1 comments Wednesday

I went out this morning to look at the world, have some breakfast and watch the water for a moment or two. Cold and bright, an ice-blue sky, hard sharp-edged buildings with perfect outlines. Sunlight-speckled waves.

I wish I lived somewhere snowy.

I've been getting the "You've lost so much weight!" remarks the last week or so. It's nice, but I wish they wouldn't. I think it warns my brain that something good might be about to happen, and it naturally veers toward doom and disaster again. The more static I am, the less I move each day, the easier it becomes to continue the slide.

How do we get that way, where we seek ruin and shun good fortune?

At a crucial point, age eight or nine, do we decide that loss and isolation are safer?

Tomorrow morning, first thing, supermarket. If I walk along the foreshore, I know the day will go well no matter what else happens. Mornings are important.

2 comments Sunday

Just watched an old episode. At the end, the writers speaking as Chris:

"I know most of you have been where I am tonight: the crash site of unrequited love. You've asked yourself, "How did I get here? What was it about her? Was it her smile? Was it the way she crossed her legs, the turn of her ankle, the poignant vulnerability of her slender wrist. What are these elusive and ephemeral things that ignite passion in the human heart? That's an age-old question. It's perfect food for thought on a bright midsummer's night. Hey, you said it best Will:

Love looks not with the eyes but with the mind
And therefore is winged cupid painted blind


Yeah."

The unhealthy part comes when every day is like this. When every love is unrequited. After awhile you start to fall into a pattern. You obsess for a week or two, knowing deep down nothing will come of it. And eventually it fades.

I often wonder what it must feel like to be in a normal body and not know what's going to happen; to avoid that sense of inevitability, throw the dice and take your chances. What possibilities must dance in their minds, with blinded cupid flinging arrows at random in the hopes that one will strike home.

But after awhile, after years of it, you begin to feel as if you don't want to inflict yourself on anyone. And that's where the rot sets in.

Some days, more often these days, I can say "fuck it" and get on with things. Not so much tonight. Talk about wallowing! Pass me the serotonin, if you'd be so kind.

0 comments Monday

I am waiting for the oedema to go down.

When I don't exercise, and sit at this desk all day, my feet and legs swell. It hasn't happened in awhile because I've been so active. However, it happened this morning because I've had two inactive days.

Time to break the cycle. I'm going outside. But I need to squish my foot into my shoe, and let the excess water drain away.

I am waiting for the oedema to go down.

0 comments Wednesday

I've just finished a string of days off, slightly unexpected. My shifts just fell this way at the beginning of the month. I should have done a lot of things but didn't; I remain unrepentant!

I spent the entire period alone. Not mostly alone, but entirely alone. Work is where people are. Home is where it's just the Very Fat Guy:

It's not too much longer. Every day I'm growing back out into the world. I can see myself, bubbling upward.

It's not for too much longer. I built this cave, the hiding places of security doors and shuttered windows were of my necessity, but I am not bound by them. I am bound by nothing.

It's not too long to go now. There is movement. There is sun (and downpours catching me on the walk home, twice in two days, soaked to my blubber.)

Soon.

So back to work, and fluorescent light and people. Can't wait. But it's nice here too, in the dark, writing this that a few might read it to pass the time. Shower. Maybe a bite to eat. Bed.

G'night.

0 comments Tuesday

So I've been reading about fat acceptance a lot. Most of the links in the sidebar will take you to appropriate sites if you want to read about it too.

I can see why people are on the defensive. It's hard not to feel attacked when phrases like 'war on obesity' and 'fighting fat' are everywhere, because the mind of the Very Fat Guy finds it difficult to distinguish between an attack on the person I am (as opposed to the weight I carry):

Those who seek to 'wage war' on a fatter society. Well-meaning people, all of them. How many actually understand what it's like to live this way?

Aren't they just reaffirming the separationist attitudes that are already entrenched in our culture? Do we risk making the 'war on obesity' a war on children who happen to be overweight?

As an adult, I have difficulty with the blurred message of fat disapproval. I'm not sure how I would deal with it had it been overt and government-sponsored when I was growing upwards and outwards. The ability to distinguish between attacks on lifestyle and attacks on self is even less developed as a child.

So am I an activist? Not the kind that champions fat as healthy, I'll say that to begin with. I hate being fat. I know just how much damage it can do, mental and physiological. The arguments in favour of being obese are, it seems, just as stretched and convoluted as those claiming that people who are overweight are lazy and ignorant.

I am an ACTIVE-ist, if you'll pardon the faux-self-help book butchering of the word, in the sense that I threw a large quantity of exercise into my life and am reaping the benefits. I want to lead by example. I want to be able to say to some of the kids I work with, "It's not hopeless. There are people who know what you're going through. Here's how you start."

I am an activist for people. The anti-fat and the fat brigades combined (what a lovely, squishy melange that would make!) I want to see us, as a people, indescriminately prosper. I want people to be able to live and be loved without fear. I want us to stop being reactionary, to drag ourselves out of the ambulance at the foot of the cliff mentality, to follow the trail back to the point where things started to get out of control, way before the cliff was even an issue.

I want to be happy. I'm an activist for happiness. Is that the most schmaltzy thing you ever read in your life?

0 comments Sunday

As it turned out, the rain had stopped. I walked out beside the marina towards the bridge. If you pick your time right, you're literally walking towards the setting sun which is all very poetic. It was one of those finger-suns where the digits of light stretch out behind clouds, reaching for one last shot at this portion of the earth.

And as I watched the other walkers, the mind of the Very Fat Guy spake:

Those two sure are clinging to each other. I hope they're happy... they look happy.

This guy is carrying a lot of stress.

That's not a dog, it's a large hairy rodent.

That one is in serious need of a hug. Wish I could help, sorry, they arrest you for stuff like that.

It's getting cold.

I shouldn't daydream about her so much. It can't be healthy. It'd probably creep her out if she knew.

And yet... what if the daydreams are what's keeping me going? Tricking the Fat Guy mind into maintaining lots of serotonin at the synapses.

I wish I knew what she was thinking.

Turn back. Remember, you have to cover all this distance on the way home again.

Oh well... maybe a few more minutes won't hurt.

It was dark by the time I got home, feeling strong.

0 comments Saturday

It's raining. I'm going out for a walk.

I've always walked. Maybe that's the reason I'm still alive. Ever since I started shrinking (more on this later), I've been walking in addition to everything else. Long, wandering, no-goal-in-mind walks.

A few months back I walked in the rain, pounding down, that really solid kind where you almost feel massaged if only it weren't so cold. I was wearing fairly tight drawstring pants. When I got home, hours later, I discovered the soaking wet drawstring had cut into the skin of my abdomen, creating a long wound. I still have the scar now, it looks almost surgical. Maybe people will think I've had The Operation.

Now I'm going to wander along the harbour's edge, with umbrella, see where I get to. Some days I feel called out into the rain.

3 comments Thursday

So, there's this woman...

Of course there is! I'm fat, not dead. There's someone at work, which is really the only time I spend with people.

She's bright, funny, a little quirky. Interesting accent. Challenges me. Has a gentle strength about her, and yet a kind of reticence sometimes, like she's not sure where she fits.

So ask her out, you say. I would love to. Here's the mind of the Very Fat Guy at work:

What on earth would she want with someone like me?

I'm fine talking, but no one could possibly feel good about becoming physically close to me. I have breasts. I have an abdominal pannus [fat that hangs down].

I've spent years alone. I'm awkward and moody.

It will make her feel bad to have to say 'no'. It will invoke pity.

Pity is something that at once entices and terrifies the Very Fat Guy. Sometimes you find yourself playing for the pity vote, and yet all the time you detest it.

There is an often repeated cliche that it's easier for men to be obese than for women. I imagine it may even be true in a few individual cases. For the most part though, it's admiring from afar for me. I watch guys mistreat the women they're with, ignore, insult, attack, belittle and be violent towards them. And I think, being with that woman would be an honour. How can you waste such a precious thing? To be close, to have secrets with, be inspired by your lover. To touch...

I go for years at a time without being touched. Sometimes someone will come up behind me and clap me lightly on the back, and I'll flinch, will feel that hand imprint for hours afterward. It's not a grab for pity (see above), but more to ask the question: who are we that we let this happen to ourselves? And what community to we live in that allows such isolation, that even has an undercurrent which encourages it?

1 comments Wednesday

It's happening all over, now. Fat? Let's rearrange your innards a little. Knife please.

All power to the people who are having bariatric surgery, and to those who market it so agressively. (It's all over the Internet, you know.) But it's not for me.

Gastric bypass. Just the name sounds inviting. 'Bypass' it all, that's the solution. Create a small pouch in the stomach, then detour around the rest of it and the first chunk of intestine.

My problem is not with the risks of the procedure (very low, with a laparoscopic approach). I don't think we have a lot of data about long-term effects yet, which is troubling, but that in itself wouldn't stop me having surgery.

I worry about the economic incentives for hospitals to be performing these procedures. Bariatric surgery is big business now. I dislike any surgery on spec which has such a powerful economic motivation behind it. That's hardly atypical these days; any number of cosmetic and elective surgeries fit the same description. Still, it makes me wary.

What really bothers me is that we haven't yet found a way to stop children and young people from becoming obese in the first place. We now have a significant and growing surgical infrastructure designed to 'cure' the morbidly obese -- at least, those among us who can afford it -- but no real idea of reducing the number of people who develop the condition. Trust me, general practitioners and nutritionists saying 'diet and exercise' doesn't work.

There is a deep-set, insidious, intractable failure of our communities, our families, to handle what is happening. We are beginning to abdicate responsibility, to stand aside for someone else to alter our plumbing in the name of recovery. We become too desparate, and finally too tired.

I will not arrive at the hospital with a smile and an 'incise here' mark on my belly. There is a greater responsibility at stake, for those of us affected to discover more. Why did we become this way? How can we prevent the next generation from undergoing worse hardship because we were not prepared to face ourselves?

4 comments Tuesday

Good afternoon. Welcome to another blog. My name is Creature. I will be your host.

I am morbidly obese.

This term may not delight the reader. Some are uncomfortable with it, because 'bese' sounds like 'beast', and morbid anything can't possibly be good. I've grown accustomed to it, over the years, and now use it freely to describe myself.

You may be interested to know, depending on how bored you are, that there is a clinical definition of morbid obesity. Anyone with a Body Mass Index greater than 35 is considered morbidly obese.

At best estimates, since I am too heavy to use conventional scales, my weight when at my heaviest was around 180kg. I'm 187cm tall. That's a BMI of about 50. I guess I qualify.

(For the imperial at heart, those numbers are 400lbs and 6'2". Saved by an enthusiastic ephiphyseal growth plate!)

My intent is not to glorify or excuse, whine or prevaricate. Rather, I offer an insight into the mind of the Very Fat Guy.