It was like a scene from an American teen flick, but the nine-year-old child was too young to see it like that. He stood there in the change room, pretending to be in on the joke because his mother had told him the best way to respond to bullies was to laugh at them.
Of course, the seven bullies themselves, who were reacting to the child taking off his school shirt, were too busy pretending to vomit at the sink, shrieking in mock terror, asking: “Ew, don’t you ever go to the gym?” and demanding he “Put it away!”.
So with a nervous smile and tears in his eyes, the child put his sports shirt on and went to practice.
This is a real incident that happened to a child I know. This is bullying, or in 2018 what’s known as ‘fat shaming‘: “The action or practice of humiliating someone judged to be fat or overweight by making mocking or critical comments about their size”.
But ‘fat shaming’ is a dangerous term, and I’ve got a real problem with it.
Is plastic surgery a solution if your child’s being bullied about their appearance? We discuss, on our podcast for imperfect parents. Post continues after.
I’m not here to debate or ‘glorify’ obesity. I do care very much about the increasing weight of Australians in general. I wholeheartedly support initiatives to get people to be healthier and fitter. I know, as most people do, that serious health risks increase as weight does.
The problem is, using the term ‘fat shaming’ is victim-blaming at its finest. The implication is that the target is fat, and whilst we all agree that the bully shouldn’t unkindly point that out, the fat part is true.
But not always. The child in my story isn’t overweight, but he is larger than his classmates. That shouldn’t matter, although I’m sure size is where many people’s minds went when I told his story. An obese child was envisaged. And, this thought was entertained: “He wouldn’t be fat shamed if he was not fat in the first place.”