Culture Deconstructing diet culture: Lessons unlearned from a thin-obsessed society

Link (Archive)

Deconstructing diet culture: Lessons unlearned from a thin-obsessed society​

Diet culture is everywhere. It affects the care we get at the doctor's office and our experience in fitness spaces. And we may be misunderstanding the science used to uphold moral standards of weight and health. [This episode airs on WUNC 1/7/21]

Diet culture is the water we're all swimming in. It’s a system that upholds thinness and says the smaller your body, the greater your moral superiority. But there’s no body shape that’s intrinsically good or bad.

Host Anita Rao unpacks the science that props up diet culture with anti-diet registered dietician Christy Harrison and certified internal medicine physician Dr. Louise Metz. She also hears from Mirna Valerio, ultrarunner and author of “A Beautiful Work in Progress,” about how she’s pushing back against the ways diet culture manifests in the doctor's office and on the trails.

Also joining the conversation are Ilya Parker, owner of Decolonizing Fitness, and Natalia Petrzela, associate professor of history at The New School, to talk about the history of fitness culture and its intersections with diet culture.

10 important lessons to take away about diet culture

1. Diet culture is rooted in racism and misogyny.


“Early evolutionary biologists who were working around [the 1800s] started to point to fatness as a mark of ‘evolutionary inferiority,’” says Christy Harrison, registered dietician and author of "Anti-Diet: Reclaim Your Time, Money, Well-Being, and Happiness Through Intuitive Eating."

This thinking has been used to justify the oppression of people considered to have “excess” body fat, including women and people of color.

2. Body Mass Index (BMI) wasn’t meant to be used as an indicator of health.

In fact, this method of determining one’s body mass wasn’t even invented by a medical professional.

“It was actually originally created by a Belgian astronomer in the 1830s,” says Dr. Louise Metz, an internal medicine physician based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. “It was designed for populations — not for individuals — and was not designed to define health in any way.”

3. It’s impossible to determine someone’s health or fitness based on the way they look.

Just ask Mirna Valerio, creator of the blog Fat Girl Running, who frequently fields “concerns” about her larger size despite the fact that she trains for marathons on a near-daily basis.

“The questions are always there on people's faces,” Valerio says of the weight stigma she encounters on the trail. “The questions about whether I really do the things that I say that I do — because I'm still fat, despite the fact that I've done 14 ultramarathons and 10 marathons.”

4. Medical fatphobia prevents people of all sizes from receiving adequate healthcare.

For those in larger bodies, the prevalence of medical fatphobia means doctors can be quick to attribute their symptoms to their weight — a phenomenon that causes them to rule out other and often more insidious explanations.
“The same goes for someone in a smaller body,” says Metz. “If we assume they are healthy based on their body, we will misdiagnose a high number of people who have metabolic conditions.”

5. Medical fatphobia means you can also be denied treatment based on your size.

Ilya Parker, physical therapist assistant and founder of Decolonizing Fitness, describes the experience of being denied gender-affirming treatment as a result of weight stigma: “I experienced a lot of medical gatekeeping from my primary care physicians, who were literally refusing to initiate gender-affirming care or refer me to an endocrinologist, which is who I needed to see to receive hormone replacement therapy.”

6. Diet culture has always been about money, not health.

At the turn of the century, many doctors took their cues from the burgeoning life insurance industry when deciding which bodies posed the highest financial risk. According to Harrison, doctors at the time began encouraging patients to lose weight “as a way of supposedly reducing health risks, but really, it was about reducing monetary risks from the insurance industry.”

7. Intentional weight loss is rarely permanent

“We see in the research that up to 98% of the time when people embark on weight loss efforts, they end up regaining all the weight they lost within five years,” says Harrison. “In fact, up to two-thirds of people who embark on weight loss efforts may regain more weight than they lost.”

8. Language used in fitness spaces perpetuates transphobia.

Based on his own experiences of being a transmasculine participant in group exercise classes, Parker urges fellow fitness instructors and trainers to reconsider their gendered language.

“It's countless group classes that I've been in where language was so important, especially when you're like: Hey, guys can only do this exercise, ladies can only do this exercise. And then also making the assumption that you know who's in the room.”

9. Diet culture claims that fatness is un-American.

Historian Natalia Petrzela traces this connection back to the 1950s, when physical fitness began to be touted as a key component of American citizenship. “[Politicians] spoke of this in unapologetically fat-shaming ways,” Petrzela says. “I mean, JFK gives this big talk about the ‘soft American’ and how an American who is physically soft is a national liability.”

10. You can decline to be weighed at the doctor’s office.

“Let your provider know that you would like medical care from a ‘Health at Every Size’ perspective,” says Metz. “And if you do not want to discuss weight or weight management at your visit, then you have the right to ask for that.”
 
But there’s no body shape that’s intrinsically good or bad.

Yes there is. Being Dr. Now's next patient is certainly not good. Being fat is nothing to be proud of or feel good about.

Body Mass Index (BMI) wasn’t meant to be used as an indicator of health.

It's pretty accurate as an indicator for health when it comes to gigantic fatasses.
It’s impossible to determine someone’s health or fitness based on the way they look.

The average fat fuck is in no way as healthy as the average normal weight individual. I find it hard to believe this person trains for marathons yet doesn't lose weight. How far does she actually run?

The diets they are talking about are fad diets. That's why they don't work. They are not sustainable because they rely on weird eating habits and overpriced products. You can keep weight off for good. It involves changing your eating and exercise habits. You have to make lifestyle changes and keep them up. You don't need the diet industry to do that. You can do it yourself without paying a monthly fee. You just don't have the commitment. You'd rather stuff your face with McD's and claim you're healthy. If I die before you I hope you don't get my heart.
 
"Trying to push illness as health: Yet another attempt to censor healthy natural thinking"

- what the clown journo really meant?

'Diet culture is rooted in racism and misogyny.'
So Woke to English: 'Healthy dieting is rooted in wrongthink.'?

Up to a decade of this insane endless BS now. It would be nice if Current Year would end already.
 
3. It’s impossible to determine someone’s health or fitness based on the way they look.
Literally untrue.

Just ask Mirna Valerio
Screenshot 2022-01-02 at 21-11-52 mirna valerio - Google Search.png


“The questions are always there on people's faces,” Valerio says of the weight stigma she encounters on the trail. “The questions about whether I really do the things that I say that I do — because I'm still fat, despite the fact that I've done 14 ultramarathons and 10 marathons.”
It's almost like the laws of thermodynamics themselves cast doubt on your claims. If you're exercising as much as you want us to believe that you are, then the only way you're not in caloric deficit is if you're pigging out in between. You're not going to convince people that waddling around with all of that extra weight is a healthier lifestyle than if the weight wasn't there.
 
1. Diet culture is rooted in racism and misogyny.

It's rooted in the desire to appeal to the opposite sex and create offspring. It also has roots in insecurities that people have about themselves, which in part can be shaped by society or something as close to home as your mother having a fixation on thin arms and legs being delicate and drilling that into you from a young age. But no one talks about weight more than women: buff men are heroes and shabby blobs are basement dwelling incels, too thin woman are unhealthy and gross, too fat women are strong and independent, female celebrities having candid photos taken of them are disgusting because they dared walk out with some cellulite or some flab in between diets and projects.

The "dude bro gym" stories that circulate the internet are largely positive experiences shared with the goal of motivating other dudes to get their shit together, because they're supported to a degree in these spaces. The weight stories are thin women telling fat women to shut up or fat women telling the whole damn world to shut up (but also thin women for daring to be healthy, fuck those bitches).

3. It’s impossible to determine someone’s health or fitness based on the way they look.

Impossible, this person says, when some ailments are only discovered later on because they have specific physical signs to show that someone is unwell. As if the human body doesn't routinely do shit like this so that the host understands they're in some serious fucking trouble. But no, go on about how having an ass the shape of a man-made piece of furniture is totes healthy and not at all a signal that something might be terribly wrong. Chicken pox is a hoax by the patriarchy!

4. Medical fatphobia prevents people of all sizes from receiving adequate healthcare.

People too chicken shit to admit they're on death's door so they can receive the adequate treatment and start living a healthier life isn't fatphobia or a fault of the medical system. You being upset your doctor tells you you're fat because you're fucking obese and need to eat differently isn't inadequate healthcare.

8. Language used in fitness spaces perpetuates transphobia.

Because the biological differences between man and woman are never more prominent than they are in a field that deals directly with them. You can pretend you're a fairy gold cuckold queen all you want but if your body is capable of doing certain shit or not, it's in part because you were born a man or a woman and you cannot change that fact after birth and especially not after puberty.

7. Intentional weight loss is rarely permanent

That doesn't make trying to lose weight bad, you dumb fuck. Next thing you're gonna tell me hard drugs are a-okay because addicts tend to relapse without the proper support and mental fortitude.

9. Diet culture claims that fatness is un-American.

Being proud about having such ease of access to food and gluttonous habits and glorifying a road leading directly to an unhappy life and death truly is an American whiny piss baby problem, you're right.

10. You can decline to be weighed at the doctor’s office.

And a doctor can decline to deal with your lunacy because they understand you're not here to be helped, you're here for ass pats and affirmation that your shit lifestyle and suicide is totes okay girl, yas slay.
 
“It was actually originally created by a Belgian astronomer in the 1830s,” says Dr. Louise Metz, an internal medicine physician based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. “It was designed for populations — not for individuals — and was not designed to define health in any way.”
What does that matter? Scientific discoveries routinely cross boundaries as new applications are discovered. Fitting the thread, the magnetron was originally invented for radar but ended up being very useful as a microwave oven.

And it is true that BMI is not always useful or applicable, but the type of people who trigger "false positivies" on the BMI aren't the types it's intended for.
 
Stop calling it fatphobia. I'm not afraid of you, I'm fucking disgusted by someone who weighs in at twice the average. The arguments they present may be applicable to someone who's 10 or 20 pounds overweight, but they wanna act like being over 100 pounds overweight is just fine. You should feel shame for being that fat. Healthy at any size is a blatant lie.
 
If you decline being weighed now the doctors will do it after you become incapacitated. They might have to wait a few decades but they are very patient.
 
Stop calling it fatphobia. I'm not afraid of you, I'm fucking disgusted by someone who weighs in at twice the average. The arguments they present may be applicable to someone who's 10 or 20 pounds overweight, but they wanna act like being over 100 pounds overweight is just fine. You should feel shame for being that fat. Healthy at any size is a blatant lie.
This needs to be on billboards all across America (and anywhere else with a landwhale infestation.)

Also "racist and misogynist" are words I do not want to hear smooshed together as an argument against anything. They mean different things! AND! Neither are relevant here since anyone can be skinny and anyone can be fat, given the right circumstances.
 
Wstecz
Top Na dole