Don’t Let
Weight Bias and
Discrimination Ruin Your Self Esteem
By
Maureen Carney
I am obese.
It hurts me to say this but it’s
true. I don’t know about you, but I think this is the worst word in
the English language. I guess that says something about me--the
shame I feel about being so overweight that I qualify as obese. Oh,
and I saw a story on TV about morbidly obese people and heard that
technically I qualify as MORBIDLY obese--which some define as being
more that 100 pounds overweight. Great. Really great.
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It’s not as if I am sitting on the
couch watching TV all day and night, eating bon bons. I am actually
relatively fit. Not that that fact makes a difference when it comes
to first impressions.
I’m sure I don’t have to tell you
that I’m not alone in my negative feelings about obesity. A study
was done at Yale University by BA Teachman and KD Brownell testing
the attitudes of health professionals who specialize in the
treatment of obesity toward their obese patients. I’m really not
surprised that the study showed that even these professionals who
make their living off the treatment of obesity “have strong negative
associations toward obese people” (International Journal of Obesity
(2001).
In fact, there’s this book called
Weight Bias edited by KD Brownell, RM Puhl, MB Schwartz and L Rudd
(Guilford Press, 2005) and it is absolutely chock full of studies
that show how people who are overweight and especially people who
are obese are victims of bias, discrimination and stigma.
Maybe that’s why I have such negative
feelings about being obese. I’ve heard about it since I was just a
child. “You have such a pretty face--if only you’d loose some
weight” still echoes in my head even though I heard that over 45
years ago. Problem is, my own mother is one of the people who said
that to me. Nobody talked about self esteem when I was growing up.
My mother didn’t say that with the intention of hurting me, but
somehow that one phrase has affected my whole life.
So what about being the victim of
weight bias and discrimination? What have been the long term affects
of this stigma on my life? I guess I’ve been lucky. In some ways I
did “Look for love in all the wrong places”, but I’ve made the best
of my life--always seeking to learn more about myself, always
willing to do all the personal development exercises that came my
way, always having enough self esteem to get by on and even to find
a fair amount of success.
What about being a victim? Through
that self development work I’ve been doing I have learned this: No
matter what has happened to me in my lifetime, I do not ever have to
accept being a victim. Yes I am obese, and yes there may be stigma
and discrimination, but I don’t have to let those mere facts make me
feel like a victim. Being a victim is all in our heads--it’s all
about how we see ourselves.
I’m not playing the victim roll any
more. I’m changing my mind about my weight. That’s it. No matter how
much I weigh, I know that right now I am a beautiful, smart and
worthy woman.
How about you? Want to jump off the
victim train with me? It leads nowhere anyway, just to more misery,
shame and depression. Who needs that?
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