Absolutely.
I do take issue with the statement though "Your value is obviously thin rather than overweight."
That's actually not where I'm coming from in this discussion. I'm simply stating what I believe to be the realities of what people face in life in the effort to give the best advice possible.
Believe me, I understand the desire to try and make weight about something more than what it is. People like to believe they undergo stuff for a reason...or at the very least that they gleam something worthwhile out of their misfortune.
With obesity - those beliefs take the form of things like "somehow our love is deeper - because it's beyond the superficiality that other people base their relationships upon" - or "I know my husband/wife truly loves me - because they accept this or that". Heck - I used to make the same kinds of arguments, and I remember the reasons why.
But - the truth is - that's a bunch of nonsense. People that prefer physically fit people aren't hung up on superficiality and don't have more "shallow" relationships. People that refuse to date the obese aren't superficial. The relationships that the obese may begin to cultivate aren't somehow deeper or more special. There isn't some elusive connection that they've got that others are missing.
It's all the same. The only difference is the amount of garbage you deal with in the meantime and to get to that point.
The most liberating moment for me was when I realized that. Despite all of the effusive flowery (and self serving) nonsense I used to spew about acceptance, true love, this, that...etc... there was a moment where I sat back and asked myself "
do I even offer that which I purport to value?"
...and the answer was a resounding "no."
Even at my heaviest, at 350 lbs, if a 600 lb woman had approached me and said "but I love you" - I'd have given her the friend speech. The truth is - I was just as bigoted against people significantly heavier than me as those were that had rejected me. The only difference was our starting point.
If I was just as "guilty" of those feelings as those that I lamented about - what did that really say?
I certainly wasn't going to try and shift my point of view to somehow take the stand that I was going to start looking at 600 lb women as potential mates, because I'm honest enough with myself to know that wouldn't last. I simply didn't want that - just as other women didn't want a 350 lb guy. If I would grant myself that liberty and feel good about it - weren't they just as entitled?
So the only real solution was to get rid of the problem in and of itself. Respect other people enough to grant them what they want - because inherently you want it too. Anything else would be hypocritical. Realizing that simple fact took away all feelings of conflict or feeling "at odds" with "society" - and actually made the process feel good.
Fat people feel far too at odds with society - and I believe it's that sort of thing that causes it. They think they're undergoing something - and they try to give it meaning in the process. In that quest for meaning - they give it value - and it's the assigning of value (and often a moral sentiment) to it that makes many of these things difficult.
It's the assigning of meaning - and other people - that I firmly believe are the biggest impediments people have. People aren't consistent - they don't really TRULY try (in the grand scheme of things) - because they don't value the fact that they OUGHT to do it. You can't succeed at something that you feel you OUGHT NOT HAVE TO DO. Ya know? And that really is the whole push of this thing.
