Thanks to the miracle of DVR, tonight I was watching last night’s Superstars of Dance (it’s nice that way, you can skip some of the prattle). Usually I fast forward over commercials, but I got distracted and let them run. I happened to catch an ad for The Biggest Loser.
Understand, I am not a fan. I’ve never watched, I’ve never wanted to. I think its premise is inherently flawed in a thousand different ways. As a fat acceptance activist, I abhor the message it sends, I abhor its focus on pounds lost vs measurement of actual improvement or decline in health, I abhor the way it is marketed, reinforcing every fat person sterotype and misconception in the fat hater book. I resent the whole “saving their lives” bullshit. But this particular commercial caught my attention, because the girl in it…
well…
she was ME.
Obviously she is not really me, I am at home watching Superstars of Dance, not hanging out on the Biggest Loser Fatfarm O’ Doom ™. But the similarities were striking. She looked about my age, maybe a little younger. Her face was shaped like mine. I’ve had her haircut, and her hair color. And when the commercial cut to the weigh-in shot and I saw her in the requisite BLFfO’D sports bra and spandex shorts, the starting weight was pretty damn close to what I weighed the last time I was placed on a doctor’s scale, and her body looked eerily familiar. Her belly and mine share the same curves. Her breasts were shaped like mine. Her hips and thighs would have fit beautifully into the pants I wore to work today, and although I did not see her behind, I am guessing that she too could rock a good booty shake.
It was, to say the least, shocking.
This is the point in the post where I am supposed to start talking about what a wake-up call it was to see something like that, and how now I am all inspired to work really hard to drop all that weight, because OMG I can’t believe I really look like that. But I am not going to.
I was inspired by seeing her. I was inspired, because I looked at her and thought “wow, she’s beautiful“. And that, my friends, is revolutionary.
She made me sad, sitting there crying about how no guy has asked for her number in 3 years. While I can definitely sympathize with how she is feeling, more than anything I wanted to tell her that if that’s the case, then getting thin is maybe not the answer. Maybe she’s hanging around the wrong kind of guy, the kind that is more concerned with the size of your ass than the light in your eyes. Maybe now is a good time to learn how to be alone, and be happy. Maybe it’s just not the right time.
Thanks to her, I am inspired. I am now inspired to bare my belly when I bellydance. I am inspired to continue on with my life the way I am right now, being alone and happy, refusing to worry about my singleness, and leaving my future up to a Power greater than myself. I am inspired to embrace every ounce of my body, to love the curve of my belly, and the heft of my breasts, and even that beautiful booty. I am inspired to save my life by living my life, and not spending one more damn second worrying about my weight. I think that makes me the biggest winner.