The always-amazing Katha Pollitt discusses the ridiculous hyper-masculinity of our bullshit elections, and the mysterious absence of the other 52% of the population, in The Girlie Vote.
Matt Cheney's got a new discussion going on at the Mumpsimus about the bizarre articles department at Strange Horizons (I've tried to join in this discussion, but I've been having trouble getting the comments to work).
And, in case people think that I'm narrow-minded and *never* listen to political rants from conservative Republicans, well, put your fears to rest. I get hours of mindless entertainment out of such ranters here.
On a more serious note, though I don't like to tote abortion rights "merely" to protect the "life" of the mother (wow, it sounds infinitely sick to feel that I have to say that), here's a useful first-person account from a woman who's much-wanted potential child ceased growing and expired after 19 weeks gestation - and due to Bush's progressive ban:
"She walked around for a week, bleeding, with her dead baby inside of her, because the virulent political controversy around dilation and extraction meant that no one was willing to provide her with proper medical care. This could happen to me. This could happen to any woman."
Repeat after me: "Being a woman whose reproductive health is administered by men's laws and powers of vote and veto is FUN!!"
And, one more, because I can't end of the above story, as it leaves me with a bad taste in my mouth: here's a list of the top blogs being accessed and linked to around the blogosphere, in case you're curious (I was quite happy to see that Cory Doctorow, Xeni Jardin et al over at boingboing are ranked at #2)
Monday, September 13, 2004
Up, Up and Away
Fat Girls, Obesity, and the American Obsession with "Thin"
So, I did get the inevitable "ping" for my "No Shit, Sherlock" post about the latest study CNN has decided to publish that purports that cardio problems are not necessarily linked to "obesity" or "overweight" as much they are to a sedentary lifestyle. No matter their weight, women (the study only involved women) who exercised for half an hour at least three times a week were healthier than those who did not, though those who did not may have been "thinner."
My poster sites the UK's NHS (National Health Service) website, though not a specific article - it appears he took the quoted text from the NHS Encyclopaedia. I don't particularly need a specific article, of course, because the US is already way ahead of the obesity-speak than the UK (I read The Guardian regularly, so I've kept up with their pacing of the US regarding obesity as a disease, school lunch reforms, rising fear and panic about slothful, gluttonous children, and outsized women et al). The US has, of course, already gone far past this and moved into gastric bypass surgery on demand (As I recall, there are currently appeals to the UK's NHS to perform this surgery free of charge to "patients." Gastric bypass surgery reduces the size of the stomach, inhibiting how much one can eat, and in effect, you suffer from malnutrition for the rest of your life, and have to subsist on supplements until the last breath leaves your body). What most studies have not done is separated out the sedentary and non-sedentary and controlled for that factor when making judgments about the correlation between weight and one's propensity for disease. They've even "discovered" a great thing to do with "obesity hormones": inject them in women suffering from anorexia or female athletes who've trained so hard that their bodies have dipped below the 10% body fat requirement that allows them to menstruate. Yes. That's right. Instead of telling a woman who wants to get pregnant that she should "gain weight" (that 10% body fat requirement is there for a reason), they'll inject thin women with leptin to trick their bodies into thinking that they've got enough resources to nourish children! Great!
I've watched the increasing medicalization of fat with some amusement, trepidation, and disgust. When I was five or six, and first got the Fat Talk from Concerned Adults, it had to do with their fear that I would be outcast at school, and in later life, lack for a sexual partner. The health aspect was peripheral at best. Now "obesity" is categorized as a "disease" whose symptom is "excess body fat." unfortunately, "excess body fat" is an extraordinarily relative term. "Excess body fat" isn't a disease. It's a symptom. For most of history, body fat has been a "symptom" of health and prosperity. The truly excessive body fat that impeded movement, the sort linked to sloth and gluttony, was most derided in the Christian era. Christianity had an abhorrence for the physical "earthly" body that still lingers into today, though today it's called "not letting oneself go," or "attaining self-perfection" - and both terms are now considered positive.
Want to know what the indicator of excess body fat is today? The BMI system. Where did the BMI system initially come from? Insurance companies. Who did all the medical studies to figure out the simple height/weight formula? No one. MET Life looked around at the people in the office, did some quick averaging, and printed up the now ubiquitous BMI charts. Yep. That's it. Not one single study was conducted in order to create the BMI charts. No doctors sat down with control groups, nobody measured body mass composition (muscle to fat ratio). For a far more realistic (but, I think, not quite lenient enough) BMI chart based (again, not on scientific evidence ::sigh::) on the goal weights of others in your age/height/gender range, and how drastically this differs from the very odd BMI charts promulgating the internet (the MET Life BMI chart, the insurance one, is the one you'll see most often. The other was, indeed, concocted by doctors - back in 1974, when they were trying to work out medication dosages, not critique fat or lack of it), check out this site.
My biggest issue with BMI is that few of them take age into account, and NONE take body shape and body mass into account (each individual has a differing bone and muscle density). According to the MET Life BMI, Brad Pitt is obese. Seriously. Muscle is heavier than fat. If your goal for "healthy" is taking up *less* space in the world, you may as well do this.
My quarrel isn't with health. I think we should all be able to take a couple flights of stairs without being out of breath. You should be able to walk a mile or two for fun, without feeling like you're going to die afterward. You should be able to lift things, to bend and twist and interact within the world without feeling like you need to sit down every five minutes. And for those with the time, money, and will, I'm a big proponent of competitive sport and conditioning, all of which require a balanced diet to keep the body running properly. This means you're likely going to have a very low amount of body fat - but it doesn't mean you're going to be "thin" in the supermodel sense of the word. Being that "thin" for most women means loss of muscle mass and loss of the ability to produce children.
The average white American female teenager's ideal body type is 5'7, 117lbs. One female survivor of Auschwitz measured 5'2, 55lbs. Add 10lbs per inch to get her to 5'7, and she's very nearly the American teen ideal.
How fucked up is that? I make "jokes" about concentration-camp chic, but they aren't really "jokes." They're not funny.
Too many people have conflated "health" with "thin." When I read all of these reports about the Evils of Obesity, I want to hit people. The language is flawed. When we talk about the Evils of Fat, we aren't talking about health, anymore than when we're talking about abortion we're talking about preserving some sort of mythical life (as opposed to the life working to bring the other to fruition, a nurturing that only succeeds 2/3 of the time anyway, without medical intervention of any sort, but I've already done that rant).
We're talking about fat people. We're talking about beauty, misogyny, aesthetics, and (the dirty word in America, though Britain is rife with talk of it) class.
We live in a largely sedentary society whose bottom rungs work a couple of jobs just to make ends meet. They often have children, and if they're women and/or single mothers, they're working upwards of three jobs including the care of their children and the maintenance of a home life. When you come home after standing at a mindless job for 12 hours, you want to come home and collapse. Exercise? Very funny. McDonald's and some mindless TV will do. Besides, how much does proper exercise cost? Sure, you could walk around the block, but what if you're in a shitty neighborhood (as many poorer people are)? What if, in addition to a merely bad neighborhood, you get home well past dark, living in a city with the highest murder rate in the country (Ah, Chicago)? You'd have to be able to afford a gym fee, or an exercise bike. And let me tell you, when it comes down to paying the heating bill or getting an exercise bike, guess what wins out?
Rich people - or single "young professionals" like me, who have no kids to take care of and were lucky enough to scrape out an education and slither into cozy desk jobs - have excess money, excess time, and the will to spend it. The times in my life when I've been the most out of shape were when I was the poorest (working two jobs and going to school, trying to pay rent and live on my own for the first time; and again in South Africa, once again desperately trying to pay bills, and this time around, also complete a master's degree in a foreign country). When life is a breeze, you've got more time to pay attention to status indicators like weight, and if you're looking to move up in the workplace or go on media tours, you're definitely making "image" a priority.
"Image" being the key term here.
If "health" were the biggest issue here in the US, we'd have a national health care system. We'd have a welfare system that supported people beyond the subsistence level, and a minimum wage that afforded people the ability to keep a roof over their heads that didn't belong to their hand-me-down car. If we were really so freakin' concerned about other people's health and welfare, you'd see less disgust at the Evils of the Fat and more interest in improving working wages, working hours, childcare, and access to education.
The "obesity epidemic" is another handwave. It's not a disease. It's a symptom. For those few who are actually sedentary, obese adults in the "dangerous health" range (the "healthy" range actually spans an 80lb range, not the narrow 15-lb range the MET Life bullshit BMI spouts on about) where "excess weight" impedes mobility, it's a symptom of a system catering to old white men with old white money. We're being peddled drugs and operations toted by old white male doctors who're getting rich on spreading Fear of Fat the same way Bush is trying to get himself re-elected through Fear of Terrorism (because he did such a great job "protecting" us three years ago).
I'm a firm believer in taking care of yourself: of eating good food, hanging out with good friends, drinking good wine, going on long walks on the beach and long bike rides in the park, and pursuing projects that make you the best person you can be. I resent being told by a screaming news media funded by dieting companies and profiteer doctors (it's all profiteering in the US) that I should hate myself for everything I do and don't do, that I should spend the best moments of my life counting every calorie, declining every beer, and passing up on social occasions because I haven't jogged 18 miles today so I can fit into the latest Abercrombie & Fitch 00.
Sure, fat people die of heartattacks.
But you know what? Thin people do too.
No more spin. I'd like some straight talk.