End Weight Stigma, Starting With Your Own

Whether subtle or blatant, weight stigma is broadcast into our living rooms and shows up in our classrooms, break rooms, and exam rooms. For many people, weight stigma hits even closer to home: right between our ears!
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Bias. Stereotyping. Prejudice. Discrimination. Bullying.

These ugly words describe a serious problem spotlighted by Weight Stigma Awareness Week. Our culture is entrenched in the belief that fat is bad, people with fat are bad, people who exceed a BMI of 25 are unhealthy, and that only a narrow range of body sizes are beautiful. Billions of dollars are spent trying to attain the cultural ideal, but the more we diet, the farther we move from it.

Whether subtle or blatant, weight stigma is broadcast into our living rooms and shows up in our classrooms, break rooms, and exam rooms. For many people, weight stigma hits even closer to home: right between our ears!

By internalizing this cultural bias, we condemn ourselves to living within its limitations. We allow the bully to move into our brains.

What is the reality you create?

I'm not letting the bullies off the hook, but if you believe them, you become them. For example, you may have old tapes that sound something like this:

  • I'm too embarrassed to be seen exercising.
  • I can't go to the gym until I've lost some weight.
  • I'm trying to eat healthy but I'm not losing weight; I guess it doesn't matter what I eat.
  • I'll get diabetes because I can't lose weight, so why change the way I eat?
  • I can't eat what I love in public, so I'll binge later in private.
  • I'll never look like I did in high school, so why bother with healthy eating and exercise?
  • I don't deserve someone who loves me because I'm too fat.
  • I don't feel sexy because of my weight.
  • I don't see how my partner can think I'm sexy so I thwart his/her attempts.
  • I don't believe my husband when he tells me I'm beautiful.
  • I don't want to go to the doctor because I regained the weight I lost.
  • I don't take my blood pressure medicine because I know I should lose weight instead.
  • I won't buy new clothes until I reach my goal weight.
  • If I was thinner, I would ask for that promotion.
  • I'd love to travel but I want to lose weight first.
  • I love going to the beach but I hate putting on a bathing suit.
  • (Add your own here.)

Making the impossible, possible

What if? What if, instead of waiting on the world to change, you booted the bully from your brain? Ask yourself, "How could my life be different if I didn't buy into those limitations?"

  • I'm exercising.
  • I go to the gym.
  • I'm trying to eat healthy.
  • I'm at risk for diabetes so I'm changing the way I eat.
  • I'll never look like I did in high school. I'm eating healthier and exercising.
  • I eat what I love.
  • I deserve someone who loves me.
  • I feel sexy.
  • My partner thinks I'm sexy.
  • My husband tells me I'm beautiful.
  • I go to the doctor.
  • I take my blood pressure medicine.
  • I buy new clothes.
  • I'm going to ask for that promotion.
  • I love to travel.
  • I'm going to the beach.
  • (Add your own here.)

Boot the Bully from the Block

Take your power back. Boot the bully from your brain, then join us in booting the bully from the block!

For more by Michelle May, M.D., click here.

For more on personal health, click here.

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