I am obese.
No, correct that. I am grossly obese. When I weighed myself this morning, the scale tipped at 363. It's, well, "gross" is really the only word, isn't it?
I have no one to blame for this condition but myself. My obesity is the result of choices I have made, many of them, over a period of years. The premature baby of four and a half pounds didn't become someone all too close to four hundred overnight. It has taken me years of choices, choices about food (too much) and exercise (far too little).
My fatness, my grossness, is my responsibility. No one else's.
I'd chastise others for intolerance of the obese, fatism, or whatever the politically correct might be calling it today. But that would be wrong. As Jesus said, the judgment of other's character is not mine, but His. And, to be honest, I'm guilty of the same intolerance. Of the same exclusivity of tastes.
Do I consider women of my shape as equally "beautiful"? Do I not prefer women who look good in miniskirts and stilettos, small-breasted women who look good in basic black evening gowns plunging down to here and slit up to there. I'm not particularly proud of these prejudices of mine, but denying would be lying, and worse.
Do I only laugh
with the late John Candy and the Kung Fu Panda? Or do I laugh with them
only because I'm also laughing
at them in their fatness? When I watch Beverly Hills Ninja, do I see anything other than a fat man, a buffoon because of his presumption to martial arts mastery and the attention of the young and leggy Nicollette Sheridan?
I laughed and shuddered at the "People of WalMart" photos, but as I was doing so, did I remember that, unlike me, many of those people probably can't afford to shot at CasualMaleXL, Or KingSizeDirect, much less at Rochester Big and Tall? That were I, like them, relegated to choices of the WalMarts and Targets and the other stores in their town, I'd have few choices in my size, that I might find myself having to buy clothes two sizes too small?
This is not a request for pity, or even understanding. As I said, I know who bears responsibility for my condition. I see him every day when, in the morning, I ask myself to look in the mirror.
When I'm in an excuse-making mood, I might blame my weight on the bad knees that made me stop my two favorite athletic activities, running and basketball. Or on "the job" that keeps me sedentary all day and mentally exhausts me so that I wish nothing other than vegetation in an easy chair and mindless movies in the evening. Or I'd gripe about the insurance company who professes to be concerned about wellness but refused to pay for a visit to my physician because the physician's primary diagnosis was "obesity."
But when I'm honest with myself, I know these all for the impostering excuses that they are.
It's no one else who lets the Bowflex and the Total Gym go unused. It's no one else who failed to go to the health club when I was a member. It's no one else who doesn't take the dog for enough walks. It's no one else who buys the cheese and the lunchmeat and the large fries. Who eats an excess of processed sugar and flour.
It is one individual, and one individual alone who is responsible. One individual and one individual alone who has made talk of "retirement planning" moot. One individual, and one individual alone who has made it unlikely that my heart will survive my fifties. One individual and one individual alone who has led me down the path to GERD, to glucose intolerance, to a whisper's distance from Type II diabetes. One individual and one individual alone who has spent most of his life squandering the gifts God has given him.
No, this essay is not a request for pity or sympathy or any of that. I'm not deserving.
If I would ask anything of you, I would ask you to simply remember that each fat person you meet or observe is still an individual. That they aren't fat because they fit some particular abstraction like "lazy" or "socially inept" or "hate themselves" or "dumb" or "lower class" or "uneducated."
That they are obese because they have made an individual's choices. And that each individual chooses because of the particulars of their being at the moment of choice. I know that in economics we talk about choices as the result of perceived costs and benefits, yet all of us -- economists and non-economists alike -- should not forget that those perceptions are always those of discrete and unique individuals.
I don't claim that all fat people chose their too-much-eating and their too-little-exercise for the same "reasons" I chose mine. My choices were made because of my particulars, the particulars that of my brain have tended me toward depression and a lack of lifelong relationships, the particulars of my development that have shaped my fears of social contact and what other people think, the particulars of my body and mind and soul. And my particulars are not the identiical particulars of other fat and out-of-shape people any more than they are the identical particulars of thin and in-shape people.
In my opinion there is only one generalization you can apply to the fat and the obese: that almost none of us set out to be fat or obese. We chose other things -- eating and exercise practices, most particularly -- that led down our paths to fatness and obesity. Yes. Of course. But those other things we chose, not for the same reasons or from the same perceptions, but for unique and individual ones.
That is true of the choices each fat or obese person has made to get where they are today. And that is true of the choices they make today and for whatever tomorrows their prior choices have left them.
I do not ask you to excuse them of their responsibility for their choices, any more than I ask you to excuse me of mine. I do not ask you to blame yourselves or society for those choices, either. I ask that you strive to remember that they are individuals. That they have not followed your path because are not you. That choices which you see as obvious or easy or essential they may see as neither obvious nor easy nor essential. That choices you see as simple they see as anything but.
Not because they are dumb or lazy or ignorant or socially deprived or poor.
But because they aren't you. Because they haven't lived and moved on your path.
OR each other's.
OR mine.
Only their own.
Thanks for listening.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)