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Originally Posted by mountain walker
Bridget Jones I love your reason for working out! I would have given up at the start of the Hunger Games!
This is why I find this idea so complex. I have a slim friend who eats rubbish lives on her nerves and gets short of breath on a flight of stairs...even at my heaviest I was fitter than her. BMI doesn't indicate health.....I know.
But as I get older and the side effects of my life long obesity are becoming more obvious....ie athritic knees etc I would so not want MY kids to go through these problems. I can now walk around a supermarket with out leaning on a trolley....and I am only 46.
Ha, thanks! It was my number one thought when I read the books and saw the movie. It's not really why I work out, but it amuses me. Thanks!
And I totally agree with you - obviously I believe achieving a healthy weight is seriously important for my health, and I imagine it is for others. I wouldn't be here, working so hard, if I thought otherwise. I am 100% with you on that, and yes, it's a complex topic. I just find that in most cases, when FA gets brought up, it inevitably becomes about people making it out to be a bunch of cheeseburger-pushing obesity glorifiers. I think it's also telling of society's main concern with regards to fat people - aesthetics. Period. If it were primarily health, there'd be a lot less shaming and negativity happening, and a lot more focus on the effed up nutrition/agriculture in this country.
Like I said, I think if FA helps people not hate themselves, that's a huge, incredibly positive thing. I am convinced making positive changes is nigh impossible when you have super low self esteem. You don't necessarily have to be in love with your body, but accepting where you are and that your body is pretty awesome in all that it does, is a good thing.
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Originally Posted by kelly315
I'm pro the movement, for one main reason: I believe it has the possibility of increasing general acceptance of normal, healthy sized women. While the goal is techically the acceptance of the overweight and obese, it could help to make the idea of body fat less hate-able and thus help the millions of normal sized, healthy, but not thin, women be accepted on tv and in their lives. So I'm pro anything that might help healthy young women not hate their bodies as much.
Same here. I also think the word "acceptance" was deliberate and is an important distinction. Accepting your body does not mean you don't want to change or improve it, but it does mean that you're not actively hating it, which is a huge waste of time.