The cruel, predictable outcome of fat-shaming

rockin'robin

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Guess what? Humiliation doesn't encourage people to get in shape.
We all know that body image is a national obsession, with every movie poster and magazine ad bombarding Americans with the message that slim people are beautiful. As a result, note the authors of a new study published in PLOS One, obese people often get the message that others perceive them as lazy, unsuccessful, and weak.

Predictably enough, all that fat-shaming hasn't inspired us to get trim and healthy; in fact, it's had the opposite effect. People interviewed for the study who were not obese when it began, in 2006, were two and a half times more likely to wind up obese four years later if they had faced some form of discrimination or humiliation related to their size. And those who started out obese were three times more likely to remain so if they were subjected to fat-shaming.

"Weight discrimination, in addition to being hurtful and demeaning, has real consequences for the individual's physical health," says study author Angelina Sutin, a psychologist and assistant professor at the Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee, Fla.

The researchers have merely confirmed what we already knew — humiliation does no one any good. "So the takeaway from this is that being super negative to people will not yield positive results. Shocking!" says Tracie Egan Morrissey at Jezebel.

"Stigma and discrimination are really stressors, and, unfortunately, for many people, they're chronic stressors," Rebecca Puhl, deputy director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University, tells Today. "And we know that eating is a common reaction to stress and anxiety — that people often engage in more food consumption or more binge eating in response to stressors."

Still, notes Melissa Dahl at Today, many people — including some medical ethics professors — argue that people need to get some kind of negative messaging about obesity, because it can lead to serious health problems and even early death. One way to do that is to treat obesity as a disease, as the American Medical Association officially began doing last month. That gets across the need to combat obesity without getting personal about it.

Will that help? Maybe. Unhealthy eating and exercise habits develop over a lifetime, so improving them takes patience, experts say. One key, says Sy Mukherjee at Think Progress, is starting early, and being positive. "Having parents talk to their children about healthy nutrition habits," Mukherjee says, "is much more effective in curbing childhood obesity than talking to them about weight."

The cruel, predictable outcome of fat-shaming
 
saw documentary about this half ton american boy fattest in the world he was going to die terrible,but his mother was the enabler.Most of these people rely on someone, maybe the fat lads should be taken into care cos those enablers are murdering the spouse child.
 
saw documentary about this half ton american boy fattest in the world he was going to die terrible,but his mother was the enabler.Most of these people rely on someone, maybe the fat lads should be taken into care cos those enablers are murdering the spouse child.

Most fat people are fat because someone enables them. Ever wonder why people confined to their beds continue to get larger? People go to McDonalds and bring it to them. If someone that loved them only gave them healthy food, there's no way in Hell they'd be confined to the bedroom and continue to gain weight. I don't believe in shaming a person though - that solves nothing, but enabling them is just as toxic.

Laura
 
Most fat people are fat because someone enables them. Ever wonder why people confined to their beds continue to get larger? People go to McDonalds and bring it to them. If someone that loved them only gave them healthy food, there's no way in Hell they'd be confined to the bedroom and continue to gain weight. I don't believe in shaming a person though - that solves nothing, but enabling them is just as toxic.

Laura

I was former obese and lost 75 lbs over 2 years.

I became overweight as teen because of frequent customer at fast food and ate a lot of frozen food (even with MSG). My blood pressure was high and the doctor ordered me to stop eat frozen food, so replace with bread and lunch meats. The high blood pressure disappeared and the weight is stabilized until I became adult so went increased to 200 lbs mark. I started ate Edwards brand pie - whole dish at work but my weight gained VERY FAST and my blood pressure is really high. It went shot up to 230 lbs. I was really stupid and quitted ate Edwards brand pie anymore. It went up to 250 lbs in 2011 due to frequently ate at fast food.

It went down after my GI issue occurred and the old management isn't work anymore. I had to change the plan and my doctor officially told me that I was diagnosed with IBS. I have to be careful about what I eat. I lost the weight after change in diet habit.

Life with IBS isn't fun at all. You have deal with unpleasant motion (bother, pain, cramp) and a lot of gas everyday. I got good and bad days.
 
While fat shaming may redeemed cruel ad unethical one could argue that fat justification is just as cruel if not even crueler. Obesity and depression go hand in hand a large percent o the time. The fat man is rarely ever jolly. There is nothing natural about being fat. Sure maybe being slightly overweight may be natural but not bein obese. Quite frankly there is nothing really natural about our lifestyles anymore. The majority of our food is processed in some way, our overall activity levels are way down and everything is done for us. We have substitutedmoney with activities. We pay people to grow our crops. We pay people to build our shelters. We pay people to deliver our messages. Although we are superior in the hierarchy of animals we must remember we ourselves are reall just animals. Our bodies are built to do more then sit around on telephones and computers all day. We're built to be active and when you take that away and add in unnatural foods and sugars you get an unnatural result. Fatness an obesity. So in my mind being thinner, and athletically muscular is clearly more beautiful because its an image that you work towards and reminds us of what our bodies are capable of. No one works to become fat lol. Oh yeah there are studies that show thinner and more athletic people have higher function brains, accomplish more and are overall happier with their lives. Cheers!
 
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