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Female fat [as] a moral issue is articulated with words like good and bad. If our culture’s fixation on female fatness or thinness was about sex, it would be private issue between a woman and her lover; if it were about health, between a woman and herself… A cultural fixation on female thinness is not an obsession about female beauty but one about obedience.

Naomi Wolf The Beauty Myth

I’ve always wondered why being fat is bad. Why is it bad? Think about it: why is being not super skinny BAD?  Who made it that way? 

(via ickyjane)

Reblogged from Internet Winnage
courtneytrouble:

the bellies of courtney trouble, beth ditto, mordecai, and deez / 2005 homoagogo

courtneytrouble:

the bellies of courtney trouble, beth ditto, mordecai, and deez / 2005 homoagogo

majesticlegay:

tangledupinlace:

TW: Fat shaming!

myownbody:

FAT

the short doc i made

this is AMAAAAZING!!! SO GREAT YOU SHOULD BE SO PROUD OF THIS!!!

I watched the entire thing with my mouth wide open; it’s been a while since I’ve had friends who felt like they could talk about my body like this and admittedly, it brought a lot of those feelings back. Which I think is so important for me to remember. 

I think you’re so brave and a gifted filmmaker and I’m SO looking forward to meeting you at the wedding!!! xoxoxoxoxo

the way you constructed this documentary is so powerful and interesting and i think you are so great and i can’t wait to meet you!! <3

Fat acceptance doesn’t simply advocate in favor of fatness. Fat acceptance is also about rejecting a culture that encourages us to rage and lash out at our bodies, even to hate them, for looking a certain way. It’s about setting our own boundaries and knowing ourselves, and making smart decisions about how we live and treat ourselves, and ferociously defending the privacy of those choices. It’s about promoting the idea that anything you do with your body should come from a place of self-care and self-love, not from guilt and judgment and punishment. It’s about demanding that all bodies, no matter their appearance or age or ability, be treated with basic human respect and dignity. That’s the world I’d like to build. For all of us.
Reblogged from Tangled Up In Lace
ashleyketchumvisualjournal:

relief prints I did this spring with Beth Ditto as an inspiration for the figures :3

ashleyketchumvisualjournal:

relief prints I did this spring with Beth Ditto as an inspiration for the figures :3

Reblogged from Love & Zombies
You probably noticed, elsewhere I use the word FAT. I used that word because that’s what fat people are. They’re fat. They’re not large, they’re not stout, chunky, hefty, or plump. And they’re not big-boned. Dinosaurs are big-boned. These people are not necessarily obese, either. OBESE is a medical term. (Author’s Note: A particularly meaningless term, at that.) And they’re not overweight. OVERWEIGHT implies there is some correct weight. There is no correct weight. HEAVY is also a misleading term. An aircraft carrier is heavy, it’s not fat. Only people are fat and that’s what fat people are. They’re fat. I offer no apology for this. It is not intended as criticism or insult. It is simply descriptive language. I don’t like euphemisms. Euphemisms are a form of lying. Fat people are not gravitationally disadvantaged. They’re fat. I prefer seeing things the way they are. Not the way some people wish they were.

George Carlin, Brain Droppings. (via youngandfatshionable)

This quote is great until you put it in the context of some of the other shit Carlin said. 

(via sugaredvenom)

Reblogged from Fancy as Fuck
totheexperts:

[image: hand-drawn sign which reads “No: sexism, racism, ableism, homophobia, fatphobia, transphobia, or general hatefullness allowed. You will be asked to leave”].

totheexperts:

[image: hand-drawn sign which reads “No: sexism, racism, ableism, homophobia, fatphobia, transphobia, or general hatefullness allowed. You will be asked to leave”].

Reblogged from Social Uprooting
I’m fat positive because no matter what size you are, you shouldn’t be ashamed. You shouldn’t have to turn on the TV to see therapists making anorexic women cry, or see trainers shout at and shame fat people. I’m fat positive because I don’t think that anyone else should decide what’s okay for you to wear or eat or do or look like. I’m fat positive because even though no one should be subjected to that, millions of us are every day—and we’re shamed into silence and compliance.

why i’m fat positive. « you’re welcome.

go read the whole thing, it’s fantastic.

(via xicanagrrrl)

Reblogged from
For those of you who haven&#8217;t seen this yet, you have to check out this awesome website:
http://adipositivity.my-expressions.com/index.html
It&#8217;s all about fat positivity and has loads of really beautiful photos of happy naked fat people!

For those of you who haven’t seen this yet, you have to check out this awesome website:

http://adipositivity.my-expressions.com/index.html

It’s all about fat positivity and has loads of really beautiful photos of happy naked fat people!

Fat people are often supported in hating their bodies, in starving themselves, in engaging in unsafe exercise and in seeking out weight loss by any means necessary. A thin person who does these things is considered mentally ill. A fat person who does these things is redeemed by them. This is why our culture has no concept of a fat person who also has an eating disorder. If you’re fat, it’s not an ED — it’s a lifestyle change.
Reblogged from i'm a bucket of fun
I was born fat and have always been, which was just fine and even healthy and cute until I turned ten or so. Puberty hit like a hurricane and brought a new set of rules. All of a sudden it was my fault I was chubby. The prefix “baby” fell away from fat, a little word that hung around and haunted me until one day, in my late teens, I decided that I was either going to spend the rest of my life trying to change myself or accept myself as I was. I chose the latter. I believe I owe all the best parts of my adulthood to embracing my imperfections and showcasing them.
— Beth Ditto / The Guardian / 2007 (via kittyradio)