Maintenance Phase - What's Our Deal?
Episode Date: October 12, 2020Welcome to Maintenance Phase! In our first episode, we tell our origin stories and talk about some of the basic ideas behind the show. Here's where to find us:Aubrey: https://www.yourfatfriend.co...m/Mike: https://rottenindenmark.org/Thanks to Ashley Smith for editing assistance and Doctor Dreamchip for our lovely theme song!Support us: Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PayPal Get Maintenance Phase shirts, stickers and moreSupport the show
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Hi everybody and welcome to Maintenance Phase. My name is Aubrey Gordon and I am here with
my co-host Michael Hobbs. Hello. Yeah, hi. Hi. We're doing like a little overture episode.
This is like a little teaser because we know that when people find a new podcast, oftentimes they scroll down to the bottom of the feed.
That's what I do.
Yeah.
Yeah, so we wanted to give folks a little introduction
to who we are, what this podcast is,
and sort of what are some of the underlying critiques
that are gonna come up,
and we're gonna talk about our own experiences
in relation to those.
False, I will be revealing nothing about myself,
but proceed.
Ironically, the anonymous person here
is gonna be the whole world.
Oh, my God.
Should we talk about our inspirations for the show
and how we got the idea of doing it?
Yeah, why don't you kick us off on this one?
So my desire to do a show like this
came from a couple months ago.
I was looking through the sort through the top charts on Apple podcasts
and health is one of the categories.
And I was scrolling through the top,
I don't know, 50, 100 health podcasts
and very, very, very few of them were subversive at all
or seemed to be in any way skeptical
of the wellness industry.
So I thought it would be a good idea to have a show that is kind of curious about this
stuff.
And if we find good ideas, that's fine.
But also, I think it's important to be like, are we really becoming healthier with all
this stuff?
Totally.
And we have very conveniently as a culture just collapsed our definition of health into
our visual assessment of our own weight.
That's a good way to put it.
Even really smart, thoughtful people,
except fully,
then how fat you are is a direct measure
of how healthy you are.
And the underpinning of that is that
it is your responsibility to be as healthy as possible.
Yeah, a lot of the other shows seem to have this
kind of like our fat people, people kind of vibe.
We're like this very exotic concept.
And so we're just sort of taking that as a starting point.
Yeah, we're gonna assume that fat people are people.
You know what?
So do you wanna tell people who are these millennials?
How would you get that going to ultra-out into my ears?
Who are these millennials? Who are these millennials?
Showing me into the extended group of us. What's your deal, Aubrey?
Who is my deal? So I am a writer. You may know my work as your fat friend if you
have read anything by that person. That's me. And I started writing about being fat
because I'm a fat lady. And I have been a fat lady pretty much my's me. And I started writing about being fat because I'm a fat lady.
And I have been a fat lady pretty much my whole life.
When I graduated from high school, I was a size 24,
which was at that point, the largest size available,
even in plus size stores.
So yeah, a lot of high school spent wearing sweatshirts
with polo collar sewn in.
They're like, if you're this fat, you must be 60 or 80.
Oh, God.
That's why it's for wearing men's wear.
We were talking about earlier.
Anyway, like pretty much every fat person,
I tried every weight loss method
that was available to me.
As I did that, as I went on diets and diet drugs
and detoxes and cleanses and lifestyle changes
and whatever else, the same thing pretty much always happened,
which is that I would lose a little bit of weight,
10 or 20 or sometimes as much as 50 pounds.
I would lose that weight and then I would reliably gain it back
and then some.
The more I tried to lose weight, the fatter I got.
It's a very rare experience that only happens to 99%
of people who go on extreme diets.
So we're really uncharted waters now.
Totally.
And the only explanation that was available to me for that was that it was a personal failure.
That's the only message that we ever get.
If a fat person is fat, especially as fat as I am, it has to be their fault.
Subsequently, we sort of deserve whatever's coming to us.
Yes.
If people are shitty to you, sorry. That's just what happens to fat people.
Yeah. Wait is the number one reason that kids are bullied at school? I feel like a lot of
people don't know that. Yeah. And it's generally something that we just like accept. Like, well,
you know, she is pretty big. So, you know, like that's that tends to be the way that these
kinds of bullying experiences get framed.
And it's correct.
Yes, absolutely.
And it becomes like such a big thing, right?
That there are some cases of children being taken away
from their parents because the kids are fat
and that must be a failure of parenting, right?
I didn't know about that, that's bad.
Oh, yeah.
So like, we have sort of taken this reasoning
to such extremes that we are building social systems
around the right, and that is like really troubling to me.
But look, look what you look what you just did. We were talking about you. And then you got into academic research,
which is, which is what you do no matter what we talk about. I asked you something about yourself.
And then like two minutes later, it's like, according to a peer review journal in 1990s,
it looks like,
I'm really out of it. Go back, go back.
in 1990s, it looks like it's like, the other way, other way.
Go back, go back.
Go back.
Listen, you and I are very well matched
for a 100 reasons, and that is one of them.
Part of what's so exciting to me with the podcast
is that it relates really closely
to stuff that has helped me a great deal
in sort of making peace with my own size,
but also thinking critically about how fatness and anti-fat bias
and sort of this idea that everyone owes it to everyone else to be healthy.
Right, because nobody gives a shit about the resting heart rate
or the LDL cholesterol readings of someone who's skinny.
Right. I think people can genuinely believe that they are concerned for fat people's health and that that belief can be rooted in faulty information and biased beliefs that they have been
fed and consumed pretty uncritically for most of us for our whole lives.
It's great. Not all discrimination against a group manifests as like shouting slurs at them from
a pickup truck, right? It can very easily just be an overwhelming sense
of paternalism or this like fake concern.
Right, there is this sort of like no bless oblige
that happens with thin people,
which is sort of disbelief that like I have cracked the code
on being thin and you have not.
Yeah.
So it is my duty to instruct you on how to have a body
that is less like yours and more like mine.
Yeah, but let's talk about your writing because this is how I found you.
This is a lot of other people found you.
You started writing anonymously on the internet, what, five years ago?
Four years ago?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I had gotten into an argument with a friend of mine who I love dearly.
She and I had gotten into this back and forth about a Cheryl Strait
quote of all things.
That's where it started.
I had posted this Cheryl Strait quote that was something like, is there anything more
boring than listening to a woman bemoan the size of her own body or something like that?
So I had had this whole sort of back and forth with my friend who was like, well, but you don't understand how hard it is to stay thin. Oh, we sort of went down this road
where she was like, you don't understand what it's like to be me. And I was like, cool, but also,
you don't understand what it was like to be me. Right. We had this back and forth and I wrote her
letter and sent it to a friend of mine to take a look at. And I was like, hey, can you just tell me if I'm being like a total industrial strength jerk in this letter?
Or if I'm like, this is okay to send to someone
and he was like, it's okay to send to someone
and also maybe you should post it somewhere online
because he was like, I'd like to share it
and I know I handful of people who probably would like to share it.
I was like, sure.
So I posted it online and then within about a week,
I think four year, 50,000 people have read it.
So all of this means that you were into systemic bias before it was cool.
I don't know if you're just what you're saying.
Like you had to even the early EP.
Anyway, so I started writing, you know, for that audience, for people who were good, thoughtful,
kind people, who had never really thought critically about the ways in which they think about and interact with and treat
fat. Right. We are the same age. We have both read a billion newsweek cover stories that are like
the obesity epidemic, obesity among our kids. Like the same framing around obesity are entire lives.
Like how many times have we just seen a random sentence in a random article that's just like, da, da, da, fat people are unhealthy, da, da, da, da, da.
It's one of those presumptions that sort of doesn't even need unpacking anymore.
There's a lot of people who believe this because this is something we've all been told
a million times.
And it's actually more complicated than that.
Believe it or not, it's not as simple as every fat person is unhealthy and every skinny
person is healthy and every fat person needs you to tell them
that they are unhealthy constantly and that will help them and oh it's just like smoking if we shame them everybody will not be fat anymore.
These are things that a lot of us believe without really interrogating them.
Well I mean like that's also part of what's again like helped me pre-emensely right in
feeling okay in my body,
is doing this kind of research, right?
And finding that actually those messages,
those specific actual messages
are part of what's making us fat.
And so is trying to lose weight.
I mean, should we talk about the science a little bit?
I think.
Except hang on,
because I introduced myself and then we started talking.
I feel like you should do a little intro who you are and what brings you to this conversation too.
I wanted to skip that part.
Um, I was trying to keep the focus on Aubrey and the science.
I'm sure you were reported.
So I was, this was like, I don't know, eight years ago or something.
I was on a date with a guy who was, I think, an anesthesiologist.
And I was like, oh yeah, how has your job changed
since you started doing it?
Or something like relatively benign?
And he started complaining about all of the fat people
that he has to see and how it's hard to do anesthesia on them.
And basically complaining about the fundamental tenets
of his job, which are like finding out what an appropriate dose
of an anesthesia is for a patient. And I was getting more and more angry at him and like visibly annoyed on this
fucking brunch date. And he was very quizzical about like why I was defending the basic humanity
of fat people. And then at one point he sort of stopped and he was like, wait, did you have a fat mom
or something? He's like accusing me of like the only reason why I would give a shit about this issue
is because someone close to me is fat, right?
And the worst thing about it is that he's fucking correct.
My mom was fat growing up and it was a huge part of my life growing up.
Was it I saw how hard my mom was trying.
She was on a diet all the fucking time,
which means the whole family was on a diet.
And we saw her make different food for herself.
Like she would make the whole family like a nice meal.
And then she would sit there and eat raw carrots
out of a bowl.
She was on the fucking Ornish diet.
And that was like a huge thing in the late 80s
and early 90s.
And I saw how hard she was trying.
And I saw how shitty the world was to her.
My friends made comments. We would be in public and people would make comments. Waiters and
waitresses at restaurants would make comments. If she asked like basic questions about the
food like, Oh, is the salad included with that? She'd get these sort of eye rolls, right?
Like, Oh, the fat lady wants to know about the salad. Like, it was so palpable to me.
Just what bullshit it was, right?
Because she was constantly being told
that she should lose weight.
And it was like behind the scenes,
I knew as young as like 5, 6, 7,
that like she's fucking trying her best, man.
And it's not working.
Everyone is shouting at her to do this thing
that she is already doing.
And nothing is ever enough.
Right, and also like as a kid, I don't know, man.
If you have a decent mom, right?
Like a mom who's like that abusive or whatever.
I don't know that there's anybody
that you feel closer to in the world
and more defensive of in the world.
Fuck that nannis-hesiologist.
Truly.
I also think it's worth sort of busting one of the myths.
I think one of like the accusations of sort of I guess like the fat politics
or fat activism community online is that sort of they're implying that there's no unhealthy
fat people or that every single fat person is just as healthy as every single skinny person.
And that is not the argument.
There are unhealthy fat people, there are unhealthy skinny people, there are healthy fat people.
I mean, I think it's a fundamental argument of the fat activism community and the fundamental
argument of this show is that this is all individual. Weight and health are two distinct
concepts and sometimes they overlap and sometimes they don't. So one of the most striking statistics
I came across when I was researching a big long article that I wrote about this two years ago now, I think, is that one third of quote unquote obese people
have completely normal health markers,
like they are not unhealthy,
they do not have any of the risk factors,
and around 25% of skinny people do have the risk factors.
Yeah.
So the whole point of this is that
individual variation in this matters
and weight and health are not the same thing.
This is all one big scatter plot.
Yes, the idea of a healthy fat person existing
is like inconceivable.
Right, you can go on Google Scholar
and you can find a million studies
that find a correlation.
Right, if you look at a population of a million people,
you'll find that weight is correlated with poor health.
For decades, what we've been told
is that one thing is necessarily causing the other
and that all we need to know about is that like,
fat people are unhealthy so people shouldn't be fat.
Boom, right, like we solved it.
Yeah, but of course, it's not clear from those studies
if the same thing is causing people
to be both unhealthy and fat, right?
That there's actually more studies coming out now
that are showing that fat people who exercise regularly are healthier than skinny people who don't exercise regularly. Diet
and exercise do matter, like no one is pretending that those things have nothing to do with
health. But oftentimes there are lots of people who exercise a shitload and eat really
well and they're fat. And there's a lot of people who never exercise. We all know these
people and they're skinny. And so we're not trying to sort of transfer the stigma.
Like, let's be shitty to people who don't exercise
regardless of their weight.
Right?
It's more about like taking the actual like
the blaming-ness out of the whole thing altogether.
And I would say our research around fatness
is very fundamentally shaped by our existing biases
and beliefs about fatness and fat people, right?
There was a big deal study in like maybe 10 years ago from the CDC,
was the first time they had studied anything, funded any studies related to lesbians.
What? Oh yeah, there research question, the question that they decided to fund,
the very first one was,
Why are lesbians so fat? No way.
100%.
The fundamental research questions that we ask are not, hey, in what ways are fat people healthy?
And what things are fat people, you know what I mean?
Like, what's the role of bias in all of this?
What's the role of dieting in all of this?
Yeah, the problem with these correlational studies is that fat people have a lot more in common
than just their weight, right? So another thing that links the experience of fat people
is worse medical care. Because fat people often delay going to the doctor because they know
that doctors can be extremely stigmatizing about their weight. Like, I interviewed, I think
it ended up being like 66 people for this article for HuffPose that I wrote two years ago.
Every single fat person who I interviewed has had terrible experiences with the doctor.
Like, you go in for a migraine.
I talked to one woman who was in a fucking train accident and went in with like a dislocated shoulder
and the doctor said, how long have you been this way?
Yeah.
There are all kinds of studies about the fact that fat people do actually delay medical
care.
And so the idea that that would have some sort of effect on their health over time is
like not totally nuts.
Like I have spoken to fat people who have had tumors like growths that show up on their
X-rays and their doctors will tell them, oh, lose weight before we do anything about
it and it turns out to be cancer.
100% and I would say I had a doctor at one point who I went in to get examined and he
would not touch me.
Oh my God.
He was too uncomfortable to make eye contact.
Jesus Christ.
And he told me to come back when I lost weight.
Oh.
It is often an indicator of the care that will follow.
Oh yeah.
It is often an indicator that this doctor or nurse or whatever stripe of health care provider is not actually equipped to care for you because their biases are so front and center, right?
Because this is the only thing that they can talk about. And because doctors are frankly trained to assess patients on like, what's the most likely cause of X and such thing. And for most folks, it is like visually presents
that you are fat, therefore, whatever you were having
must be cause of that.
I will say I also went in at one point.
I am like a 36 year old baby in that.
My stress reaction is that I have ear infections.
It's like fully like an infant.
Okay, like I just need like bubble gum,
a moxicillin or whatever,
meaning to like get through these ear infections.
I went in at one point and I had a double ear infection.
So one in each ear and the doctor was walking me through
sort of like he need to use these ear drops.
He need to take these antibiotics.
And I was like great, is there anything else I need to know
about after care?
And he was like, well, you need to lose a lot of weight.
Oh my God. And I was like cool. I'm talking to know about aftercare and he was like, well, you need to lose a lot of weight. Oh my God.
And I was like, cool, I'm talking to you
about my ear canal, which definitely did not get fat.
Yeah.
He was so sort of encrained with this idea
that like every fat person needed to hear from him
that they needed to lose weight in every interaction.
This to me is the much more salient point.
Like we could sit here and do studies back and forth
about the complexity of the relationship between weight and health
and various, you know, small studies and big studies.
Like, we could talk about the science for a thousand years
and we will eventually do an episode on the science around weight and health,
but it doesn't fucking matter.
Yeah.
So, even if every single thing that your doctor and my anesthesiologist guy, even if every
single thing that they think is true, every single fat person is unhealthy, great.
You are correct sir, congratulations.
Now what?
We know from a billion studies for a billion years that between 95 and 98% of attempts to lose weight fail.
We also know that out of many of those attempts, people end up gaining weight.
So what do we do with that information?
Because we know that telling people to lose weight does not help.
We know that putting them on unsustainable diets makes it worse.
Whenever I tell people that I wrote this article
or that this is a really important issue to me,
everybody wants to debate the fucking science
and they're like, oh, what about calories?
You get into these technical scientific debates
immediately and they don't fucking matter.
They're nice to people.
What fat people need is for their basic humanity
to be acknowledged, they need a medical system
that actually asks them what they need.
Like what's going on with your ear, Aubrey?
Yeah.
Like that's what people need.
They don't actually need to be told for the 10 billionth time lose weight because that
doesn't fucking work.
Well, it does do one thing, which is it makes us fat.
All right, it just makes it worse.
Good point.
Totally.
So the experience of anti-fat bias amongst fat people is extremely universal.
94% I think of fat people in the US report experiencing some form of antifat bias like recently. Yeah, it's bad.
And most frequently that comes from family, friends, partners, right?
Folks will report about partners actually restricting their food intake or monitoring
their food intake. But it also comes from people like their doctors and their bosses and
strangers on the street and co-workers. It just comes from all sides, right? And what we
know from research is that that triggers what researchers call obesogenic processes,
my least favorite term, which is a series of processes that actually make us
fatter. In some cases, it's a result of cortisol and other stress hormones that hang onto
whatever energy you have got for your fight or flight response, that we don't really think
about the ways in which we are sort of triggering these biological responses in fat people by
the way that we treat them. To your point earlier about your article, one of the things that absolutely blew my mind
about that article, I've read it, I'm going to say 10 times at the point.
Okay, just go back to it all the time and recommend it to people constantly.
It's so good, buddy.
It's so good.
I tried to interview you for it and you ghosted me on the internet.
I'm still mad about it.
That was, you know what?
The year that I ghosted me on the internet. I'm still mad about it. That was, you know what? The year that I ghosted everyone.
Fair enough.
Within the first year of writing as your fat friend,
I was just like, I don't know what to do
with this level of attention.
So I'm going to fully hide and not respond
to a single email.
I don't know why I set up an email address.
Oh.
Anyway, one of the things that I sort of pulled from that article
and that I think about constantly,
is that actually the fatter you get,
the less likely it is that you will become thin
in your lifetime, right?
Which sort of stands to reason.
But particularly for people my size
and particularly for women my size.
So people with what they call an extremely obese BMI.
Oh, these designations. Yeah. Or super morbidly obese. It's the other one I get.
Cool, cool, cool. Yeah. Makes me feel like a super villain. Yeah.
Is that for women my size, there is less than a one-tenth of one-percent chance. Yeah.
That we at any point in our lives
get to what is considered a quote unquote healthy
or normal BMI, right?
So we are talking about infinitesimal likelihood
that this will succeed and all of our treatment
of fat people is predicated on the idea
that this is not only possible,
but if you can't do it, it's because there's something wrong with you.
And it's necessary. It's like, no, you, you have to do this thing that is almost sure to fail and is likely to make whatever you have worse.
Toad. And it's also, it's double dumb because we know, because again, there's dozens of studies on this, that regardless of the weight that you are at, if you eat well and exercise regularly,
that's going to do a shitload for your health. You might lose weight and you might not.
It's much more important to focus on people's lifestyles and something that they actually
can control, rather than weight, which people can't really control to the extent that we
think they can. A huge number of people are fat because of various medications that they
took, or they can't
work around the block because they're disabled or they have a hip replacement, or there's
a million reasons why people are at the weight that they are at, and there's not a lot that
they can do about it.
I also think that that whole thing of lifestyle choices and stuff, that's basically a conversation
between somebody and their doctor. I am not in the business of surveilling my friends to see how many minutes of exercise they're
getting every day and how many fruits and vegetables they're eating. I'm saying that from like
from an epidemiological perspective, we know that lifestyle changes affect health.
Yeah, on a personal level, it's really not up to you to monitor the lifestyle choices of your
friends, fat or skinny.
Totally. And also like the health concerns
around fat people are also very restrictive, right?
There's not general concern about the health of fat people.
There is very specific concern about the weight of fat people
and the weight related things that might happen to them.
I have to go point. Yeah, because nobody's ever like,
oh, you know, fat people have higher rates of depression
or higher rates of suicide, which are true.
Yeah, nobody's like, oh, we need to do something about this.
It's just like, oh, we need to make them not fat anymore.
That's the only extent to which we actually care
about the health of fat people.
Yes, I had an experience earlier this year, in fact.
I recently had to switch doctors
because I switched insurance.
I went to a new doctor who I found through the whisper network of fat people.
She ran my blood work and she was like, Hey, so it looks like you are on a statin.
Can you tell me why that is?
And I was like, I don't know.
My last doctor said it was good to protect my heart and my kidneys and whatever.
And she was like, cool, cool, cool.
So your cholesterol is
supposed to be between one and 200, right? A sort of range of healthy cholesterol. She was like,
that's a cholesterol medication. And your cholesterol is 19. Oh, she was like, it's the lowest number I
have ever seen. Whoa, she said, you know, looking at past blood work, she was like, I'm guessing you
already had, you know, cholesterol that was on the low side, just based on how you eat, looking at past blood work, she was like, I'm guessing you already had,
you know, cholesterol that was on the low side,
just based on how you eat, right?
Oh, wow.
So the last doctor just gave you a statin,
just like, because you were there,
just like spray the fat lady with statins.
Right, I talked to a friend who's a physician assistant
who said, actually, there is a school of thought
in medicine that is like, you just put fat people
on blood pressure medication, cholesterol medication, and blood sugar medication.
Just do it straight out whether or not they're diabetic, they're going on metform and whether or not they have high blood pressure, they're going on a blood pressure medication.
And that was part of what this doctor had done and it put me at like a significant health risk, right? The risks of very low cholesterol are the same,
basically, as the risks of very high cholesterol.
So I was at like super increased risk of stroke,
of like, you know, heart attack,
of like major, major problems, right?
And that was a direct result of sort of like
being treated the way that a fat person is treated.
And not even telling you, too.
That's fucked, too, to be like,
oh, I'm gonna put Aubrey on this,
but not just like tell Aubrey.
Hey, because you're fat,
I'm gonna put you on this medication.
It's just like sneak in the statin.
Right.
So what do you want, I guess, non-fat people
to know about the history of all of this?
Yeah, so I mean, I think the thing that I think about most often
is we are in a moment of like
full moral panic about fat people, right? It bears repeating and is often sort of left out of
this conversation that like despite the fact that we are all freaking out about fat people at this
moment in our history, there have always been fat people, right? There may be more fat people now than there used to be,
but like people's bodies look different.
They've also always been tall people
and short people, right?
There have also always been disabled people.
We have to get out of this mode of like
envisioning a world which I think many public health
institutions do and many individuals do,
which is that like the best and healthiest world
doesn't have fat people in it.
I remember coming across,
I haven't been able to find it again, actually,
but I remember very vividly years ago,
looking into this and coming across a European,
like a PDF from some European institution,
that was basically proposing that all public health messages
should be geared toward health rather than weight.
Knowing what we know about how ineffective diets are,
we're never going to have a world
where there's deliberately fewer fat people.
So what we can do is focus on health.
Because honestly, diet-related disease is a real problem.
Like heart disease is a problem, strokes are a problem.
And I think I stole
this from Kat Pause. I stole this from somebody, but it's like, we've given up health to focus on weight.
Yep. That's the point of public health is to make us healthier. It should not be the point of
public health to make us skinnier. I personally think that weight and weight related messages
should have no role in public health whatsoever.
I pretty strongly agree.
I mean, I also think like part of,
if we really want to tackle sort of the sets of issues
that you're talking about here,
diet-related disease, getting people moving regularly,
getting people eating more vegetables,
all of that kind of stuff,
then we need to create the conditions
in which that is possible, right?
Oh, yeah. Oh, so we need to create the conditions in which that is possible. Right.
Oh, yeah.
So we need to address the conditions that have parents and particularly single parents
working multiple jobs to make ends meet, which means there is no time to prepare food
and there's often no money to buy like a fancier fresher foods, right?
We also have to, if we really want to get at, you know, sort of a collective and healthier
society, we actually paradoxically need to stop treating health as a mandate and as a moral
obligation, right?
And we need to stop believing that we can assess another person's, that we can and should
assess another person's health by looking at them.
If you really want to help somebody's health build them a bike lane, you know what? Get out there
with cones. Totally. If you really want to help somebody's health, make sure they have a living
wage. Yeah. Make sure they have a place to live. Make sure they have enough money for food.
I mean, the corollary to my belief that public health should give up on weight and focus exclusively on actual public health is
basically the idea that individual messages and cajoling messages and fucking billboard campaigns
don't work.
We've had 30, 40 years now of telling people that fruits and vegetables are healthy, that
everybody should get 30 minutes of exercise every day.
I don't know if there's an American alive who doesn't know that.
In the same way, telling people cigarettes were bad for them did not work.
Right.
So to me, the primary goal needs to be changing the environment and like only 10% of kids
today walk or bike to school.
It used to be 50%.
Very few people live close enough to their work, the thick and walk.
That's another thing like we need denser housing.
Like there's all kinds of other policies
that we need to make it possible
for people to live healthy lifestyle.
Like right now, it's not really possible
to buy a bunch of fruits and vegetables
and to like saute broccoli for dinner
unless you can afford it.
So to me, I really have no interest
in telling any particular individual you need to do X.
It's really much more about like,
well, let's just have a shit load of bike lanes to school and like really wide sidewalks,
so that kids who want to walk to school can. And some kids aren't going to want to,
and some kids won't be able to, and that's fine. The first thing has to be focusing on like,
what can we do to help people? And I really don't think that there's any point in like telling people
for the one billionth time that like apples are better for you than Snickers bars. Totally. And also like, you know, again, if
we're looking at sort of creating a world in which it's possible for folks to
make individual choices, right? We sort of we really like to focus in on
personal responsibility. It's this weird moment when like everyone becomes like a
hardline Republican. I know. When we talk about fatness,
everyone's like personal responsibility,
boop straps, willpower, will, right?
Yeah.
Should we talk about vocabulary briefly?
Yeah, what do you want to say about vocabulary?
I mean, just the one I ever I talk about this,
I mean, I do actually feel a little bit weird about this
as like a thin dude talking about fat people.
And I use the word fat because I have been asked to, and that is my
understanding, from people who are in these spaces who prefer to use the word fat rather than
euphemisms like curvy or big-boned or overweight or obese, which you're really medicalizing.
But it's also an interesting term because it's sort of in the process of being reclaimed,
that there are a huge number of people who do not feel
comfortable identifying self identifying as fat.
And some folks who are not fat, who have never been fat, who are very uncomfortable even
hearing the word.
Totally.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, yeah, can you just talk about that a little bit?
So listen, the harm that comes to me as a fat person doesn't come because someone calls
me fat. It comes much more
often because someone refuses to call me fat and then treats me terribly anyway. Oh, okay. There's
something that happens when I'm with a person who is willing to say the word fat, I know that they
are not so afraid of my body that they will just act out of their own weird biases, right? If someone is willing and able to say the word fat in good faith, right?
That tells me that they are as much concerned with how I identify myself,
as they are with projecting their own beliefs about fatness and fat people onto me
by calling me like fluffy or like more to love or whatever, right?
The sort of challenges that fat people face
don't come from a word.
They come from the ways that we treat fat people.
And if we can't talk about that in a direct and honest way,
we are always gonna fall short in addressing
sort of what fat people need.
And if we can't take direction from fat people
in a conversation that is fundamentally about us, right?
Like part of what we're talking about here is that we have been talking for the last 30 or 40 years
about flipping out about fat people existing, and overwhelmingly that conversation has happened
without fat people's participation.
Can I ask, how have you identified over the years?
Oh, around my body?
Yeah.
I just didn't for a long time.
Oh yeah.
I totally remember having this experience at work.
I spent years as a community organizer
and political organizer.
And I had this experience with a good, good friend of mine
who was a coworker at the time.
We were loading out boxes of materials from the state capital.
And we had these huge boxes that we were carrying
just in our arms, right?
We didn't have like a hand truck or anything.
We had to go up two flights of stairs
to get the materials to where they needed to be.
And I just looked at him and I was like,
the fuck it?
I'm taking the elevator.
And I went over and like with my one free finger,
right, pressed the, pressed the up button on the elevator.
And he looked at me and sort of grinned and went, is that why you're, pressed the, pressed the up button on the elevator. And he looked at me and sort of grinned and went,
is that why you're, you know, large?
Oh, wow.
He was a good friend and he said it sort of
with a twinkle in his eye.
And honestly, like my first response was absolute terror
that he had noticed.
I was so terrified that he had said anything about my size
that I felt like my whole job in the world
was to get people to forget that I was found,
which is an impossible task.
I am five foot six people are gonna notice.
Right, totally.
There's just sort of like core physical characteristics
that are gonna follow us around.
And I remember being first mortified that he had noticed,
and then absolutely delighted that he had actually just said something.
That's interesting.
But that was the first time that I really started like talking about being fat.
Did it feel really good?
It felt immensely free.
Yeah.
Right?
I had spent 20 some years hiding from my own body.
Mm.
That is an impossible task, right?
Like wherever you go, there you are.
Do you have like a coming out process now?
Like when you meet new people, do you have like a way
of telling them like this is a safe thing
to talk about with me?
Oh, I just lead with it.
Oh yeah, I'm just like, look, I'm fat and I'm queer.
Yeah, I try not to shoehorn it into conversations,
but I do try and make sure that it is present
in my first couple of conversations with someone
to just let them know that I know that I'm fat
and that I don't have weird baggage around talking about it.
You know what I mean?
I don't feel, it doesn't feel emotionally heavy to me
to talk about being fat
and actually it feels incredibly liberating.
It is very interesting because I feel like we have
in our brains this coming out narrative for gay people,
but the coming out process for a fat person is, like, there isn't really a script for fat people to do it,
and there isn't really a script for, like, non-fat people to sort of react to it.
Totally. We're totally not used to it. And what usually happens in that moment,
if you have, like, a concerted conversation conversation that is like, look, I'm fat.
I'm not trying to lose weight
because that has never worked for me.
And I'm just going to be a fat person
that what usually happens in that conversation
feels very reminiscent of my like coming out
conversations in the 90s around being clear,
which is thin people will then unleash their many anxieties
about becoming fat onto you.
Oh my god, like when I used to tell my teenage guy friends that I was gay and maybe like sometimes
I watch gay porn, man. And I'm like, I don't need to go there for this. Like one time in boarding school,
a dude gave me a hand job. I'm like, I don't need to know. We're both interns. We don't need to share this.
a dude gave me a hand job. I'm like, I don't need to know.
We're both interns, we don't need to share this.
I will say one crossover question
that I get both for being fat and for being queer
is how do you have sex?
Oh my God.
I don't have her people who just wanna know
like how does it work?
Right, like it's truly just like people's in,
just jumps out.
They're like, be here's a thing that I can't control,
that I have to say to you right now.
Right.
No, there's totally not,
there's not really that kind of script for coming out.
There's not really a script for reacting to it.
Because I feel like people are used to the sort of like
the fat person who makes like self-deprecating jokes
about being fat, like that's a script
that most of us are familiar with.
But I think the thing that people find really threatening
is I am fat and I am not trying to lose weight.
Yeah.
Fat as a concept is weirdly like really fucking triggering
for like non-fat people.
It's fascinating.
People have such strong reactions
to a fat person who is not actively performing shame.
Yeah.
Either in the form of self-deprecating jokes
or pratfalls or like any of that kind of stuff,
or in terms of, I promise you, I ate a salad to like reporting out to them, right?
Like, sin people often expect that fat people will report out what we are eating,
how we are exercising, how it's going, how much weight we've lost, right?
Those are the first things that they need to hear from us in order to engage further at all.
Yeah.
It's real while I'm curious about,
you mentioned sort of response to your article.
Like here I am talking about sort of coming out,
quote unquote, as a fat person.
I'm super curious about sort of like,
what was the kind, what were the kinds of responses
that you got?
Oh my God.
Many of the responses were like people sharing
their personal stories, which were like,
I was like weeping, reading emails,
I was writing people back, like the sort of emotional response
from actual fat people was extremely gratifying.
And it seems like it touched people,
which makes me really happy.
But then the response from non-fat people,
I don't know if you get these,
but I got probably 50 or 100 emails from older,
like 40 to 70 year old dudes, all of which were like no, no, no, no, no, no.
I have a figured out what the fat people don't know is there's actually this system and
then they would walk through this like Baroque fucking clockwork diet thing that they
had figured out and it was like eat like no more than 600 calories before 7 a.m. and then switch to only carbs and then protein and it's like some of them
were like eight pages long and all the diet plans were fucking nuts dude. It was like
eat nothing but venison on Wednesdays and then like collar greens on like Thursdays from
7 to 8. Yeah, I mean like the other thing that I get, I don't know if you get this, I'm sort
of like exploring this lately,
is the, you've got blood on your hands?
Oh, see, I didn't get that as much.
So I get a lot of like, you're killing people.
Glorifying obesity, I got a lot of the glorifying obesity one.
That was great.
Which is also, which is fascinating
because nobody ever talks about glorifying fineness,
which is what we do all the time.
And like, we know how damaging it is to glorify fineness to which is what we do all the time. And like we know how damaging it is to glorify thinness
to the extent that we do.
But no, it's like that's fine
because thinness is healthy, right?
Like all the eating disorders that like fucking teenage girls
are getting totally fine, you know,
because thinness is good.
But glorifying obesity like that's really dangerous.
Yeah, and also glorifying obesity, quote unquote,
like that is a response to one of two things.
It's either work like mine
that's like hey, maybe treat fat people more like people right or it's like a fat person
posts a picture of themselves at the beach on their personal Instagram account and then be more like
you're glorifying obesity and I'm like yeah, I don't know man. It's literally Lizzo like writing a bicycle, like everybody relax. It's just like Lizzo having an enjoyable day.
And then all the comments are just fucking poisonous.
Yes.
Any picture of a fat person engaging in any kind of physical activity,
showing any kind of skin, or with any kind of food in frame with them?
Oh yeah.
Are all glorifying obese people.
I mean, that's the thing of like not trying to lose weight though,
of like just the image of a happy fat person.
It's amazing to me how threatening people find it.
Yeah.
You know, I'm fat, I'm in a bikini, I'm on a beach,
I got a hot dog.
It's like, that is enough to send people
into this spiral of rage.
It's incredible.
Yeah, I mean, I think so this is like the white whale, right?
Of my writing and research is to figure out what that is about.
What is your answer to that? Do you have a theory?
I've had a few theories over time.
So early on one of my thoughts was, oh my god, you feel like you have had to work so hard and be so vigilant to stay thin.
And you've been so terrified of being fat that you've done all of this work to avoid being
fat.
And now you're seeing a person who actually is fat and is doing fine and it makes you mad.
Another one of the theories was this one feels closer to the mark to me, but not quite
it.
That like the way that people talk to me as a fat person,
right, like people like shout things from passing calls,
right, like that's the level that we're operating at.
And I've heard from other fat people,
in particular, when people who are fatter than I am,
who will talk about people throwing trash at them
and stuff like that.
That's very good.
I think in some cases, people are talking to me
as their nightmare future self,
that they are so, they object so strenuously
to my body that they get so strident and kind of mean
frankly, about like how to die and you have to do this
and there's like such energy behind it
that I'm like, oh, you're talking to,
you are talking to yourself.
I actually think so much of the blame for that kind of shit.
I mean, obviously goes to the people doing that,
but also to like public health messaging. I mean, the sort of the basic presumption
of every, you know, billboard, eat five roots and vegetables a day poster we've ever seen
in our lives is it is bad to be fat and fat people are unhealthy. There really aren't any
positive messages about like, leave fat people alone or like fat people are fine or
somebody else's health is known of your business. All of us have grown up in this
just toxic sludge of like being fat is the worst possible outcome for you. We
have sort of been so careless with the way that we talk about fatness and fat
people that we are now at the point that instead of when we talk about health
risks we're actually talking about people. instead of when we talk about health risks, we're actually talking about people.
Right.
And when we talk about people, we're talking about them as if they are health risks, right?
Like human health risks.
And of course, that's going to have a huge impact on, you know, the lion's share of Americans
who have BMI's that put them in the overweight or obese category.
Right.
That's most of us at this point.
I mean, I have interviewed public health professionals
about this and sort of put this argument to them.
And the answer that I have gotten back,
and I think this has really become the sort of standard answer
from public health is this idea that like, okay,
weight stigma is bad, but it's okay to stigmatize
the condition like obesity is bad,
but without stigmatizing individual fat people.
And I think that that is impossible. I don't think that in a billboard campaign that is like
presenting a very simple message, right? Eat vegetables or else you will become fat.
There is no way to do that in a way that is not going to make people think that must
mean that every single fat person refuses to eat vegetables.
Yes.
Right.
There's no way to not send that same message at the same time.
And it's extremely like there are so many parts of our conversation around like fatness
and fat people that feel like echoes of our conversations around gayness and gay people
and transness and trans people, which is we are spinning our wheels for so long on two very basic, very terrible
strategies, right? One is love the sinner, hate the sin, right? Yes. This belief
that you can reject a core part of who someone is and how they move through the world, but
still somehow embrace them.
We have seen time and time again that this does not work and that it is deeply alienating
and stigmatizing.
And the other one that we spend a ton of time on is this idea that it's a choice.
Sin people will continue to behave terribly toward fat people until they feel personally
convinced that it is not a choice.
And no amount of data will do that convincing, right?
The only times that I have really seen
thin people turn around on this
is like the experiences that you're talking about, right?
Have like seeing someone very close to you,
die it for a super long time.
Seeing how hard they try over the course of years and how terribly they are treated.
That is actually like the only thing that I'm aware of
that meaningfully turns then people around of this stuff.
That's dark.
It's super dark and I know from being a queer person
who has done organizing around queer and trans rights
for like a decade plus,
that like we will spend years stuck on that conversation
and it has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not
it's a choice, it is a code word for,
I'm not comfortable with you yet.
Somehow people are convincing themselves
that like yelling at a fat person from their car
is like less of a moral transgression than like being fat.
You're gonna mean like you can maintain your self-conception as a good person,
even while you are literally as an adult bullying other people. You're like, no,
but her being fat, that's bad. Me shouting at a random stranger from my car, that's chill.
Not only that's chill, but like the number of people who say garbage things to me and then look so proud of themselves.
Oh, I know. Yeah, it's like, I must. Like, oh, I would be remiss if I didn't tell this person to be wait.
Ridiculous.
I did my good deed for the day. I yelled at a fat person, and that helped them.
Right? Like that is the belief here, is that like, my abuse is to make you the best you versus
what I'm doing is abuse, right?
Like by any stretch of imagination,
shouting at people from a passing car,
that is an abusive thing to do.
The only time that it is appropriate to do that
is when somebody has a cute dog
and you say, hello, little friend.
I would love it.
I mean, like I tweeted about this recently that I was wearing sort of like,
workout clothes when I went to walk my dog and someone's like,
stopped me to be like, good for you.
You'll get there.
I know I saw you tweeting about that and like my entire face just like
collapsed in on itself with a cringe.
I was just like, oh, a good,
lactic cringe. Totally. And that was a person I was just like, oh, a good, lactic cringe.
Totally.
And that was a person who was absolutely like,
she sort of puffed out her chest
and was like smiling really big.
Like, we did it.
We're doing it.
You're working out.
I'm complimenting you for working out.
Oh, my God.
This is not a workout, ma'am.
Don't.
I'm walking around two blocks.
She should have said, hello little friend.
That's the key.
Totally, just say your dog is a door of the room,
which he is, that would be correct.
So what did you say to that person, actually?
I just waved and kept moving.
I didn't say anything,
because I was just like,
I'm not gonna see this person ever again, right?
Like there's a calculus,
it's a little bit of like organizer brain, right?
It's like how deep is my investment in this person
in our relationship?
And how much energy do I wanna put into it consequently?
Right, right? Like I also had a person a few years ago, stopped me on the street, in our relationship and how much energy do I want to put into it consequently? Right?
Like I also had a person a few years ago stopped me on the street and without even
saying hello, just said, hey have you heard about this weight loss surgery clinic? Oh my god.
Oh my god. Really good, right? Like that was another person who absolutely felt like they were doing
their good deed for the day. Yeah. If that had come from a family member or a close friend or a
coworker or someone who I was gonna see more often,
and or if I felt like I was in a place
of like really being ready to tackle it, then I would.
In both of those cases, I was like,
I am literally passing you by on the street.
I am not spending time on this or on you.
That's like an emotional labor thing too.
Do you really wanna stop and spend 45 minutes?
Like actually the peer review literature
doesn't indicate that white and health are perfectly correlated. It's not your job and
it's just exhausting and you have other things to do today.
Totally. I mean, I will say there are times when I have done that with people in the street.
A couple years ago, it was like 106 or something in Portland, Oregon, which is where I live.
So I walked to work and was wearing a sleeveless dress.
And I was walking past a coffee shop outside my office.
And this guy, I would just walk past this guy
and he just went, nobody wants to see that.
Ah, and I was just like,
what?
First of all, like, what are you doing?
This is absurd.
And I turned around and I just said,
it's 106 degrees today.
What do you think I should be wearing?
Yeah, fuck that guy. And he got really sheepish and he just went, not the, I just said, it's 106 degrees today. What do you think I should be wearing? Yeah, fuck that guy.
And he got really sheepish if he just went, not the...
I was like, okay.
Did you think about giving that guy a noogie?
Just getting under your arm and just rubbing his head
with your knuckles?
I think that would be...
Just full wedgie.
Was there a toilet nearby?
Could there be a twister?
A toilet?
Yeah.
I think he had those in your arsenal.
We're talking a lot about weight stigma here.
And I also think there's something else
that we're gonna talk about here,
which is the role that capitalism plays
in our understandings of health and wellness, right?
But like a lot of the things that we think of
as like tried and true public health knowledge
as just like people out in the world
is actually like a direct result of advertising campaigns, right?
Yeah, electrolytes.
It is gatorade marketing that has taught you that you need to drink a sports drink.
That's not real. You can have a banana or a glass of water. It's fine.
Yes, probiotics are important in your digestive tract and we don't know how to change
the bacteria composition in your gut. There's all this stuff that we so want to believe,
we so want to believe that we can exert a level of control over our own individual health.
And what we know and what disability justice activists have taught us for a long time
is that health is a privilege, it is an accident, and it is necessarily sort of transitory,
right? Yes. I would also say that actual health advice,
like the things that we know from various peer reviewed studies
and don't have tens of millions of dollars
in marketing campaigns behind them are extremely boring.
There is a vast array of healthy diets in the world, right?
Like there are healthy Japanese people,
there are healthy Greek people,
there are healthy Ugandan people.
These are countries with wildly diverse diets. And we know that
humans can be healthy with very different mixes of food, mixes of macro ingredients. There's
not going to be a single thing that is bad for you. There is no such thing as a super
food. In general, the most important thing is finding food that you like and all of
the stuff you already know is good for you is good for you and all of the stuff you
already know is bad for you is bad for you. And it's fine to eat stuff that is bad for
you. Like if you want a brownie, have a fucking brownie. Like there's not going to be like
this a kai berry. I'm probably mispronouncing that even that like some weird smoothie that
you drink that is all of a sudden going to make you healthy
or you're going to cut this one thing out of your diet unless you have like a specific
food allergy, cutting one thing out of your diet or only eating one particular thing is
not going to be the road to wellness.
Like that isn't really how our bodies work.
Well, it's also all very like Ponce de la Ohne, right?
It's all very fountain of youth, right?
Oh, yeah.
What we are addressing is not our actual health needs. What we are addressing is not specific
concerns about our own family history of X, Y or Z condition. We are addressing our own
fear of aging. We are addressing our own profound fear of disability, and we are addressing our own fear of our own mortality,
all of which are part of being human.
Right?
There's also the thing that people do not owe you
healthiness.
Yeah.
If you're interested in your health,
and you really want to eat the healthiest diet
that you can, that's great.
People have different hobbies.
Yeah.
But I think the only extent to which we're going
to give specific advice on this show is to not
assume that your body is going to be relevant for other people's bodies that like maybe you have a
vegetarian diet and you love your vegetarian diet and like you have a ton of energy and you're
super happy with it. Great! Other people are not going to feel that way and just because you are
really diligent about getting your five fruits and vegetables a day It doesn't mean that other people want to be diligent about that or have to be diligent about that
Or can or can I mean especially for cost but also like for various disability reasons a lot of people cannot do the things that
You can do or don't want to do the things that you want to do and it's fine to tell people about like the health
Behaviors that you have without thinking or implying that they should do those too like it's fine to tell people about like the health behaviors that you have without
thinking or implying that they should do those too.
Like it's completely fine for you to tweak and mess with and optimize your health as much
as you feel fit, but other people don't want to do that.
They have other things going on in their lives or health means something different to them
or they're focusing on their mental health and they don't give a shit what they eat right
now.
So like the only sort of like 10 simple tricks,
life hacks that we're gonna give you
is just like mind your own house
and whatever other people are doing
is really not any of your business.
Totally, I will say anecdotally,
I have a good friend who is on social security disability.
She lives in low income housing
where they do not have kitchens in their apartments.
They just have microwaves and they have like a big
roach problems in her building.
So she can't and doesn't keep fresh food in the house
and also she doesn't have the money for it.
Right?
She is also diabetic and she has found TV dinners
that she can afford and don't spike her blood sugar. So she eats like banquet frozen meals.
That is the healthiest choice that woman could possibly make.
And that is a significant leap forward
for her own management of her own diabetes.
And that is a big part of what all of ours
with public health campaigns are like,
definitely don't do this. no circumstances should you do this.
And I'm like, that's actually like the best she's done in the 10 years that I have known
her.
She does not need your seven page long email about how has she tried switching to an all-meat
diet from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. every night?
Like, this is total.
This is not what people actually need. If that's your diet and you're all
Venison all the time have a blast my friend, but that is not going to work for everybody. Yeah, if you know this friend of mine pays her rent, pays her phone bill, and at the end of that has
$40 left for the month for food. Yes, she will be eating banquet dinners and know she can't make your like cool zucchini
noodles that you found in the New York Times. Yeah, yeah, I say that as someone who makes a lot of
zucchini noodles and a lot of New York times. Putting a farmer's market in her neighborhood is now
what she needs. Right. She means like food stamps that cover more than 18 bucks a month. Exactly.
And she needs some fucking celebration of her accomplishment
of figuring out how to manage an incredibly complex
chronic illness on zero dollars.
Yeah.
She is fully dietary health maghiver.
Yeah, okay.
But that's stuff.
So eat as much venison or as little venison as you require.
Enjoy your however you eat as you're hobby.
Yeah, and leave Lizzo alone.
And the tune it, I feel like I'm so excited
about the conversations that we have had
that we're gonna continue to have right on this podcast.
I'm so excited to talk to you all about like,
not just the world of weight stigma,
but also the world of like wellness companies
that are making their money off of our insecurities,
and the ways that they are perpetuating those.
I'm super interested to have these conversations
about the role of capitalism and class
and race and ability and all that sort of stuff
on health and wellness.
And I'm really excited to have a conversation
that is pretty dramatically underserved. Sorry, I wasn't paying attention to that. I had another window, and I'm really excited to have a conversation that is pretty dramatically
underserved.
Sorry, I wasn't paying attention to any of that.
I had another window open where I'm ordering a Jade egg off of goop.com.
Really sorry.
You're just going to have to repeat that please.
Hey! Thank you.