The
 other day I had something happen that I was COMPLETELY unprepared for. 
 I had gone and done a little grocery shopping before work.  Mind you I 
got some
 healthy things: packaged salads, cherries, apples, Greek yogurt, almond
 milk.  I was putting my groceries in the trunk of my car and this older
 guy walked up to me and said “you’re going to have a hard time.”  I was
 completely confused, so I asked him what
 he meant.  He then went on to say “well, they say the obesity rate is 
going up and up in this country and you’re already obese, so you’re 
going to have a hard time.”  As soon as he was done saying that he 
turned and walked off.  I was beyond shocked and the
 only thing I could think of to say was “eff you too.”  
After
 he had gotten in his car and drove off and after I had finished putting
 my groceries in my truck and put my cart in the cart corral, I got in 
my car and
 cried.  You know that feeling when someone you love with all your heart
 and means the world to you tells you something that completely shatters
 your heart?  That feeling in the pit of your stomach…the wind is 
completely knocked out of you?  That feeling. 
 That’s the feeling I had.  
Then,
 as I drove down the road to my next stop, the anger set in.  Who the 
hell does he think he is?  Who walks up to total strangers and says 
something like
 that.  I’m not obese.  Hell, I’m not even all that “fat.”  And, even if
 I was, he doesn’t know anything about me.  I could have some sort of 
disease or condition that causes me to gain weight or make it extremely 
difficult to lose weight (PCOS, for one…I don’t
 have it, but it is a disease that causes serious weight gain and makes 
it almost impossible to lose weight…prime example, Whitney from My Big 
Fat Fabulous Life).  I could have PTS/PTSD (I do) and have poor coping 
skills (I do).  I could have an eating disorder
 (I do).  I could be a survivor of some horrible event like rape (I 
am).  Or maybe I’m just prone to being overweight.  There are so many 
different complications that could cause a person to gain weight and 
make it difficult to lose weight.  He knows absolutely
 NOTHING about me.  Nothing.  
He
 doesn’t know that I’ve lost 80 lbs.  He doesn’t know I run marathons.  
He doesn’t know I love lifting weights.  He doesn’t know I love the 
stair climber. 
 He doesn’t know I love Zumba or P90X.  He doesn’t know that my BMI and 
body fat % are actually within the normal range.
After
 the angry response, I immediately thought about the 4 Agreements.  The 
second Agreement is “don’t take anything personally.”  What does this 
mean?  It
 means that whatever someone says about you is actually about THEM and 
not about YOU at all.  “Nothing other people do is because of you. It is
 because of themselves.”
“Even
 when a situation seems so personal, even if others insult you directly,
 it has nothing to do with you.  What they say, what they do, and the 
opinion they
 give are according to the agreements they have in their own minds.”
What
 someone else thinks of you, whatever their opinion is, doesn’t matter 
to you.  What does it mean that what they say about you actually says 
more about
 them than it does about you?  It means that they are so miserable in 
their own life that they have to insult others to feel better about 
themselves.  With that said, this guy is obviously so miserable in his 
own life that he “got off” by the act of insulting
 me and telling me that I was obese.  He didn’t even wait around to see 
what my reaction was.  He said it and then immediately walked away, got 
in his car, and didn’t hesitate at all with driving out of the parking 
lot.  The act of insulting a perfect stranger
 is what gives him his jollies.  He didn’t care one bit about my 
reaction.
“Don’t take anything personally because by taking things personally you set yourself up to suffer for nothing.” 
“There is a huge amount of freedom that comes to you when you take nothing personally.”
That being said:
Here’s what I was wearing when this guy approached me and said his hateful message. 
See?  Not obese at all.
And here’s one of my friend’s reactions:



Great post - and honestly I don't know why people do that. My wife used to really let that stuff get to her, but the thing I always remind her is that the best way to handle it is to understand that what they're saying is more about THEM than about you.
ReplyDeleteexactly!!!!!
DeleteOooooh, this makes me mad reading it! I would have told him off, too!
ReplyDelete