a lot just by living in that mountain of fat, and will suffer a lot more before she eventually dies, and every last bit of it will be well-deserved.

She is her own worst enemy, and I'm cool with that.

It's not though, the cheapass material that plus brands use barely factors into the higher prices. Even the pricier plus brands are a sea of polyester, its not like anyone is going to waste nice silk or linen for things that are inevitably gonna get soaked in roll sweat, require intense laundering that more delicate fabrics can't take, and quickly get discarded after the next 30 lbs come on. The real issue is with technical design/pattern drafting, which is exponentially more difficult for plus because of all the wildcards that obesity adds to the mix, and is normally done by western workers, not the destitute Bangladeshi women paid a pittance to actually sew the clothes.

Not every professional pattern drafter can even do plus sizes, and of the ones that do, not all of them can do sizes larger than a 28 or 30. For the ones who can, their services are expensive, and they're busy. A small indie brand isn't going to be able to afford them, and bigger brands economize by offering iterations of the same garment for as long as they can get away with it (which is why plus-size clothing sites were still selling those annoying high-low hem skirts for at least a couple of years after the trend had passed in straight sizes.).

It's incredibly rare when one of these deathfats decides to be part of the solution by learning to sew, but so far, I've seen none of them go back to school to learn the technical aspects of apparel manufacturing—such as pattern drafting—and then use those skills to make more fashionable clothing available in larger sizes. I see a lot of complaining, but no action, which tells me they're happier to complain about problems than to do anything that might actually fix them. And those kinds of people? I have no trouble leaving them to their misery.

Have any of these shrill bitches ever set cloven hoof foot inside a thrift store? Any thrift store in the United States, whether part of a big chain like Goodwill or a smaller, independent shop, is absolutely crammed to the gills with enormous clothing of all styles, quality, and provenance. Rack upon rack of gigantic jeans, tent-like dresses, and t-shirts that could double as the mizzen sail of HMS Victory.

I've been a regular thrift shopper for decades, and have not found this to be even remotely true. The biggest Goodwill store where I live (large West Coast city) has, at any given time, only one aisle of plus sizes, which includes all categories of clothing. Straight sizes? There's aisle upon aisle of those, separated by category; the sweater aisle is longer than the entire plus-size section. And this pattern holds true in other thrifts, and in other cities.

When I skim through the plus sizes looking for the rare garment that can be re-made, I always notice that ther is never more than a handful of garments over a 3X. (And these days, when I do find something in a natural fiber that is worth remaking, it's almost always unsold inventory from a retailer that they've donated rather than throw it in a dumpster.)

Plus, thrift store prices around here can be ridiculous. A barely-mobile deathfat is going to have much better luck, for a lot less effort, and likely spend even less money, at Walmart.

Maybe in other parts of the US it's different, but I'm just not seeing this overabundance of plus sizes in thrifts where I live.
 
I've already called bullshit on thins buying super-plus sizes (or even smaller plus sizes) so they can get the "oversized" look. The clothes don't work that way. If skinny shoppers are sizing up, it's into straight sizes.



She wants to talk about what's ethical? She can start with not consuming enough resources and creating enough waste for five people. She can start with not demanding an abundance of cheap, trendy clothes, made with environmentally-destructive synthetic fabrics, using exploitative labor practices. Until she confronts her own lack of ethics, she can fuck right off with lecturing anybody else, or any business, for theirs.



The best thing about Danielle McAllister, and the greatest comfort I get when seeing her bullshit, is that she's a miserable, angry cow trapped in a prison of her own making, and she'll never get out. She already suffers a lot just by living in that mountain of fat, and will suffer a lot more before she eventually dies, and every last bit of it will be well-deserved.

She is her own worst enemy, and I'm cool with that.



Not every professional pattern drafter can even do plus sizes, and of the ones that do, not all of them can do sizes larger than a 28 or 30. For the ones who can, their services are expensive, and they're busy. A small indie brand isn't going to be able to afford them, and bigger brands economize by offering iterations of the same garment for as long as they can get away with it (which is why plus-size clothing sites were still selling those annoying high-low hem skirts for at least a couple of years after the trend had passed in straight sizes.).

It's incredibly rare when one of these deathfats decides to be part of the solution by learning to sew, but so far, I've seen none of them go back to school to learn the technical aspects of apparel manufacturing—such as pattern drafting—and then use those skills to make more fashionable clothing available in larger sizes. I see a lot of complaining, but no action, which tells me they're happier to complain about problems than to do anything that might actually fix them. And those kinds of people? I have no trouble leaving them to their misery.



I've been a regular thrift shopper for decades, and have not found this to be even remotely true. The biggest Goodwill store where I live (large West Coast city) has, at any given time, only one aisle of plus sizes, which includes all categories of clothing. Straight sizes? There's aisle upon aisle of those, separated by category; the sweater aisle is longer than the entire plus-size section. And this pattern holds true in other thrifts, and in other cities.

When I skim through the plus sizes looking for the rare garment that can be re-made, I always notice that ther is never more than a handful of garments over a 3X. (And these days, when I do find something in a natural fiber that is worth remaking, it's almost always unsold inventory from a retailer that they've donated rather than throw it in a dumpster.)

Plus, thrift store prices around here can be ridiculous. A barely-mobile deathfat is going to have much better luck, for a lot less effort, and likely spend even less money, at Walmart.

Maybe in other parts of the US it's different, but I'm just not seeing this overabundance of plus sizes in thrifts where I live.

It still boggles my mind that we now live in a world where people eat themselves to a point where they cannot fit in any clothing. Not even Amazon have clothing to accommodate these fatties.
 
the third girls body isnt bad tbh. just further proof that if you have decent skin and a flat belly you're not "ugly"
im obsessed with threads like this on edtwt (eating disorder twitter) especially the "what i eat in a day, fat edition" vids :lit:
 
really enjoy your tiktok posts, @NoReturn
the third girls body isnt bad tbh. just further proof that if you have decent skin and a flat belly you're not "ugly"
im obsessed with threads like this on edtwt (eating disorder twitter) especially the "what i eat in a day, fat edition" vids :lit:
:suffering:they always love showing us what foods they're going to inhale later.
 
She says she'll try to track "80% of the food
That's very effective, yes. I logged a cereal for breakfast, two apples for lunch, yoghurt with berries for snacks and a tuna salad for supper, 1200 kcal for the day, good job me (ranch soaked plate of roasted pork with potatoes doesn't count, it was one meal from five today, itsy bitsy 20%, right? Soda ain't food, need something to drink. Oh, and it's a diet one, soon that pesky wedding band gives up enough to fit me)
 
Cross-posted in the Jude Valentin thread, but shit like this makes me a little MOTI:

View attachment 2419701
View attachment 2419702


lol fuck you, fattie. make your own clothes then.
:spudking:...but that would take too much effort and it's oppressive, you shitlord.
Wanna see something else that's maddening?
Danielle McAllister makes her own clothing.
:shit-eating:
Screenshot 2021-08-06 at 15-29-31 Danielle McAllister - YouTube.png
So why does she continue to complain about the skinnies stealing all of the thrift store tarps garments?
Don't forget that companies aren't being size-inclusive enough.
 
They seem to not understand that the cost is merely due to the fact it takes more raw material to cover their massive bloated frames. My working theory is that upon reaching a crossroads between an extreme weight that is in direct disproportion to self awareness they loose their ability to grasp topology.
It's not just more material. Someone posted in this thread about how much of the manufacturing process would have to be altered in order to make garments in the kinds of sizes these deathfats deem "inclusive". Fabric comes in a standard width, and the equipment for manufacturing clothing is designed to fit it. Manufacturing very large sizes would require the whole process to be re-engineered, from the machines that weave the fabric to the vehicles used to transport it to the size of the workspace used for cutting out garment pieces.

Additionally, there was a super informative link posted that showed how mass produced clothing patterns are designed to minimize waste and meet retailer demand most effectively. The number of garments per length of fabric is meticulously planned, and each piece of a pattern is placed and cut to fit next to the others with minimal unused space between, like a tessellation. Pattern designing is actually a big portion of the cost of manufacturing clothing, and often, people who make patterns for human clothing aren't trained to design coverings for hamplanets, as it's not a matter of simply embiggening existing designs.

So, to manufacture a 7X shirt, for example, would require a massive (heh) restructuring of the entire industry, which would be incredibly expensive. Then, the manufacturer and retailer would have to contend with the extremely limited demand for such sizes. It's not economically sensible to revamp an entire factory to make deathfat tarps, when on average, only a few of each would realistically be expected to sell each season.

To top it all off, these bitches want everything to be both ethically produced AND super cheap. It is just not possible to meet all of these demands. It's a childish fantasy.
 
Because none of you asked for it…an update on sweet little KandyFoxx:

Kandy has lost 50 pounds since working at her new job because (shocking) she is moving around more.
She has a new (again, SHOCKING) boyfriend. He looks…..special ed…
 

Attachments

  • 5C7821EB-59CF-4D10-8EAC-0B79E7849705.jpeg
    5C7821EB-59CF-4D10-8EAC-0B79E7849705.jpeg
    325.7 KB · Views: 218
I didn't see a thread for her, apologies if I missed it.

‘My 600-lb Life’ star Gina Krasley dead at 30: ‘My life’s been hard’


Gina Krasley, known to reality TV viewers as the new star of TLC’s “My 600-lb Life,” has died. She was 30 years old.

Her official cause of death has not been announced, but she passed away Sunday at her home in Tuckerton, N.J., “surrounded by her loving family” at the time, according to her obituary.

Krasley joined the TLC series — which chronicles the lives of obese people undergoing gastric bypass surgeries — in 2020 and was featured in an episode presciently titled “Time Is Running Our For Gina,” which has nearly 1 million views on YouTube.

“My life’s been hard,” Krasley admitted in the heartrending introduction to the clip. “…I always felt my entire life like I was just pushed under the rug.”

She had recently posted social media videos about health struggles that had rendered her immobile with severe pain in her extremities.

“‘I remember what made me forget the pain of being abandoned was eating — and by the time I was 10, I was already over 150 pounds,” Krasley once said on the TLC show.
see also

‘My 600-lb Life’ star Gina Krasley sued show for ‘emotional distress’ before death

By 14, she weighed more than 300 pounds, yet she continued to turn to food as an “escape,” she said. “As I was getting closer to 500 pounds, it started to get harder to do things.”

She was a lifelong resident of Ocean County — having resided in Forked River, Barnegat and Tuckerton for the last six years.

“Her greatest passion was dancing, and she would make up dances with her sister and kids in the neighborhood growing up,” according to her family’s statement. She started the “dancing has no size limit” TikTok trend and “dreamed of one day opening up a dance studio for special needs children.”



In addition to her reality TV stint, she appeared in a bit part in the 1998 indie film “Walking to the Waterline,” and she “enjoyed playing video games and spending time with her family.”

“Her greatest passion was dancing… [she] dreamed of one day opening up a dance studio for special needs children.”

In an omission perhaps too glaring to be an oversight, Krasley’s heartfelt obituary made no mention of her recent appearance on “My 600-lb Life,” which some critics have accused of exploiting the struggles of obese people.

When reached by The Post for comment, reps for the show directed us to a tweet: “TLC was deeply saddened by the loss of Gina Krasley, who shared her weight-loss journey on ‘My 600-lb Life.’ Our thoughts and prayers are with her family at this difficult time.”

Gina was preceded in death by her father, Anthony Snyder, and grandfather, Angelo Perullo, according to her obit.

She is survived by her mother, Cathy Devereux; her wife of six years, Elizabeth Krasley; her sister, Ali Samuels; her brother-in-law, Keith; grandmother Stella Perullo, grandparents Michael and Annette Tubito, and many aunts, uncles and cousins; her dog Bubba; and her cat Daisy.

Visitation will be held on Sunday, Aug. 8, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Maxwell Funeral Home 160 Mathistown Rd., Little Egg Harbor, N.J. The family requests that attendees please wear pink or purple, which were Gina’s favorite colors.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to mental health charities of their choosing.

By 14, she weighed more than 300 pounds, yet she continued to turn to food as an “escape,” she said. “As I was getting closer to 500 pounds, it started to get harder to do things.”
Not to speak ill of the dead, but, ummm....
 
I didn't see a thread for her, apologies if I missed it.

‘My 600-lb Life’ star Gina Krasley dead at 30: ‘My life’s been hard’





Not to speak ill of the dead, but, ummm....
I didn't remember her episode at first but checking the interweb she was one of the nastier participants who abused her enabling wife. Her parents failed her, but she also never took any responsibility for herself. Dead at 30. What a pointless life.
Google says she was part of the lawsuit against the show. It looks like she lost some weight since the show though.
My-600-LB-Life-Gina-Krasley-Where-Is-She-Now.jpg
 
Back