by ROSIE WATERLAND
This week, Mamamia published an article about an overweight young woman, Stella Boonshoft. She published a photo online of herself in her underwear and received a massive reaction – good and bad. She seems comfortable and happy with who she is, which I think is fabulous.
I wish I could feel the same.
I’m morbidly obese, and I hate myself for it.
Being fat is hard. Being fat is heartbreaking. Being fat is humiliating. The way I look right now fills me with unimaginable shame.
Maybe the reason I find it so hard to accept the way I look is that I haven’t always looked this way. I’ve never had a weight problem in my life. I’ve always been slim and attractive. I wouldn’t say I was completely void of body-issues, but I was confident enough in myself that when a play I was performing in called for a naked scene, I didn’t give it a second thought. My body just wasn’t a big deal for me. Until my body got big. Really big.
Things started changing about six years ago. I had a childhood filled with neglect and inconsistency, topped with an extremely traumatic bullying experience in my last three years of high school. When I was twenty, the relatives who had been taking care of me since I was fourteen told me to find somewhere else to live. I was devastated.
These were the people who looked after me when my parents couldn’t, and now they too had cast me aside. I was already dealing with PTSD from being abandoned in my younger years, and now it was happening again. Like sending a traumatised soldier back into the battlefield, I was not equipped mentally to handle a repeat situation.