Nok:
The Larger Side - A Rant on the Irony and Hypocrisy of Fetishizing Thinness while Tabooing Fat Admiration
Being into fat women isn't a fetish.
Being into thin women is a fetish.
For millions of years, a fat female body has meant fertility, which, let's face it, is the core of sexuality every bit as much as fun is.
A thin female body, on the other hand, has (no offense) no biological reason to be attractive: it doesn't display the nutrition necessary to make baby brains, it doesn't feel good in bed, and, for most thin women, it also kind of sucks to inhabit... except, debatably, for the attention it gets from people that fetishize thinness.
And that's the crux of the problem: the only reasons to strive to be thin are: one, for that, frankly, deviant and nonsensical attention, and then the only reason for that attention is a novel and deviant modern cultural norm based largely around just how difficult and unnatural it is to be thin; and two, to avoid the negative social attention heaped on anyone that doesn't laud the cult of thinness or has the audacity to actually show in public a body that is larger than borderline anorexic.
It's even become adopted by the medical community itself, despite the dearth of actual evidence. Does excessive visceral abdominal fat have a correlation with some diseases? Yes, yes it does, and that's probably one of the reasons the waist-to-hip ratio is also relevant to instinctual physical attraction to a woman's body.
But there's grosse fallacies imbedded in the medical fear of fat, most prominently: that most fat is not unhealthy; that exercise and healthy foods have far more impact on health than body weight does; and, OF INCREDIBLE IMPORTANCE, that the disease and damage (physical, psychological, social, etc.) caused to individuals and society over the last several decades of cultural bodysize dismorphia and the pursuit (read: fetishization) of female thinness, despite it being neither natural nor healthy, is probably LITERALLY INCALCULABLE (but, certainly, absurdly, obscenely, disgustingly, despicably vast).
The Larger Side - A Rant on the Irony and Hypocrisy of Fetishizing Thinness while Tabooing Fat Admiration
Being into fat women isn't a fetish.
Being into thin women is a fetish.
For millions of years, a fat female body has meant fertility, which, let's face it, is the core of sexuality every bit as much as fun is.
A thin female body, on the other hand, has (no offense) no biological reason to be attractive: it doesn't display the nutrition necessary to make baby brains, it doesn't feel good in bed, and, for most thin women, it also kind of sucks to inhabit... except, debatably, for the attention it gets from people that fetishize thinness.
And that's the crux of the problem: the only reasons to strive to be thin are: one, for that, frankly, deviant and nonsensical attention, and then the only reason for that attention is a novel and deviant modern cultural norm based largely around just how difficult and unnatural it is to be thin; and two, to avoid the negative social attention heaped on anyone that doesn't laud the cult of thinness or has the audacity to actually show in public a body that is larger than borderline anorexic.
It's even become adopted by the medical community itself, despite the dearth of actual evidence. Does excessive visceral abdominal fat have a correlation with some diseases? Yes, yes it does, and that's probably one of the reasons the waist-to-hip ratio is also relevant to instinctual physical attraction to a woman's body.
But there's grosse fallacies imbedded in the medical fear of fat, most prominently: that most fat is not unhealthy; that exercise and healthy foods have far more impact on health than body weight does; and, OF INCREDIBLE IMPORTANCE, that the disease and damage (physical, psychological, social, etc.) caused to individuals and society over the last several decades of cultural bodysize dismorphia and the pursuit (read: fetishization) of female thinness, despite it being neither natural nor healthy, is probably LITERALLY INCALCULABLE (but, certainly, absurdly, obscenely, disgustingly, despicably vast).
Wow. The misogyny is off the charts.
So, I am a buff woman. Neither fat nor thin. Which ... kinda puts me outside of your little binary, but maybe that will lend more credence to my words.
Being into fat women or thin women isn't inherently a fetish. But it is possible to have a fetish for either (or both). In fact, if you can think of it, there's a fetish for it. Kinda like Rule 34.
Also, women exist outside of our ability to procreate and provide sexual pleasure for men.
Women have existed in all shapes and sizes since the beginning of humanity. And as cultures evolve and change certain body types come into fashion.
Right now, there exist cultures that glorify thin women as well as fat women. Both come with their own flavors of toxicity, but it all boils down to one thing:
When society tells women "You must look like this", it creates a kind of violence. There's a pressure to achieve and maintain a certain look as well as punishment for those that don't.
Meanwhile, women's bodies are vilified, objectified, and scrutinized with disregard to the women that inhabit these bodies.
Look, man. Like what you like. If you like fat women, you like fat women. You certainly are in the right place for it. But don't be a prick. Idk what you are going through, but that's no excuse as to how you are acting.
2 years