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Danielle Daniel Nigeria
Student @ University of Abuja
In Mental Health 3 min read
The Punchline: Fat shaming isn't a joke
<p><img alt="" src="/media/inline_insight_image/1000225383.jpg"/></p><p><br/></p><p>They say it casually.</p><p>Like a weather report.</p><p>Like their words wouldn’t lodge itself under my skin.</p><p><br/></p><p>“You’d be so pretty if you lose weight.”</p><p>“You have such a fat face.”</p><p>“Do you really need seconds?”</p><p>“Have you tried not eating so much?”</p><p><br/></p><p>It’s so normal now.</p><p>Too normal.</p><p>We live in a culture where commenting on people's bodies is small talk,</p><p>where fat shaming hides behind jokes, laughter, and "I didn’t mean it like that," Well then what else did you mean? </p><p><br/></p><p>Everyone feels entitled to an opinion.</p><p>At the dinner table.</p><p>On the street.</p><p>Online.</p><p>As if bodies are community projects instead of homes.</p><p><br/></p><p>They laugh.</p><p>Nudge each other.</p><p>Say it’s just a joke.</p><p>Say people are too sensitive these days.</p><p><br/></p><p>But it’s never funny.</p><p>At least not to the person living inside the body being discussed.</p><p>Not to the one carrying those words home,</p><p>replaying them in the mirror,</p><p>swallowing them with every meal.</p><p><br/></p><p>I had to learn quickly that being fat means being loud, even when I am silent.</p><p>That my body speaks before I ever open my mouth.</p><p>That no achievement outruns the space I take up.</p><p><br/></p><p>I start measuring my worth in shrinking.</p><p>Smaller portions.</p><p>Smaller clothes.</p><p>Smaller apologies for existing.</p><p><br/></p><p>I learn how to disappear without leaving the room.</p><p>How to suck in my stomach until breathing feels like something I have to earn.</p><p>How to smile while hating myself for every bite, every curve, every inch of proof that I am real.</p><p><br/></p><p>The<span style="background-color: transparent;">y teach me to punish myself in private for the crime of being fat in public.</span></p><p><br/></p><p>They don’t see the nights I cry on the floor, hands pressed to my stomach like it is something shameful.</p><p>They don’t hear my heart begging me to stop hating the very thing protecting it.</p><p>They don’t care that their jokes, their “concern,” their comments dressed as humor are slowly hollowing me out.</p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p><p>And I know it's not only me. </p><p><br/></p><p><br/></p><p>I hate myself.</p><p>A lot.</p><p>I hate my body for refusing to be acceptable, for failing to be thin enough to deserve kindness.</p><p><br/></p><p>But somehow, I hate them more.</p><p>And that terrifies me—because hating myself is already exhausting.</p><p>Because it takes a special kind of cruelty to make someone despise the body keeping them alive. </p><p><br/></p><p>Fat shaming doesn’t motivate.</p><p>It wounds.</p><p>It teaches people to be at war with themselves.</p><p>It teaches people that pain is discipline and hunger is virtue.</p><p>It turns food into fear and mirrors into enemies.</p><p>Imagine hating the very thing made to keep you alive. </p><p><br/></p><p>And sometimes, it doesn’t end with confidence or self-love. Or a biography about overcoming it all. </p><p>Sometimes it ends with silence. </p><p>Dead silence.</p><p><br/></p><p>....... </p><p><br/></p><p>So when you speak about that "fat boy," or that "fat girl", remember:</p><p>You’re not talking about health.</p><p>You’re not talking about concern. </p><p>Don't lie to yourself.</p><p>You don't actually care. </p><p>You’re talking to someone who already knows how cruel the world can be—</p><p>and might be trying, desperately, not to believe it.</p><p>You’re participating in a culture that thinks cruelty is comedy—</p><p>and the punchline is someone’s life.</p><p><br/></p>

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