as I grew up I saw my little brothers go from pudgy pre-teens to having super muscular bodies and I thought to myself
WHAT THE FUCK?
was I not playing in dirt enough?
did I miss some genetic lottery in which my brothers could just one day stop being chubby as fuck and gain a six pack seemingly overnight?
and it didn’t stop there, the older I got the more I wondered if my fat was something I’d ~snap out of~
that if I just waited, I would one day ~transform~
and then when waiting didn’t work - I tried dieting and pills and all types of shit that just doesn’t work and actually fucks with the health you’re told is already fucked up by being a fat person.
THIS.
My little brother is a super fucken ripped, football-scholarship-toting, dudebro jock extreme - and he was chubbers when he was younger.
I went through puberty and moved to college before he even went to middle school, so we’re ages apart…it’s just weird how body image issues don’t translate in the same ways. At all.
My bro is always like “I’m so glad I don’t have anxiety and migraines and skin issues like you do” (always leaving out the “fat” aspect, though of course I know he’s thinking it) - it just makes me so goddamn angry.
My sister and I both struggle with this shit, and he never has. He’s had everything handed to him on a goddamn silver platter. Though I will admit, he does work his ass off and totally excels as an athlete…It’s just that when I was an athlete, I could never lose enough weight. I was “never good enough” because of my size. And I was a girl, so, you know.
I DON’T KNOW I just totally feel you and wanted to say as much, okay? okay. <3
I don’t know, I was curious.
If you’re ever feeling desperately low, like your brains could seep out of your ears from the pressure of your thoughts and you’re thoroughly sick of yourself, seek inspiration in the things you love. Avert your attention. Transform something in your appearance - anything - just to be able to look at yourself differently.
Get creative and imagine yourself as someone else, even if it means pain-stakingly painting your eyes with liquid liner whilst sitting cross-legged on your bed listening to Sonic Youth at 1 in the morning.
It helped me. Maybe it will help you.
I am taking my fiancé’s name for a number of reasons.
First of all, my own last name is descendant from a man who started a family with my Great Grandmother when she was 19 and left her in the dead of night with a newborn (my grandfather) and a toddler (my great uncle) in the midst of a harsh Detroit snowstorm, parting with the most cliche of last words - “I’ll be back, I’m going to the corner for cigarettes.”
He went on to do all manner of things I’d rather not speak about, but most importantly - he never came back, although his name remained.
My grandfather once even entertained the idea of changing our family name, due to my great grandfather’s past transgressions. I think it ultimately became more trouble than it was worth, and he decided against it.
So you see, I really feel no particular affinity for it. Sure, it is part of my identity and my family’s history, but identities change. Lives transform. You become connected to others and start to think about leaving behind your own legacy - and the possibility of a fresh start with the person you love most in this world begins to sound more and more appealing.
In a way, I kind of wish my fiancé (Jamie) and I could make up our own last name. When prompted to make one up, he immediately came up with “The Boopingtons” - not an entirely unworthy option.
As it is, we don’t have the luxury of becoming Mr. and Mrs. Boopington. I could keep my name and Jamie could keep his, I could take his, OR accept a hyphenated mash-up of the two.
On the surface it appears to be a pretty simple decision to make. And at first, I felt pretty confident about it.
When I told Jamie I’d like to take his name, his reaction was not unexpected.
“Don’t you want to keep your name?”
My argument against this was also quite simple - “I am going to be with you for the rest of my life and I want to share a name with you. I want our children to share our name and I want us to be a unit, a force to be reckoned with. I want your name to be OUR name.”
This exchange would start a discussion between us that lasted for months. Just when I thought I’d finally made a decision, I’d start to feel like maybe Jamie wasn’t on board with it. For some reason, he seemed to care more about the preservation of my surname than I did.
We even thought for a while about the possibility of Jamie taking my name. I brought this up at Thanksgiving dinner with my parents, to which my dad replied (in Jamie’s absence), “You may as well chop his dick off.”
Because his name…Is in his dick?
Turns out that for a lot of reasons (mostly due to the fact we are applying for a fiance visa so that he can finally move to the states) Jamie is stuck with his name. But that still leaves my own name to contend with - and a decision that is mine alone to make.
There is a part of me that is wary of being perceived as a “bad feminist”, surrendering myself to the very patriarchy that I’m meant to be fighting against - but that’s not how it feels, to me.
We are both feminists. We both understand the implications that come with sharing a name or not sharing a name.
It doesn’t make me any more or less dedicated as a wife or a partner. It doesn’t mean that I would begrudge any other woman the right to keep her name, or that what I decide on is the best option for everyone.
The bottom line is, I know that Jamie doesn’t view me as his “property” and taking his name doesn’t make me “his”. It makes us “us” in a more obvious way than if we had two different surnames. It’s about what’s right for US. And that is all.
I realize that I am in the majority. Even now that we’ve had the option not to for quite some time, the bride still prefers to take the groom’s surname 90% of the time.
I still feel that this is something that deserves to be challenged, for those of us who feel a particular affinity for our surnames - but I am not one of those women. So I don’t feel particularly empowered to take it on as a personal issue.
The truth is, I quite look forward to changing my name and starting a new chapter alongside my husband.
While my name may change on paper, I can still bring it back as I please. I may even continue to use my maiden name situationally, especially as it is so engrained in the history of my work as a designer, activist, and writer.
So, does taking my husband’s name make me a hypocrite? Have I lost my right to be critical of patriarchal traditions because I’ve chosen to go along with one, for my own reasons? Do I really care? What’s in a name, anyway?
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I am totally with Haley, even though when I get married I have no intention of changing my name, and told my partner this in no uncertain terms (to which he replied “duuuh”), I don’t think it is at all anti-feminist to take your husband’s name. There are many circumstances (like Haley’s, or say if they woman’s family or origin is abusive) where taking your husband’s name is in fact a feminist decision. As long as it is a freely-made, conscious choice to either keep your name or take your husbands, then either choice is completely consistent with being a feminist, in my opinion. I think feminism is fighting for the freedom for women to make the choices in her life, not dictating what those choices should be.

I just need to get real for a second because I’m thinking about it and doing it. I pick at my skin compulsively/excessively and always have. It was getting bad again so I tried to take control and cut off all my fingernails. Now it seems I have fixated on plucking hairs out of my face/chin even more than usual. I inspect each one after I pluck it, especially the coarse ones. I run the pads of my fingertips over my skin and feel for the perfect opportunity to press two together and pull.
GOD WHY IS IT SO SATISFYING TO PLUCK AND PICK AND REMOVE AND SMOOTH, YOU KNOW?
Where are my derma/trich babes at? How many of you cross over into both territories like this? I AM DRIVING MYSELF BONKS.
In other news: I have a lot to do for RBI that I have not been doing and I am very sorry about that. Life has been weird. I lost my grandmother, my sister had a baby, I’m waiting for my fiance’s visa paperwork to come through so we can finally be together after 5 years of international long distance, and attempting to plan a wedding that doesn’t have a date yet, because of reasons.
Also: I miss the fuck out of my fiance every single day and I’m pretty sure that unless you’ve been in an LDR, you will never understand this kind of impatience and frustration. Because it is a unique kind of insanity.
ANYWAY I have things to keep me busy. I pitched an idea to hold a fundraising event for those unable to afford mental health treatment. More on that if my proposal for my sabbatical goes through to a vote. In the meantime - other things.
I am going to make and sell some Activist Mantra buttons and pins very soon. I’m working up to that, as well as more changes to the blog that have been a long time coming.
But for now, you know, I think we’re doing absolutely fucking lovely around here. Don’t you? I hope so. Life is good.
Love you babes.

tw: disordered eating, food tracking (calorie counting)…
So as some may or may not know, I’ve been having a shitty time with food anxiety and eating habits lately. But I’m finally finding my way out.
I’ve been using My Fitness Pal to track my food. Not as an aid to lose weight or even to keep track my weight (I haven’t weighed myself since Christmas) but just to simply keep a record of the food I eat and the ways that I move my body every day.
I’ve been pretty good at not paying attention to the calorie counting aspect of the app (I always seem to come up short of my “limit” anyway), but I can’t stop feeling guilty every time the numbers go into the ~red~ for sugar, carbs, and/or fat.
It’s never outrageous, at least. I haven’t been binging - but I haven’t been restricting, either. Because when I full-out restrict, shit gets dicey and I take it to an extreme.
So it’s everything in moderation. Finding a healthy balance between neurotic restriction and the impulsion to binge. Trying to place myself safely at a point between the two.
I just need to look at the angry red numbers and tell them that they don’t really matter. That I can eat less sugar on another day if I want to. That I am still eating intuitively and being as mindful as I can, so maybe I should be a little easier on myself.
I am usually against this sort of food tracking. I know it can be triggering for many people with eating disorders to think about food in this way. It used to do the same thing for me, until recently.
Now, I am capable of using it differently. I am able to view what I’ve been eating over the past few weeks and feel better, more empowered by my choices. Because when my thoughts become irrational and I think “I’ve been eating too much of this or that lately and oh my god I’m going to die” or whatever else it is that plagues my mind when I become anxious about food, I can look back and see I’m wrong. I have solid, rational proof. It helps.
I’ve also been buying food in new ways (via food delivery boxes with organic produce and snacks), so the whole novelty of that along with feeling empowered for the first time in ages has leveled me out quite nicely, to a point where I feel almost normal about food again. And it’s really nice.
I just needed to talk out some things. I hope that’s okay.
You know when life throws things at you like death and hate and the sorts of things you can’t control and you find yourself back in the land of disordered eating and anxiety and depression and you don’t ever want to come out from under your blankets? Or is that just me?
I’ve been in that space for a while. Visibility is a challenge, taking care of myself is a challenge, owning my body is a challenge. But I continue to dare myself and accept the discomfort, because it means I’m not giving up. I am in control.

The world that surrounds me, the culture I live in, takes one look at my fat body and assumes that perhaps I should “stop eating so much” - that I’m probably an overeater or that I must be ignorant to healthy habits.
So these messages are directed at me, day in and day out: Lose weight. Eat healthier. Be virtuous and eat wholesomely. You are not doing it right. You are not right. You don’t know how to eat. Those processed foods will kill you. Don’t you have any self-control?
And then I think: “Maybe I should stop eating junk food again” because something has triggered that thought. Before I was triggered I may have been perfectly content, eating appropriately, happy with the way I was treating myself. Now, I am hyper-aware. I am questioning myself. My anxieties take hold.
Last time I set a “ban” on food for myself, I took it to an extreme.
I replaced junk with supplements. I aimed for fresh foods, but things happened and I wasn’t thinking rationally, so I started drinking weight loss shakes again. I reverted to some former echo of my teenage self who used to rationalize fucked up ways of eating in favor of creating a thinner frame. I rewarded my abstinence by allowing myself a treat, which promptly started a cycle of binging and self-hate.
There are some days that I have to force myself to eat. And when I eat, it may be junk - but it is food. It is something.
It could be nothing. It could SO EASILY be nothing.
I am forever seeking control over things that have been heaped upon me. I am forever trying to make sense of all of this fucking bullshit. I am forever fucking exhausted by it all. And the hits just keep on coming.
I am so sorry that I am letting you all down. I know you don’t come to this space to be pulled into my darkness. I created this space to be safe, for myself and others, which means all this realness is meant to be captured, but I am not a beacon of hope or a body-positive role model. I am as scarred, confused, and self-destructive as any of you, no matter how many facts I shove into my skull or how often I try to stay positive.
I have good days. I have bad days. I am having more bad days than good ones, lately. But at least I’m eating, fighting, and challenging.
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The looks fat people get in gyms is enough to want to never go back
You say you care about peoples health
But you look at them like they are the scum of the earth for actually taking your advice
Most of the time it’s not even like fat people are taking anyone’s advice, they’re just LIVING THEIR LIVES and being active like anyone else. Like, god fucking forbid.
This is the kind of shit that makes me horrified to step into a gym. I have heard so many stories of fat people actually being talked down to, or condescendingly complimented, like “oh good for you you good little fatty, I’m so proud that you’re not on a couch stuffing your face with donuts right now”
Being visibly fat, in public, doing things (especially exercise or any other activity that could get twisted and shamed) is fucking hard sometimes. It really is. After a lifetime of being discriminated against, knowing the way other people my size are often treated, on top of having an anxiety disorder and inability to let shit roll off my back as easily as I wish I could…It just takes too much, and I don’t always have the energy to face it.
But there are good days when conditions are right and I can tell the world to properly fuck off so I may do as I please - and those days make all the difference, really and truly.

I know this isn’t very pretty, but I am not embarrassed. There were nights in the past when my seb derm and hives would flare up like this and I’d let it keep me from doing things, but fuck that. I’m going out tonight. I may be a flaky hive-monster, but I love my friends, and I deserve to have fun.
- Haley
[Image: Typographic detail on gradient blue, purple, pink and orange: Physical Disability / Natural Beauty - Redefining Body Image]
I designed this because I was inspired by this.
In designing this and thinking on disability as beauty, my thoughts frequently turned to my grandmother and I am now finding the words to express them.
When my grandma and grandpa were teenagers in love, they got into a car accident. My grandpa Verlon was behind the wheel and came away with minor injuries. My grandma Shirley was in the passenger seat and came away with a mangled spine.
Disabled and in a wheelchair by age 15. Moved from a cotton-producing farm town on a slanted mountain in Alabama to the fast-paced realities of downtown Cleveland in the 1950’s, where medical technologies were advanced enough to give her the care she needed.
When they were married, she strapped braces to her legs and learned how to walk upright down the isle. Local papers published the story and the photo of my tiny young grandmother standing upright on that special day lives in family photo albums. I am still touched by the beauty and admiration I have for that woman and her unwillingness to let her disability dictate her life.
Despite her inability to physically stand without support, the strength she exuded as a woman with conviction, immense talent, and capacity to love has always been made apparent to me. She mothered three children, my own mother the eldest. Never once in my youth did I think my grandmother to be different than others, aside from the added bonus of being able to sit on her lap whilst zipping around the garden in the summertime.
My favorite story involves a spat between her and a neighbor, years and years ago. Some trivial quarrel that ended with my grandmother - so enraged - yelling “Why don’t you come over here so I can slap you?” She has always been full of sass.
Her health has been dwindling and my heart is heavy as I recall how much her small body has sustained, how hard she is still fighting to remain in this world long enough to meet her first great grandbaby.
Despite a future that is uncertain, one thing remains that I know to be true: She is and always will be a great and natural beauty.
Dear grandma,
All I can do is hope that you finally find peace. And think of you fondly, and often, with love in my heart.
Some people go out peacefully, while others suffer through their exit.
You are every kind of strength and beauty.
I cannot comprehend why things happen the way they happen. It’s as if you’re just being difficult, the sassy old broad you’ve always been - but you deserve comfort.
And if I prayed, I’d pray for you to find it.
Your granddaughter,
Haley
Sometimes I am afraid to be too dismal.
Smile. Be positive. Set an example. Fuck you.
Because I’ve come to this place again, of questioning my body - and while most of the time I aim for acceptance and presence of mind, those things are hard to keep hold of, as a reality. As my reality.
So I keep asking myself over and over again, as if reminding myself will finally get me to accept that I am not always okay with my body, or my mental health, or my eating habits, and that it will pass. I just rather wish it would stop flipping like a goddamn switch.
Does my overwhelming love for spinach cancel out my overzealous gravitation to baked goods? Am I virtuously healthy enough yet, or will I surely die some vague future death that won’t stop haunting my mind?
You know the shit that surrounds you molds you. You know how to actively break it down. You know that aiming for good health rather than the slimness commonly (and incorrectly) associated with it is the better alternative.
But that slim figure, the one you’ve crafted in your brain from the moment you realized your fatness, is burned behind your retinas. And this perfected version has a tendency to want to block your view.
Why the fuck do I want to change my body? Because I was fine, until someone or something pulled the trigger - and I don’t have to sit here and take the fucking bullet.
colorblock striped dress: torrid
black cardigan: asos curve
New York Times Declares Victory in Feminism’s War on Love and Romance
Grandma had me read this article about sex and dating relating to my age group. Some of it, I believe could be true, some of it is just appalling.
Why should men date? Why would they make any effort at all? The feminists turned all women into unpaid whores because it’s so, ya know, cool and liberating. Yeah, being a piece of meat is fabtastic.
I’m sorry. Because a woman has sex she is automatically a whore? What is free and liberating about a woman being able to have sex with who she wants, when, and where, is that men have been able to get away with it for hundreds of years-and women haven’t. I personally would not choose this as my life, but that doesn’t make women who do choose it-who want to be equal to men in this way-whores. Women turn into a piece of meat when they are not respected for being WOMEN, not by their actions.
Ask any young woman. What a horrible future the feminists have fixed for our girls. Could a concerted misogynist movement have done a better job of destroying the potential for happiness?Are you suggesting that a movement to increase the hatred for women would bring about more happiness than the freedom for a woman and her sex life? Maybe I’m misinformed, but I’m pretty sure that the feminist movement did a lot more for woman than just this one thing. Voting rights, ability to be on a jury, improved wages and working conditions, women’s health clinics, lobbied for legislation to ban sexism, racism, and discrimination, formed groups to support lesbian women, paid maternity leave and affordable child care, equal divorce, marital rape laws, sexual harassment laws, and much more.
This is how the phony feminist movement empowered women. More like enslaved women. Those men-hating parasites have ruined the glorious exaltation of women in 20th-century America. I know. I grew up in it.See above.
In those films (those created in the 30’s-60s), women were treated with respect and equality. We were then formidable, respected, treasured, and above all…revered. It was as good as it gets.
You’re right. Back when women could only work in a few fields at a few jobs, when it was acceptable for men to rape their wives, when women couldn’t get divorces, when women couldn’t vote, when women almost never went to college, when women were trapped into marriages they didn’t want to be in because they would be poor without their husbands, when sexual harassment was acceptable, and so many other terrible acts were acceptable, things were better.Back when women got married young so that they could have sex, back when women were just a piece of meat:
things were better.