Posted on 03/15/2019 1:52:11 PM PDT by RightGeek
Rebecca Alexanders worst experience dining while large happened just after she nailed a promotion at a nonprofit organization.
She took her staff, and her new boss, to lunch at a promising downtown restaurant in Portland, Ore., where she lives. As the hostess led the group to a booth, Ms. Alexander, a 31-year-old who wears a size 30, knew in an instant there was no way she was going to squeeze into it.
I remember having this out-of-body experience, she said. I watched myself sit down and try to get in even though I knew the space was too small, because I so needed it to fit. Defeated, she asked for a table. The hostess told her there would be a half-hour wait.
The cherry on top was that I got to be the reason we had to stand around for 30 minutes, she said.
For people who identify as large, plus-size or fat, dining out can be a social and physical minefield. Chairs with arms or impossibly small seats leave marks and bruises. Meals are spent in pain, or filled with worry that a flimsy chair might collapse.
...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Now let’s look at the statistics. How often do you and your horde complain about the bad health of the anorexic... or just leer?
“knew in an instant there was no way she was going to squeeze into it. “
Same goes for Flying on United.
I’m glad to have met your expectations.
We need more body shaming.
Fat people are physically repulsive and the sight of them ruins the appetite.
You know you’re fat when Japanese whalers with harpoons are following you.
Size 30!?! Yowza, she is HUMUNGOUS!!!!
The serious issue is that this woman is morbidly obese and she is going to DIE YOUNG if she doesnt stop eating like a glutton.
This is not a fat shaming issue, its literally a matter of life and death.
“How often do you and your horde complain about the bad health of the anorexic... “
==
A person with anorexia is an anorectic.
.
That's definitely true. Similarly, I have have never had to do anything to stay at a normal weight. Does that in itself mean that a person who is very large has less willpower than me. No.
Plus most of the advice that is given about how to lose weight and keep it off is wrong.
I haven’t seen a TGIF in a long time. Not here in Marin, not in the parts of San Francisco I usually drive through.
Some restaurant managers get focused on maximizing their potential profits. This leads to presumptions of exactly how many tables can I physically place within X number of cubic feet? They start thinking the way Plane Companies do.
Sardine methods become the rule.
Like its the restaurants fault.
Let me rephrase it then: If you can't fit at the table, don't eat out!
Sad to see the replies here. I have battled weight my entire adult life and it was never about being a glutton. Finally I realized it was what I was eating, not how much. I am now down to acceptable weight range but its a daily battle to maintain it. I have to constantly monitor what I eat and I can never or only rarely have things I used to love such as pasta, pizza, ice cream, pies, and pancakes. Its a battle every day. I know firsthand what others have to go through with regard to being fat. Its not as simple as calories in, calories out.
Evidently it’s not quite daunting enough.
AHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
“For people who identify as large, plus-size or fat...”
The author missed a couple of classifications: obese, grossly obese.
The booth doesn't care what you identify as.
It is wrong to remark about someones weight. Remember walk a mile in their shoes. There but for the grace of God go I.
Calories consumed, calories expended. That is all.
Should anyone find an exception to the first law of thermodynamics... well then, thats different.
size 30?
I had no idea there was a size 30.
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