When there is hate on both sides…

The result is ugliness.  Plain and simple.

People who read my blog probably know this-I’m not afraid of confrontation.  I actually kind of…well…enjoy it.  It doesn’t bother me, doesn’t faze me.  But I do get irritated when people think the answer to ugliness is to bring more ugliness into the fray.  It solves nothing.

What am I talking about?

This rather unpleasant piece over at MarieClaire:  Should Fatties Get a Room (FYI… if you want to comment, comment away…but no need to get ugly).  It was written by freelance writer Maura Kelly, regarding a TV show- and had pieces like:

The other day, my editor asked me, “Do you really think people feel uncomfortable when they see overweight people making out on television?”

and

My initial response was: Hmm, being overweight is one thing — those people are downright obese! And while I think our country’s obsession with physical perfection is unhealthy, I also think it’s at least equally crazy, albeit in the other direction, to be implicitly promoting obesity! Yes, anorexia is sick, but at least some slim models are simply naturally skinny.

and

yes, I think I’d be grossed out if I had to watch two characters with rolls and rolls of fat kissing each other … because I’d be grossed out if I had to watch them doing anything.

and

But … I think obesity is something that most people have a ton of control over. It’s something they can change, if only they put their minds to it.

Now, if you’re anything like me, you might be sitting there shocked that a so-called ‘reputable’ magazine actually allowed this to go live.  I kept hearing that Marie-Claire was supposed to be about empowering women, but um… not if they have lots of pieces like this, they aren’t.

Am I digusted by this article? Hell, yes.

But many of the commenters-the ones who are as bothered as I am, have disgusted me even more, I’m afraid.

There were comments made that about how the world would be better if the writer didn’t exist, how she should hang herself, comments calling her an ignorant bitch, etc, etc, etc.  Now it’s easy, very easy to say things when you’re pissed.  When there’s a lynch mob mentality?  Even easier.

Somebody posted the writer’s private info-mailing info, email address.

Now we have lynch mob mentality and there is access to data that the public-especially those in the lynch mob mindset, didn’t need to have.

Guys…guess how cyberbullying starts?  Anger, a lack of empathy, lynch mob mentality… we’ve got anger.  We’ve got the lynch mob mentality.  And regardless of how flippantly it was meant, telling somebody to go hang herself over an ugly, poorly written article?  Well, now we have a lack of empathy as well.

You want to make them see your fight?  Don’t get ugly.  Show them your side.  I saw this over on Jezebel first and I’m copying from there as I’m not wading into the 900+ comment stream to do it.

From commenter Beth over at the Marie Claire post-Should Fatties Get a Room:

Dear Maura Kelly, I sincerely apologize for my disgusting body and all the various rolls of fat on my person. When I married my fat husband back in June I didn’t realize it would offend anyone when we got to that “you may kiss the bride” moment, or we would have skipped it. If I’d realized how unacceptable it is for me to have love or happiness, I would have called the wedding off entirely, of course. I have told my husband that there will be no more kissing or cuddling or FATTY SEX until we both lose some weight. I hope he understands… I really am so sorry for being so fat and happy all this time! In your very honest and sensitively written article “should fatties get a room?” you write that fat people should walk more, yet you also write that fat people walking across a room is something you find disgusting. I take long walks around my neighbourhood most days, is this too much? I want to find the correct balance between getting thin and not upsetting anyone with my jiggling body parts. I also swim twice a week and go to the gym once a week, are these activities also disgusting to you? Perhaps I should start doing these activities at night so nobody has to be offended by them. Do you think that would be best? I don’t own a television so I haven’t seen Mike and Molly. But I do hope they take garbage like off the television soon. As you say, it’s implicitly promoting obesity. Surely anyone who watches it will see the yucky fat people making out and suddenly think to themselves “I should gain some weight, that looks like fun.” And then where would we be? By the way, I haven’t ever had any health problems before but if anything does come up I’ll be sure to stay away from the doctor so as not to be a drain on anyone’s health costs. Thank you for writing this meticulously well researched, world-changing article. I really think you are going to cure obesity with this! Yay! Your plump friends are very lucky to have a friend like you who is in no way a hateful bully or an ignorant sizeist jerk. Best wishes, Beth

Read more: http://jezebel.com/5673680/what-was-marie-claire-thinking-with-this-fatties-piece#ixzz13YgpoSOB

Is she using some snark there? Absolutely.  But she’s also pointing out the numerous flaws in a very flawed article, doing it in a way that probably had the writer cringing-after all, Maura Kelly says she’s disgusted by the sight of fat people walking.  Yet then she wants them to walk more.
So here’s an open letter to all sides, the ugliness that came from Ms. Kelly, the editors at MarieClaire who really should have thought about letting it go up, and those who are going off the handle with their rage:
Ms. Kelly, the editors are Marie Claire & the angry commenters:
Ugliness is a nasty, bitter circle that only stops when somebody breaks that circle.

Was Maura Kelly wrong? Hell yes.  I think Marie Claire was wrong in allowing that piece to get published as it was and if Marie Claire or Maura Kelly didn’t expect to see some sort of response coming, it was foolish on their part.  Maura Kelly is no innocent victim here.

I also think MarieClaire needs to be a little more vigilant in watching comments-particularly when it becomes apparent things are getting out of control-I’m sorry but there is no excuse for you to keep allowing people to post her private info.

Maura Kelly, I feel, would be best served by a more sincere apology.  A sincere apology consists of just that- I was wrong.  I screwed up and I apologize.  No excuses, no rationalizations, just the apology.

Marie Claire would be best served, I feel, by actually empowering women instead of posting things that perpetuate the constant we must look perfect image.  And yeah, I can say that’s the image they perpetuate, because the image that’s now emblazoned on my mind, other than that ugly piece is the unnaturally-thin model they use on their twitter page.

And the commenters who are telling her the world would be better without her?  Calling her nasty names?  Do you really think that’s going to change her mind?  Is it going to make Marie Claire see the problem?  No.  All they are seeing is the fury and the ugliness and it makes them want to form a line of defense, which means they likely won’t change.  I’ve said it before, but ugliness makes nothing change.

Ms. Kelly’s ugliness likely didn’t make any overweight person want to lose weight.  Attacks rarely do.  What often inspires people to lose weight is when they finally find the need to change and that has to come from inside and the ugliness from others will not do it.  Too often, it just makes it worse.

Morbid obesity is becoming a huge problem is the country-it’s something I would see regularly in children when I was the doctor’s office full time and you want to talk about sad?  Try explaining to a slender mom who is letting her obese child eat Fritos right there in front of you, drinking a coke, that she needs to get the eating habits better now before it’s too late, while the child is in preschool, elementary school and she has some control and the mom just smiles and said, oh, it’s baby fat…and five years later, that elementary school child is in middle and almost 300 pounds.  It’s enough to break your heart.

Yes, morbid obesity is something that can be changed.  But if it was as easing as simply moving?  There would be no weight problems, and once you become morbidly obese, it’s not even a matter of cutting calories-it takes more.  Often you have to fight the right foods to eat for you, it takes support from your family, it takes a commitment that is unlike anything you’ve ever imagined.

I wasn’t even in the morbidly obese arena when I decided I’d had enough and it was still the hardest damn thing I’d ever done, the hardest thing I’m still doing.  Another 20 lbs to go before I hit my goal, even though I’m down 60 lbs.  But if it was easy?  I would have done years ago.  If it was easy? Something that, as Maura Kelly says, we have a ton of control over?  There would be no issues with weight.  If Maura Kelly is, as she says, a recovering anorexic, then she should understand the struggles with body image, how the mind plays tricks on you.  And that right there is one of the biggest obstacles and why so many people struggling with their weight fail, why that support system is so crucial…and why hateful articles are so detrimental.

But on the flipside…her hateful commentary doesn’t mean she needs to be told she should go hang herself. She doesn’t need to have people posting her private info.

Hate will only breed more hate, guys.    It’s a nasty bitter cycle.

8 Replies to “When there is hate on both sides…”

  1. Not at home & can’t edit on my iPhone but I forgot to mention one thing-in case newcomers end up on my blog? Hello, welcome, feel free to speak your opinion (regardless of which ‘side’ you are on) but if you don’t use courtesy? I can, do & happily delete. I don’t tolerate cruelty or BS on my blog.

  2. I agree with you Shiloh. I also want to say that I have seen the show and enjoy it. The writing is spot on and both the leads have great timing. It is strange but watching the show makes me laugh and remember all the stupid things I did when I was dating my husband. It doesn’t make me reach for a gallon of Rocky Road.

  3. Applauding. I think that was so perfectly said. Publishing her personal info is over the line, as is wishing her dead. We can agree to disagree on all sorts of things in this country. Where the problem lies isn’t in her opinion (well, yes it is, but not my main priority here because, hell, there will always be opinions like that), but in her opinion being sanctioned publicly by a women’s magazine.

  4. Well put. Excuse me for introducing a slightly different angle, but the principle remains the same:

    When the reports about Tyler Clementi’s suicide came in, as soon as I saw who the alleged guilty parties were – Dharun Ravi And Molly Wei – I knew and expected how some reactions would be, but hoped I’d be wrong. I wasn’t. Some comments and articles were more about these two people’s ethnicities than their deplorable actions.

    Many said they should go back to their countries (“Molly Wei and Dharun Ravi , you had your chance here. Get out of our country!”), even though they were born and raised in the US.

    There are some horrible & WTF generalisations, too. Such as “Chinese people are famous for being homophobic! Kick them out of our land!” and “Everybody knows foreign Indians want to take over our country. Kill them before they kill us.”

    I honestly don’t understand how they miss the irony of bullying two stupid and callous pranksters with racist crap for “bullying”.

    What bothers me more is that youths of ethnic minorities committed suicide due to racist bullying throughout each year. (I won’t go even there with little media and public interest in reporting the incidents of children of ethnic minorities getting abducted, abused or murdered, e.g. the white woman syndrome).

    Not only that, quite a few LGBT youths of ethnic minorities committed suicide as well (seven young black gay men killed themselves during last August). Where were these righteous people when the reports were made?

    Phew. I feel better after getting all this off my chest. Sorry for hogging your space, but thanks for listening.

  5. The one thing I would add is that if she is a recovering anorexic this problem is hers and it likely has more to do with her own self hate issues than anything else. She owns this issue not the overweight, but otherwise happy people. I hope this article prompts her to get some additional therapy. I can diet and change the outside but we can’t always change the things that are on the inside.

  6. I lost a brother-in-law to complications from morbid obesity, but strangely enough I don’t remember him as a fat, disgusting guy. I remember him as my sister’s husband and the father of three of my nephews. I remember how devastated the children were when he passed away (they were all pretty young.) I can tell you he spent decades fighting his weight and his eating disorder, went through countless treatments, hospital stays and remained bedridden for the last years of his life. After he died, my sister went through hell trying to recover from losing the man she loved and who she had worked so hard to try to save.

    I’m sure to many people he was nothing more than a really fat guy who got what he deserved, but he was more than that. He was a person, and he mattered, and his wife and his sons and his family will miss him forever.

    I also have a younger sister who has fought anorexia since her early teens. Her eating disorder made her very popular at school (you can never be too thin, right?) but it also nearly killed her a couple times. She then got cancer in her thirties, thanks to the chemicals she used while endlessly purging and starving herself.

    There is no cure for anorexia, only treatment, and she’s relapsed several times. She has a husband and two children who adore her, and I hope her love for them will motivate her to keep fighting it, but I just don’t know.

    It’s easy to make fun of people with eating disorders and weight issues, but it’s a little harder to live with them, and feel helpless against them, and every day watch them slowly kill those you love. So when people use these issues as weapons to attack others out of fear or self-loathing or whatever, I just walk the other way. There is no other reasonable response to such ignorance.

  7. Such a well thought out post. Hey I hate my own overweight body but that’s my issue & wouldn’t visit it on others.

    Fat is the last prejudice standing. In one of our main newspapers they post a daily Sunshine Girl/Woman in skimpy clothes. Without exception you will never see a pretty girl with a non-perfect body but I’ve seen plenty of “dogs” with great bodies.

    In my young & single days, when I played tennis daily, I worked with a scrawny little smoker. She insisted that she was healthier than me even if she couldn’t run for a bus to save her life.

    The saddest thing I ever heard: They polled elementary school kids & found that they’d rather be paralyzed than fat if they had to choose. As someone who plays tennis, that’s not my first choice. At least I’m moving around & keeping active. I certainly not going to wait till I’m thin & look good in workout gear before I start moving around.

    Society & exposure from all media dictates what is the “norm” for beautiful. The writer herself is a victim of this.

    Lastly, while for the most part, we do have control over our weight, there are such things as metabolic issues like thyroid disease which I know you are aware of with your training.

    Thanks for this thoughtful post.Deep (just like your books)

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