When I was a child, fitness was not rigid. It wasn’t a responsibility or a way to measure value, worth, or health - it was FUN.
Barefoot running through neighborhoods with callused little feet, splashing in the pool, jumping on the trampoline, acrobatics in the front yard, and rollerblading around the block…It was all play, without focus on performance or the failings of my body. It was all refreshingly simple.
From the moment I was able to pick up a baseball bat, I was enrolled in t-ball. I immersed myself in dance classes, figure skating, softball, basketball, and competitive swimming. I loved it all with boundless energy, diving into various athletic activities with excitement and an eagerness to enjoy myself with my friends.
(Before puberty struck, I was ambivalent towards my body - because it had not yet begun to hold weight.)
At some point, as I grew older and made it onto my junior high basketball team, the whole “It doesn’t matter if you win so long as you have fun” mentality stopped being enforced - and in retrospect, I can see how that is the point at which my relationship with sports and fitness began to take a turn into problematic territory.
I discovered pretty quickly that I preferred to do this kind of stuff rather than worry about not being invited to popular kids’ parties. I felt an immediate and reciprocated kinship with anything green and outside. As an adult trail-running, hiking, kayaking, canoeing, and ZIP-LINING!!!! are among my favorite things to do for exercise and for simply being in nature.
Thin (and able bodied) privilege is not being mocked for using an assistive device in a fitness class. Fat discrimination is assuming the device is necessary because someone is just too fat to move a limb properly, as opposed to a chronic injury or disability.
There’s a weight loss incentive going on at my place of employment that involves losing weight to contribute money for charity.
My coworkers are all on diets, talking about cleanses, and detailing their personal work-out and exercises…ALL DAY EVERY DAY…and it will continue to last all month.
While I’m over here, totally in my own head enough as it is about my fitness and eating habits, now screaming on the inside from not being able to escape any of it and hoping to god I don’t break and start going on a weight-loss mission that I know will TOTALLY FUCK ME OVER.
Hell, I’m having a hard enough time just getting myself to eat anything without over-thinking every aspect of it, now this?
How do you deal with such triggering environments? How do you respond when others seem so hell-bent on discussing the things that make you feel like shit?
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[Disclaimer: I’m obviously not a doctor, please discuss ANY change to your workout/lifestyle with your doctor. If walking isn’t feasible for you, a physical therapist or occupational therapist should be able to help you design an appropriate workout. (I realize a number of people following can’t walk around the block, I’m not trying to be a dick - just sharing my experiance)]
As much as I hate to do it (or admit to it) I do exercise daily. I’ve mentioned before that I’ve recognized my Exercise Donut Hole, and I’ve reblogged things about it when I didn’t have brain power to write. As much pain and fatigue as my body causes me when moving around, a complete lack of exercise makes my pain and fatigue noticeably worse, which I’m pretty sure is irony distilled. HeathersDay wrote a great piece about this, detailing why exercise is more difficult for Fibro:
- During exercise, blood flow increases to muscles to bring important nutrients and remove wastes from the tissues. If wastes, such as lactic acid, build up in the muscles, anyone can develop exercise-related pain. Blood flow to the muscles during exercise is lower than normal in people with fibromyalgia, making exercise more painful.
- Normally, exercise helps reduce pain by increasing pain-blocking brain chemicals, such as endorphins. However, these pain-blocking pathways are less active and less responsive in people with fibromyalgia, which is another reason why exercise may be more painful.
- People with fibromyalgia have reduced exercise tolerance. They may have abnormalities in the autonomic nervous system, which controls heart rate and blood pressure, and this, in turn, increases fatigue.
- Hormonal factors may also play a role. For example, growth hormone helps repair the tiny muscle tears (muscle microtrauma) that occur with exercise. The deficiencies in growth hormone associated with fibromyalgia may impair this repair mechanism.
It’s a battle every morning to get moving, but the day is easier when I do, and harder when I don’t. I am in screaming pain every morning, and it’s often difficult just to dress, but over the years I’ve crafted a morning care plan that gets me going (more on this later). My dog is trained to talk to me when he needs a walk, and I’ve trained him far too well. Even on flare days, he will fuss until we stroll, my own furry personal trainer. I can’t run or jog, too high impact, but I walk my dog every morning and almost every evening. I also occasionally take a dance class, and swim at least once a week.
I’ve tried “Working out” like normal people do, with 20-30 mins of aerobic exercise and weight training, but the cost in pain and suffering is too great for such a little reward. So I stick to my donut hole, my Goldilocks zone of acceptable physical exertion. I’ve been working on finding this happy medium for over 10 years now, finding the amount of exercise that’s just right is a long but worthwhile process.
Also, I made you a cute graph to illustrate; In this case, the cakey body of the donut is bad (twilight zone!) representing either too little or too much exercise, and the little donut hole is GOOD representing an amount of exercise in between the two sweet cakey bad’s.
MY donut hole = about .5 mile of dog walking 2x daily
This is just fucking brilliant. While my conditions are much different, the desire I have to define exercise that is right for me is very similar, and it has been a long process…but I am finally finding my donut hole :3
This way of thinking never sits well with me and is honestly part of the reason why I have such a fucked up relationship with exercise.
I would rather take pleasure in what I eat and enjoy the way I move my body without associating it with guilt or punishment for not “behaving” and eating one too many of these beautiful pastries.
(It is a Mexican Concha and it was nearly the size of my head before I consumed every bit of it for breakfast this morning.)
Please, just eat what makes you happy. Move when it pleases you. Don’t do it to live up to some ideal that is grounded in making you feel guilty about treating yourself. Please. It’s not worth punishing yourself over and perpetuating this way of thinking, that “unhealthy behavior” deserves punishment. It doesn’t.
So lately my boyfriend Jamie (hyperopiacheart) and I have been discussing our thoughts on being fat and exercising. I encouraged him to write about it.
- Haley
——-
From a young age, long before I can vividly recall, my character has been driven by a degree of controlled compulsion. That is to say, I was always insanely curious as a child, restless when there was a fact left unknown about something, uncomfortable without as full a picture as possible; it was only as I grew older and more analytical that I realized this extended beyond just knowledge - pretty much everything I do is all or nothing, albeit with a pretty good controlling hand making sure I don’t get too insane and no one things derails me or becomes an obsession.
All of that makes for a pretty circuitous path into the subject that has been stuck on my mind lately – exercise, body image and weight loss. I stand (hunch, more accurately) about 5”10 and I would guesstimate weigh about 230lbs (it’s been a while and I do like cake). As a kid, I took a fairly keen (and equal) interest in food and sports. I liked to play soccer, rugby, tennis, badminton, you name it, I played it; same applied as far as food is concerned. So I’ve always managed a pretty good balance between heft and healthiness.
My attitude to that balance has swayed a lot through my adolescence and up to the present. I’ll skip the childhood bullying which I brushed off as irrelevant, the yo-yoing girth throughout my teenage years finally equalized at the higher end of the scale with the discovery of BEER at age 19, the damage done to my self-confidence by a succession of fairly uneven and discouraging relationships…most of us have the same stories, in some form, and I don’t think I have anything particularly new or touching to take from mine that other, far more eloquent members of the Body/Fat Acceptance community haven’t already articulated better than I ever could.
What weighs on my mind currently is this: I’ve started running again, going out late at night, with my shorts and my Red Wings hoodie on, some bizarre playlist that combines Slayer and Beyoncé blasting in my ears, pounding the pavement in my slowly disintegrating Nikes. It’s not the running that I’m focusing on, I’ve always enjoyed running; it’s my reasons for doing it, or rather, my attitude to the side-effects, namely weight loss.
I got a pudgy belly, a big ass, wide hips, boy tits, rugby players thighs, fairly thick but not so flabby arms and tiny little ears on a big ol’ potato head. That’s the physical components of my body. I know them well and I’ve come to love them dearly. At least, I think I do. Therein lies my quandary at the moment: I’m running again because I missed it, I miss feeling clean, like my veins aren’t clogged with wet dust, like my muscles are firing electricity or, even better, ice cold glacier water through them and shooting off sparks of electricity, I miss feeling alive [qualification: we all feel ‘alive’ or whatever our preferred state is in different ways – without a decent amount of movement/exercise, I don’t feel particularly great, but that’s just my personal preference and I’m by no means stating this as a singular, universal good, or goal]. I know, logically, that when I run a lot, I get in to a cycle of eating in small meals to keep myself feeling fuelled, and so I usually end up eating less and healthier (more fruit, lots of water, yadda). I know that this move to organic produce, coupled with more exercise will likely lead to my losing some weight. And that right there, that is the crux of my existential crisis right now.
I have never exercised simply for the goal of feeling healthy in and of itself. The closest has been the times I exercised to ‘feel better’ which was tied in, to some extent, with losing some weight, or toning up, or whatever. So I have no mental or emotional muscle memory of what it is to lose weight and not view it as a goal, or a good in itself, something to be strived for. And when I think about working out, and the benefits, I go first to feeling more vital, and more energetic….and then this little voice, this voice from the past, the voice broken by the well meaning but narrow perspective of my mother, this voice pipes up and whispers ‘and you’ll lose some of that pudge too’. It whispers with glee.
I can’t reconcile these two things – that I love my body as it is, and that some part of me, however repressed, thinks it would look better with smaller tits and a less pendulous gut. This is where that burning curiosity I’ve had since I was a kid comes in – I’m not only wrestling with this from an emotional perspective, I’m then trying to analyse those emotions: ‘which of these is my true feeling?’ ‘does that matter?’ ‘if my true reaction is that I am looking forward to losing some pounds, am I lying to myself if I think it’s because that’s just a tangible signifier of my feeling better and entirely unrelated to aesthetics?’ ‘should I eat a cake after every run to avoid thinking this much?’. These and about 400 other tangentially-related thoughts permeate my brain every time I try to really tackle how I feel about my body, exercise, my weight, how I look…
And I think it comes down to this:
- I am fat.
- I like to run.
- If I run a good amount and eat how I eat now, or close to it, I might lose a few pounds.
- If that happens, it happens.
- I will feel however I feel about that.
- If I like how it looks on me, I should not feel ashamed of that.
This is a personal story more than anything: my girlfriend, who introduced me to the Body Acceptance movement through her senior college thesis on the subject, is an extremely eloquent and articulate writer and after a recent discussion on this matter, she encouraged me to write about it after she had first suggested she might blog about it. Hopefully that doesn’t deprive the world of her views on it because they will surely make more sense; but I thank her for pushing me to try and work out my feelings through writing. It always works, or helps, soothes, whatever. The reason I tell you this is that my story is not meant to be prescriptive, or any kind of advice – if it was, I’d have made it less rambling, had more bullet points and probably more qualifiers in case someone actually took any advice I might accidentally come up with. It is, instead, exactly what it purports to be from the outset – my own story, a snippet of my ongoing battle with my own hyper-analytical brain, my attempts to uncork the stopper it sometimes puts on my emotions and prevents them from bursting free unencumbered, my experiences as an unapologetic fat dude living in a world that confuses the fuck out of me.
I love my body, and I love who I am, but I am beginning to realize that, like any other relationship, that takes patience, understanding and brutal honesty delivered with the appropriate respect and tenderness. It is not a slogan, it is not an easy solution; it’s a life choice and everything that follows thereafter, good, bad, joyful, difficult, uplifting and upsetting is part of a never-ending process; but there has never been a better time to make that choice, never a better, more visible, more open collection of human beings to share that choice with, offering their own stories and support, in awesome-sauce times or shite ones.
In closing, I’d like to quote the wonderful Glenn Marla, who provided the mantra that has resonated with me most deeply in my journey into this brave, new world, that has kept me resolute in weak times, and provided a particularly incisive means of bringing back down to earth (and cutting down to size) anyone who tries to equivocate or justify their body-shaming:
“There is no wrong way to have a body”.
Was just rereading this and felt I should reblog it because, well, this man is the love of my life and he says some brilliant things.
TW: Body shaming, fitspo (yes, it can definitely be a trigger!), anxiety, and weight loss-related discussion.
When I read this article (“Why Fit is the New Thin”) and reblogged it the other week, the damaging possibility of fitspo made…
I’m going to be honest, here. This really infuriates me. Since when does being healthy and wanting to be better in the fitness world link directly to hating your body? If anything, for me, it’s the COMPLETE OPPOSITE. I want to strengthen my body and see what it is capable of in this life, BECAUSE WE ONLY HAVE ONE. Why not see what amazing measures my body can go to? It’s ludicrous to me that losing weight or toning up means you ‘hate’ your body. I love my body, every single transformation it’s undergone. Yes, you can get healthier without losing a pound but GUESS WHAT: Usually, getting healthier also means you are going to lose weight. Eat healthy, train healthy, your weight is going to drop if you are over-weight. It’s just how it is. It makes me really upset that “curvy” and “overweight” girls feel the need to bash on everyone else in order to get the point across that they ‘accept’ themselves and ‘love’ themselves. Most of the fitspo community on Tumblr have been overweight girls—and so there’s not bashing going on here. We’re not talking down to girls who are over weight or saying how much better we are than them. In fact, more often than anything: the fitspo community is defending over weight people and their health/choices. So I have no clue why in the world the curvy/body acceptance girls of tumblr would find it necessary to hate on the girls who have taken an active stance on their bodies and in their own fitness. I work damn hard every single day to keep my body strong and capable of out running a herd of elephants. Why do I need to see the BODY ACCEPTANCE (key word ) blogs that I follow bashing on girls like me who work hard? I submitted to those blogs when I Was even curvier than I am now, because, I was happy with my body and loved the skin I was in. I decided to lose weight and start getting into shape because I wanted to, because I loved my body and guess what…I still love my body. To this day, I love it. I was almost sure that the point of these body positive blogs was to uplift, not tear down. I’m really disappointed that this is the direction we’re going. Just an FYI, tearing others down does not show that you’re happy or content in your skin. In fact, it shows quite the opposite.
What I’m really asking (and failed to include in my OP) is that maybe those who discuss fitness-related content that involves losing weight should consider prefacing it with a trigger warning so that those who find that kind of content damaging can easily skim over it.
All I’m asking anyone to acknowledge is that fitness and health is different for everyone. I’m not tearing anyone down. I am not bashing anyone. I am suggesting that what is right for you is not right for everyone and asking you to recognize it. That is all.
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So lately my boyfriend Jamie (hyperopiacheart) and I have been discussing our thoughts on being fat and exercising. I encouraged him to write about it.
- Haley
——-
From a young age, long before I can vividly recall, my character has been driven by a degree of controlled compulsion. That is to say, I was always insanely curious as a child, restless when there was a fact left unknown about something, uncomfortable without as full a picture as possible; it was only as I grew older and more analytical that I realized this extended beyond just knowledge - pretty much everything I do is all or nothing, albeit with a pretty good controlling hand making sure I don’t get too insane and no one things derails me or becomes an obsession.
All of that makes for a pretty circuitous path into the subject that has been stuck on my mind lately – exercise, body image and weight loss. I stand (hunch, more accurately) about 5”10 and I would guesstimate weigh about 230lbs (it’s been a while and I do like cake). As a kid, I took a fairly keen (and equal) interest in food and sports. I liked to play soccer, rugby, tennis, badminton, you name it, I played it; same applied as far as food is concerned. So I’ve always managed a pretty good balance between heft and healthiness.
My attitude to that balance has swayed a lot through my adolescence and up to the present. I’ll skip the childhood bullying which I brushed off as irrelevant, the yo-yoing girth throughout my teenage years finally equalized at the higher end of the scale with the discovery of BEER at age 19, the damage done to my self-confidence by a succession of fairly uneven and discouraging relationships…most of us have the same stories, in some form, and I don’t think I have anything particularly new or touching to take from mine that other, far more eloquent members of the Body/Fat Acceptance community haven’t already articulated better than I ever could.
What weighs on my mind currently is this: I’ve started running again, going out late at night, with my shorts and my Red Wings hoodie on, some bizarre playlist that combines Slayer and Beyoncé blasting in my ears, pounding the pavement in my slowly disintegrating Nikes. It’s not the running that I’m focusing on, I’ve always enjoyed running; it’s my reasons for doing it, or rather, my attitude to the side-effects, namely weight loss.
I got a pudgy belly, a big ass, wide hips, boy tits, rugby players thighs, fairly thick but not so flabby arms and tiny little ears on a big ol’ potato head. That’s the physical components of my body. I know them well and I’ve come to love them dearly. At least, I think I do. Therein lies my quandary at the moment: I’m running again because I missed it, I miss feeling clean, like my veins aren’t clogged with wet dust, like my muscles are firing electricity or, even better, ice cold glacier water through them and shooting off sparks of electricity, I miss feeling alive [qualification: we all feel ‘alive’ or whatever our preferred state is in different ways – without a decent amount of movement/exercise, I don’t feel particularly great, but that’s just my personal preference and I’m by no means stating this as a singular, universal good, or goal]. I know, logically, that when I run a lot, I get in to a cycle of eating in small meals to keep myself feeling fuelled, and so I usually end up eating less and healthier (more fruit, lots of water, yadda). I know that this move to organic produce, coupled with more exercise will likely lead to my losing some weight. And that right there, that is the crux of my existential crisis right now.
I have never exercised simply for the goal of feeling healthy in and of itself. The closest has been the times I exercised to ‘feel better’ which was tied in, to some extent, with losing some weight, or toning up, or whatever. So I have no mental or emotional muscle memory of what it is to lose weight and not view it as a goal, or a good in itself, something to be strived for. And when I think about working out, and the benefits, I go first to feeling more vital, and more energetic….and then this little voice, this voice from the past, the voice broken by the well meaning but narrow perspective of my mother, this voice pipes up and whispers ‘and you’ll lose some of that pudge too’. It whispers with glee.
I can’t reconcile these two things – that I love my body as it is, and that some part of me, however repressed, thinks it would look better with smaller tits and a less pendulous gut. This is where that burning curiosity I’ve had since I was a kid comes in – I’m not only wrestling with this from an emotional perspective, I’m then trying to analyse those emotions: ‘which of these is my true feeling?’ ‘does that matter?’ ‘if my true reaction is that I am looking forward to losing some pounds, am I lying to myself if I think it’s because that’s just a tangible signifier of my feeling better and entirely unrelated to aesthetics?’ ‘should I eat a cake after every run to avoid thinking this much?’. These and about 400 other tangentially-related thoughts permeate my brain every time I try to really tackle how I feel about my body, exercise, my weight, how I look…
And I think it comes down to this:
This is a personal story more than anything: my girlfriend, who introduced me to the Body Acceptance movement through her senior college thesis on the subject, is an extremely eloquent and articulate writer and after a recent discussion on this matter, she encouraged me to write about it after she had first suggested she might blog about it. Hopefully that doesn’t deprive the world of her views on it because they will surely make more sense; but I thank her for pushing me to try and work out my feelings through writing. It always works, or helps, soothes, whatever. The reason I tell you this is that my story is not meant to be prescriptive, or any kind of advice – if it was, I’d have made it less rambling, had more bullet points and probably more qualifiers in case someone actually took any advice I might accidentally come up with. It is, instead, exactly what it purports to be from the outset – my own story, a snippet of my ongoing battle with my own hyper-analytical brain, my attempts to uncork the stopper it sometimes puts on my emotions and prevents them from bursting free unencumbered, my experiences as an unapologetic fat dude living in a world that confuses the fuck out of me.
I love my body, and I love who I am, but I am beginning to realize that, like any other relationship, that takes patience, understanding and brutal honesty delivered with the appropriate respect and tenderness. It is not a slogan, it is not an easy solution; it’s a life choice and everything that follows thereafter, good, bad, joyful, difficult, uplifting and upsetting is part of a never-ending process; but there has never been a better time to make that choice, never a better, more visible, more open collection of human beings to share that choice with, offering their own stories and support, in awesome-sauce times or shite ones.
In closing, I’d like to quote the wonderful Glenn Marla, who provided the mantra that has resonated with me most deeply in my journey into this brave, new world, that has kept me resolute in weak times, and provided a particularly incisive means of bringing back down to earth (and cutting down to size) anyone who tries to equivocate or justify their body-shaming:
“There is no wrong way to have a body”.