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Monday, September 20, 2010

Another Open Letter...

Over the weekend, I attended Jaquelyn Frank's Authors After Dark conference in Secaucus, NJ. Overall, it was an amazing, enjoyable weekend. There were plenty of good friends, some I had met before, some I met for the first time. There were readers and authors, both sides fangurling over each other, fun giveaways and free books. Tons of fun was had by all.

Keeping that in mind, what I'm about to say is not a reflection on the conference. It is a reflection on one particular individual, and it should in no way turn readers or authors off from attending the conference the future. It's fun, affordable, and everyone goes home happy.

Unless they spend the weekend having their body weight relentlessly mocked by someone who should fucking know better.

I'm a large woman. I make no apologies or excuses. If I wanted to be thinner, I could be. I could work out more, eat less, I'm large enough that surgery is an option. But I don't pursue any of those options, because I'm happy with my life. It never occurred to me that anyone would feel that they had the right to be unhappy with my size on my behalf.

This weekend, one particular individual, and author who I used to greatly admire and looked forward to spending time at the conference with, took it upon herself to make comments leveled specifically at me, to my face and in front of other attendees in an attempt to shame me about my size. Comments like, "There's nothing worse than a fat woman wearing flowers," in regards to my love of Hawaiian shirts. "Don't eat that, that's why you're fat," when I grabbed a snack (this in front of a horrified group of readers attending a party in the con suite). Other fat-hate comments about "feeling sorry" for large people who wear sweatpants in public, and "knowing what that's like," that assume all fat people secretly long to be thin and are miserable because they are not.

When the straw finally broke my big, fat back (the "that's why you're fat" comment), I started off feeling enraged. How dare someone police my body? How dare someone feel they had the right to pity me for the way I dress or what I eat or how much I weigh? I have given no one permission to pity me, because I don't pity myself. I like myself, at any size or shape, and I love my awesome, awesome life. I live for every moment, and I try to make sure that I feel everything in my life with enthusiasm for living. Okay, maybe not as enthusiastic when I'm stuck in a plane on a runway in Allentown, PA because God decided to smite New York with a crazy huge thunderstorm, but most of the time I really do love every second of my life. The thought of someone pitying me, making a judgment that because I'm fat I must also be unhappy with my lot, made me see absolute red.

Then, it made me even more mad to realize that if she'd said these same comments to someone who has a problem accepting their weight, they might have thought, "She's right." A friend who roomed with me said, "If she had said that to me, it would have destroyed me." I thought about how low my self-esteem was after I gave birth to my first child and gained the first seventy-five pounds of what would ultimately be an over one-hundred pound weight gain. If someone had said to me then, "This is why you're fat" or made a comment about feeling sorry for people like me, I would have been crushed. I struggled with binge eating back then, out of hatred for myself and my body. I crash dieted, desperately counted my "points" and kept a "thinspiration" journal of svelte bodies that I wanted so badly to have for my own. If I had met this author back then, when my career was first starting and I hated myself for getting fat, I would have given up. I would have given up writing, starved myself, missed out on friends and acquaintances that I met in this business who I hold very dear. A single snide comment about my weight, back then, would have literally ruined my life. Did she make a remark that hurt someone else that badly at this event?

But as I considered all this, I also realized that this woman was not making these comments to me. She used to fat, and makes no attempt to hide the fact that she has lost the weight. She shouldn't, either. She was unhappy with something in her life, so she changed it, at great personal sacrifice. She worked hard for a dream, and she deserves credit for that, just as anyone who is brave enough to make a huge sacrifice for what they want deserves recognition. But for some reason, it's not enough for her to have attained her goal. She needs to punish her old self for not living up to her new standards.

She wasn't talking to me. She was talking to herself before she lost the weight.

So, to this individual, who I hope reads this post, I say: Let go of the hatred you have for yourself. Who you are is not about what you used to weigh. The people in your life who loved you then and now will never stop loving you because of a number on the scale. Your readers, who devour your books, don't care what you look like. They love you and your stories because you have a gift that transcends physical standards of beauty.

I know, because I used to be one of those readers. I'm not anymore. I will probably never forgive you for the hateful way you treated me this weekend. I know I damned sure won't be reading your books in the future, because every time I pick one up I will be reminded that you don't feel I'm worthy to shake the ground with my lumbering steps. But I do truly want you to forgive yourself for being fat in the past. You were a lovely person then, inside and out. You've made the outside lovelier. Now work on fixing the ugliness you grew on the inside.

11 comments:

  1. this is a wonderful post. As a non-skinny girl who recently decided that I really like my shape, I wish everyone everywhere would read this. Like, it should be printed on t-shirts and bumper stickers and shown subliminally during every Tyra Banks show.

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  2. Oh, so many things to say...

    1st - you're right. It was an awesome conference. And even though it's somewhere else next year, I'll probably go again.

    2nd - kudos on the insightful and restrained post. You rock and you're brilliant and it shines through. I love you.

    3rd - this person who was making these comments, in my opinion, didn't work hard to lose this weight. She had gastric bypass which forced her to lose the weight. As someone else who's struggled with weight and who has lost weight the really hard way, I call her a cheater. You have more restraint than I do on this. And I think you're right about the way she views herself. She's reflecting her own self-loathing. Unfortunately, she's taking casualties on her trip.

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  3. I second your and Brynn's assessment of the conference. I had an amazing time and I wouldn't hesitate to do it again.

    I have to say, you really know how to take the high road, and your generosity of spirit never ceases to amaze me.

    I'm glad you didn't let her horrible comments crush you and that you're able to look beyond the cruelty to the source.

    It was incredibly hard to listen to those comments and condemnation. Your attitude toward not only her, but body-image in general, is something amazing to which I aspire.

    I love you and your beautiful fearlessness.

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  4. Oh, phew! I was worried - here I just met a totally awesomely fun group of people, and I thought I'd never see you again after that!

    Not that I'd blame you if you didn't return. I would, however, have a MASSIVE sad, and would not have the heart to steal a single rock from the next place. Not even a pebble. :-(

    Anyhoo, I must say I'm terribly impressed with this post. You're a better woman than me. I'd like to say I'd be pissed in a situation like that, but I'd probably just cry. I'm such a marshmallow...

    *HUGS* to you, lady - you RULE!

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  5. Rock on, Jen. You nailed that bitch between the eyes. I'd love to see her humble next year, but I'm guessing that's a leap.

    Sonya! I spelled your name wrong in the signing!! ACK! I'm so sorry hon. Also, I heard about how you took pics with everyone but her at the party and I totally howled at the awesome slap. Well done!

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  6. I have a huge amount of respect for you and how you handled this situation. And you're right - if this author said the same thing to a reader or someone who respected their opinion and also had a problem accepting how they looked, it could be devastating.

    This author might have worked hard to look good on the outside, but obviously she's got a real problem on the inside. I hope she does read this post, because spreading your nastiness and putting your own self-hatred onto others is uncalled for - and doubly stupid when you're at a conference in a professional capacity.

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  7. Wow. Once again, I am struck with admiration at your total confidence in who you are, and the way you don't let someone else's opinion affect that confidence -- obviously it was hurtful, but you didn't let it affect how you see yourself or feel about yourself. I wish I had that kind of strength; it's inspiring. Also kudos for keeping this person anonymous for those who were not there. I'm torn about whether I want to know: If it's an author I like, I'd hate to have to stop reading, but I also don't want to support the kind of person who treats others this way, no matter how good their work may be.

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  8. I don't think she has the insight to know, that it doesn't ALWAYS have to be about her! Some people just need constant reassurance of how great they are, or how far they have come.

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  9. Honey,

    First off, I'm humbled by your eloquence. Not only are you an amazing person, and writer, but a diplomat as well. I never could have found the words to adequately express the emotions we all shared of Queeny's little comments, yet you present us with a post that is both inspiring and insightful.

    You are a beautiful, inspiring woman, and I wish I had half your confidence. There are very few people you meet and inside of five minutes wish you'd met them thirty years ago so you could have shared all that time in their presence, and you are one.

    And as far as bitch-lady goes... she's just a mirage or what she wants people to see... inside, she's still the same insecure person she used to be.

    Rock on Jen...

    hugs,

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  10. Thank you for sharing this post. It would be most tragic if you did not attend in the future. Who would I swoon over then!? Your strength of character is admirable. You are beautiful doll.

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  11. I'm truly impressed with the realization that you came to regarding where her comments were really aimed.

    And I love the confidence and outlook you have in yourself. I, too, hope that she reads this and realizes that that kind of behavior is unacceptable. It's bad enough that those kind of judgments are hurled around by most of society, people who have been there certainly don't need to join in.

    Not to devolve into cattiness - but I'm pretty sure I know who you're talking about. Mostly because I stopped reading her a couple of years ago after meeting her and getting a feel for her ... personality (to put it nicely).

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