WHAT WE'RE ABOUT

RBI focuses on using expressive writing, design-oriented work, photography, media, research, and community input to fuel fat positive, body acceptance, discussion, and outreach. Our goal is to redefine the way we view and think about body image, size, fat, discrimination, health, fitness, wellness, mental/chronic illness, stigma, and other related topics.

We are constantly redefining our own perspectives, and therefore tend to write a lot about our personal experiences. Many followers and contributors are living with anorexia, bulimia, body dysmorphic disorder, depression, and a variety of other body image disorders or mental illnesses, so please be respectful and remember that health applies differently to everyone. Any and all potentially triggering content will be prefaced with a trigger warning.

RBI supports all races, genders, classes, and sizes. We try our best to make this a safe space for everyone. If we are not doing our job or checking our privilege, we invite you to please inform us.

Some of the artwork you see here has been created by our founder or moderators, some sourced when applicable. Please be kind enough to source this blog whenever you share it's content.

We are not health professionals. Any and all advice provided on this blog is supported only by our own research, studies, and personal experiences; nothing more.

This blog is part of the Safe Space Network.

thisisthinprivilege:

I really, really wish I didn’t have to do this. But the sheer number of asks pleading for me to disseminate the same links and information I’ve passed along dozens of times already on this blog and which are linked through the sidebar, makes this short list of lists necessary.

Let me make it completely clear from the outset that I do not believe ‘health,’ however  defined, is a reasonable measure to determine whether or not someone deserves respect, civil rights, and fair treatment. If you have a problem with how health markets apportion your premiums or where your taxes go, then by all means, rage against the system. But do not think for a minute your assholish behavior towards people you imagine use more than their ‘fair share’ is justified.

Further: shame on you damn healthist fatphobes. I’m going to throw a fucking party the day people wake up to how arbitrary and oppressive the ever-changing, ill-defined, and disputed notion of ‘health’ is.

A fucking party. That’s right. It’s going to be EPIC.

In the meantime, before you get all your info from Livestrong and WebMD and the CDC’s obesity scare site (which informs most pop science articles), please check out:

1. Michelle’s “Articles and Evidence” on the Fat Nutritionist

2. Sandy Szwarc’s excellent blog (archived)

3. ASDAH’s article repository specifically the research section which is up to date

4. The Truth Behind Fat (note some links are broken)

5. “Rethinking Thin” by Gina Kolata, “The Diet Myth” by Paul Campos, “Health at Every Size” by Linda Bacon (I trust you can ask Professor Google about these)

There are at least a hundred articles (likely more, I didn’t count), so go on and keep yourself occupied with actual literature instead of trolling fat blogs. And no, that’s not an invitation for you to come back here and hairsplit those studies. Fuck you and the healthist train you rode in on. Go back to scratching your ass and feeling superior as you read WebMD and the latest obesity scare press release and leave fat blogs the fuck alone.

224 notes

\This was posted 7 months ago
1This was reblogged from thisisthinprivilege
zThis has been tagged with: resources, links, thin privilege, fat health, health, fat, obesity, fat phobia,
  1. lunanevada reblogged this from valeria2067
  2. ponchofromawoodenindian reblogged this from valeria2067
  3. ladywerewolf reblogged this from valeria2067
  4. thavron reblogged this from valeria2067 and added:
    What irks me about their attitudes is that their logic can be applied to many more groups of people. Anyone who smokes...
  5. homosociallyyours reblogged this from valeria2067 and added:
    health doesn’t always look the same for every body. someone’s health cannot be determined just by looking at them. fat...
  6. jenniepink reblogged this from valeria2067 and added:
    After child #1 but before this current pregnancy I was 40lbs overweight and a size 10 (according to my BMI). Luckily my...
  7. training-jasmine-how-to-vine reblogged this from valeria2067 and added:
    Finding out about this movement has helped me a lot in the past year as I’ve been growing to accept myself. It’s been a...
  8. spockface reblogged this from valeria2067
  9. northray reblogged this from valeria2067 and added:
    As a big woman who is healthy (no high anything, no diabetes) I have been watching the approaching lynch mob with some...
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