I’ve always thought of those who focus on weight as being a little bit mean and, no pun intended, narrow-minded. There used to be people at the State Fair whose sole skill was apparently to guess the weight of passersby, and I could never imagine what purpose that served, most particularly what positive purpose it could possibly have. There are still plenty of places, notably supplement, nutrition and ‘health’ stores, that keep scales around for customers’ use, and again, that strikes me as unfriendly, since the aim seems to be to make people aware of their ‘improper’ weight so that they will purchase all sorts of cures and rescues from the proprietors. Yet another cruel use of the scale: humiliation and robbery. All perfectly legal and, the perpetrators would likely argue, well-meaning, as of course their goal is to save lives and make people healthy along the way. Sorry about the miserable portion of the transaction, y’all, but it’s necessary.
Well, yes, sometimes intervention’s the only tenable solution. But not nearly so often as one might think, if only when guided by the popular imagery of skinny-as-beautiful, as successful, as admirable, and anything other than skinny as not so. I’m well aware that to help one achieve and maintain good health over a long life, generally speaking it’s advisable to keep one’s weight in a range that is proportionate in a fairly specific way to one’s height, bone structure, and/or other physical criteria. But it’s also true that not only are there plenty of variables besides weight that are significant parts of the health and longevity puzzle but many people outside the ‘norms’ strictly in weight also survive and thrive and even live very long lives doing so. An additional truth: that beauty is widely, wildly variable in its manifestations, and in how we perceive it.
There is still the business about how my weight makes me feel, emotionally yes but more especially so, physically. I’m one of those fairly despicable people who never struggled with trying to weigh anything but what I did by simple default, but like most people (at least most of the privileged people I’ve known), I find that’s changing little by little as I age. So now, what little my weight changes has a more noticeable effect on how I feel. The bad news is that at long last, I do find it takes a little bit of effort to keep my weight in my own comfort zone. The good news is that, so far, it does take relatively little effort, because two small changes are starting to make it easier for me to predict what will or won’t work for me, in dietary terms.
Two small things: one, that I eat less heavily processed [‘junk’] food and see that more of what I do eat is thoughtfully prepared (i.e., not ‘junked up’ in preparation); the second, that I eat more thoughtfully. I simply don’t need to eat the quantities I eat, nor as often as I do so. Simple. Yet not. Because, of course, I’m your typical habit-ridden, easily tempted, food crazy creature, and I have grown up eating what I wanted, when I wanted, in whatever big batches I wanted, and without many consequences. Now that I’m subject to consequence it’s not quite an instantaneous transition to being smart about my eating, least of all about only eating when I’m genuinely hungry. I’m working on it. I feel better when I stick to it.
And I’m still not going to go hopping on the scale to weigh myself. How many pounds I weigh has nothing to do with whether my clothes fit the way I’d like them to or whether I feel attractive, and less than nothing to do with whether I’ll feel well and be healthy or I’ll survive for many years to come. So many factors play a part in that equation. I just want to help tip the odds a little in my favor if I can by eating a bit less, and a little bit less often, and when I do eat, eating things I really, truly enjoy, with mindful pleasure. More fun, and I hope, for a much longer time.
I have a friend who, if we’re out together, insists on poking me every time an extremely overweight person passes by. First I just ignored her and finally I asked her to stop. You’re right, it is mean spirited. I have been thin most of my adult life. I quit smoking three years ago and I’m not a kid anymore and I’ve noticed that I have to mind what I eat these days as a pound or two has crept on without invitation. I eat a lot of healthy foods and very little processed. Helps a lot.
Knowing that you do work on your own health and condition in this way is an inspiration to others like me, and helps *us* a lot too! So thanks! xo
I love this post. I find people who tote weight round are a bit lacking in other activities as well. I’m part African American and we view weight different than my mother’s white family. Larger women are more sought after and figures are commented on positively. Stickily women are teased. I think it’s a bit like how things were before twiggy. I to try to eat healthy but I have found with a 2 year old my diet is what has given! Great post glad you did it before the new year makes me think you are thinking about it as a life change rather than a NY resolution!
As I’ve said here, my years in art, especially when I was teaching Life Drawing, helped give me a much richer perspective on the many, many kinds of physical beauty and how dull it would be to have a narrow view of such things. Makes keeping my life changing ideals easier to face when I know that the internal changes are more important than the external ones and feeling healthy is far better than looking skinny! š
You will NEVER hear me argue the country!!! It’s amazing how we like skinny visually but like to TOUCH plump soft round things!
Bob Newhart told Don Rickles, when they were touring Europe together, “Drink the white wine. It’ll make you lose weight”. Don Rickles quipped, “If that’s true, soon I’ll be the thinnest man in Italy.”
Gosh, I’ve got to dash out to the kitchen and get me some weight-loss elixir right away! Hmmm, maybe 1:21 a.m. isn’t the best time to test the theory. Perhaps getting some sleep might be wiser. What am I saying! When was *wisdom* ever the determinant for my choices? Oh, the dilemma!!! š