[MENTION=6877]Thalassa[/MENTION] et al
Not to repeat myself or beat a dead horse, but you can acknowledge that the obesity epidemic is a health problem without calling it a fat person problem.
There are scientifically validated methods of encouraging people to exercise more and eat more nutritious food. Those methods do not involve shaming. Shaming has been proven to be counterproductive -- not just ineffective, but actively making the obesity epidemic worse.
This is an issue of practicality. Shaming doesn't work. So if you care about making sure that people eat healthy and exercise, then don't shame them.
Exactly! And it doesn't help that gym memberships are designed to keep people out: Episode 590: The Planet Money Workout : Planet Money : NPRYeah, I'd agree with that, its wrong but even if it werent its just not effective.
It actually puts people of taking exercise, whether its going to the gym, walking, running, dancing, because they're aware of their physical state and ashamed of it.
Exactly! And it doesn't help that gym memberships are designed to keep people out: Episode 590: The Planet Money Workout : Planet Money : NPR
[MENTION=6877]Thalassa[/MENTION] et al
Not to repeat myself or beat a dead horse, but you can acknowledge that the obesity epidemic is a health problem without calling it a fat person problem.
There are scientifically validated methods of encouraging people to exercise more and eat more nutritious food. Those methods do not involve shaming. Shaming has been proven to be counterproductive -- not just ineffective, but actively making the obesity epidemic worse.
This is an issue of practicality. Shaming doesn't work. So if you care about making sure that people eat healthy and exercise, then don't shame them.
Yup, I'd totally rebel and bring it to the next level, because I would not want someone to get away with that shit.
Also it always makes me laugh that people are self conscious at the gym in the first place. It's where you go to get in shape.... I mean it's the fundamental reason you're there.![]()
An apology is automatically disingenuous. She's sorry she got in trouble. The most anyone can hope is this makes her take a look at her POV and re-think it.
It's hard to apologize for disgust in another human being because of their physical appearance when you had to go through so many steps to make it known. It wasn't just a passing thought. It was deliberate to put it out into the world.
But [MENTION=6877]Thalassa[/MENTION] has a point. This woman, by the nature of her profession, probably places all her worth in her appearance. It's like my lesbian friend who told me all the people in high school who were so hateful toward her, ended up coming out themselves.
This woman is probably so insecure about her appearance herself. Seeing someone who isn't as ashamed probably angers someone like that.
She should at least recognize that while she opted for the easy way out of insecurity (through plastic surgery to fit a Barbie ideal) this other woman was doing it through hard work.
Yet again, how do you judge someone? You don't know if they just had a child, an eating disorder, a health issue...
Yeah. Obesity is a problem but people like this are the flip side of that. They have unhealthy views of physical appearance just as someone has an unhealthy relationship with food.
She could have made that woman Mathers' life a nightmare by suing her. First of all she can't just take a picture of somebody without their permission and then go on to defame her. I don't know if she pressed charges but karma acted out - she was banned from her gym.
But does body shaming negatively impact people's health? It depends. If the nightmarish anorexia is the "beauty standard" then certainly. Same goes for obesity. But would a doctor's advise be considered "body shaming"? I think not. If my doctor advises me to lose or gain some weight to better myself then it's said on good faith. It's advisable that we walk the line. Balance is everything.
In so far as I am concern, I was lucky enough to work out on a gym where the body builders were very helpful. Also, I'm quite discipline and focus when it comes to physicality so I have a good time at the gym. But I'm not gonna lie. People do judge. It's in our nature. The question is no longer about being judged or not but whether if judgment is well-intentioned or not. That Mathers' lady, however, shows symptom of acute inferiority complex. What she did is a step too far and for no good reason. It was ill-intentioned. I particularly judge (in my mind) when somebody tries to show off like trying to lift weights that he can't possibly lift. In my gym this is a good reason for judgment for everybody because there were instances where show off douches dislocated their rotator cuffs trying to benchpress on a dumbbell weighing 70kg each. So the trainer would advise them to either lift lower set of weights or if they are adamant would bite them with sarcasm to discourage them. He do it in good faith.
[MENTION=6877]Thalassa[/MENTION] et al
Not to repeat myself or beat a dead horse, but you can acknowledge that the obesity epidemic is a health problem without calling it a fat person problem.
There are scientifically validated methods of encouraging people to exercise more and eat more nutritious food. Those methods do not involve shaming. Shaming has been proven to be counterproductive -- not just ineffective, but actively making the obesity epidemic worse.
This is an issue of practicality. Shaming doesn't work. So if you care about making sure that people eat healthy and exercise, then don't shame them.
IME if folks have exercise tips and caloric recipes on their Pinterest, then it's not about apathy -- it's about one of many other options, including but not limited to4) I understand what [MENTION=21203]Grand Admiral Crunch[/MENTION] and [MENTION=6724]DiscoBiscuit[/MENTION] are saying re: apathy towards being unhealthy. It always amazes me when people have pinterest boards dedicated to fitness and weight-loss/alongside boards filled with calorie-laden foods. It's true that obesity related health issues affect more than just the individual.
Let me tell you a secret- you can lose weight and maintain health and still eat "calorie-laden foods." Moderation is a thing.
Agreed but I see this being very tricky for a health layperson to understand.
Moderation is subjective and prone to abuse.
What is moderation? It will vary.
Someone who says they eat pasta once a week but yet they don't realize that everything else they eat is carb heavy. Crackers, pretzels, bread, potatoes...that is all carbs.
So, this is why people who are uneducated feel deprived. Because they deprive themselves of a "bad food" while indulging in other types that are essentially the same thing. Thus, they don't see results.
Mainly due to what [MENTION=4945]EJCC[/MENTION] was explaining about those who are training extensively vs those who are working out once a week and who lack a sold fundamental knowledge base of nutrition and how it relates to activity levels. Again, education is key.
My moderation of a food is going to vary greatly depending upon my goals. That gets lost in focus a lot.
Yup. I think shaming works but works terribly. As we can see with eating disorders, etc.
Shaming doesn't educate and that is a big problem.
The fat acceptance movement doesn't educate and that is a big problem.
A person's weight shouldn't define their self-esteem, ideally. But it shouldn't define their level of health either.
To say one can be fat and healthy is not accurate. Underweight individuals have to look out for osteoporosis and the like. Just different than heart disease/diabetes but they aren't necessarily healthy either.
You can feel good in your skin and still medically need to work on things.
I was about 20 lbs overweight, two years ago. I worked out 3-4 times a week. Had a resting heart rate of 53bpm. I was 'in shape'. I felt good about my body.
I got a physical (thinking I would ace that thing!) and learned I was pre-diabetic and cholesterol was high. I was bummed. I had to change my eating habits otherwise go on statins. I did. In doing so, I lost that weight. I am not longer pre-diabetic.
I have to keep that up. I'm not doing that because I needed to be a size whatever. I did it to be fully healthy.
So I'm glad to see a push towards health as an ideal rather than an body type "ideal" because it will naturally educate people and hopefully stop a "one size fits all" ideal of beauty.
Instead of bragging about fitting into that size 2, I'd like to hear bragging about passing ones yearly physical. That would be a welcome change![]()
I agree with not shaming individuals. I do think that questioning the body positive movement is interesting, but maybe this is a different thread.
Plus-Size Models in Advertising May Make Women Even More Self-Conscious : People.com
Dani Mathers engaged in cruel, stupid, and criminal behavior. The dissent in this thread discussion seems to have virtually nothing to do with this event.
It's all connected. Dani Mathers has likely been shamed her whole life, likely has a personality disorder as well as an eating disorder, is used to constantly having her own nude photographs evaluated and critiqued, and is likely the emotional equivalent of an abused five year old.
That never would justify her awful behavior. ..yet all this stuff is connected.