I
have a hard time with skinny people. And by “skinny people,” I mean ANYONE who doesn’t struggle with their
weight. But I’m mostly talking about people who always look good because of
some anomalous combination of lovely, perfect-weight genes. Men who live on
chitlins and deep-fried cheeseballs but look like J.C. Penney models. Women
who’d look stunning in a burlap potato sack tied at the waist with a length of baling wire.
For
one thing, skinny people all secretly believe (some say it right out loud) that
we could ALL be that lovely if we
just had more willpower. It’s eeeeeasy! If “we” (not them) would just eat less
and exercise more and be more disciplined and not be so lazy and get off our fat
asses and quit stuffing our fat faces, we’d not only maintain a more sensible
weight, we’d be better human beings—more deserving of our fat little splotch in
the universe. Often, they make these comments while sucking down a butterscotch
malt and brushing French fry crumbs off their perfectly skinny little
form-hugging shirts. Sometimes they’re tall and leggy—I have an even harder
time with these folks.
I
know a guy, for example (who shall remain nameless but to whom I am married)
who “struggles” with the terrible yo-yo of gaining or losing the 5 pounds he’s
put on since high school. Whaa. On
the other hand, I have in my closet every size pants ever made for women. One
can tell where I’m at in my weight roller-coaster by the relative elasticity of
my pants. And yes, I have a muumuu.
For
another thing, skinny people like to hang out with fluffy people because it
makes them look even skinnier. They use us like hideous beached-whale backdrops,
to make themselves seem even more glowing, healthy, beautiful. You KNOW it’s
true, Skinny People.
So
lemme clue you in, Skinny People. For some of us, losing weight isn’t that simple.
We’re big-boned. We’re densely packed. We’re genetic “keepers.” We have that
“store & survive” gene (quite common in the upper Midwest, where, like
bears, we sometimes must live off our fat stores during winter). For us, losing
weight means deprivation, sacrifice, and Herculean effort.
For
example, to lose ONE pound, I need to eat no more than a teaspoon of tabouli and
a celery stalk per day, and I need to, with my bad knees and weak ankles, run
oh, about 25 miles a day and/or spend 10 hours sweating with Richard Simmons or
Jane Fonda. Do you know how hard it is to grade a paper or do your laundry while
you’re sweatin’ to the oldies? Then, to keep the weight off, I would have to
live for the rest of my natural life on an indulgent 6 Triscuits, 2 celery
stalks, and ¼ cup of tabouli daily. On holidays, I could splurge by adding two
Greek olives and a 1/3 glass of wine.
As
you may have guessed by now, I’m on yet another diet and feeling a wee bit crabby about it. This one is called “Game
On” and is designed like a team sport. Our team is called the Victorious
Secrets, and we’re totally gonna kick the Fab Fems’ butts. But I am so hungry
right now, I could eat…a skinny person (lightly sautéed in olive oil, with a
side of garlic mashed potatoes, and a pint of the darkest beer I can find). I have hope, though, that THIS diet will be more successful than the 29 others I’ve tried. Because
while my survival gene drives me toward bags of Doritos, entire blueberry cheesecakes, and enough pasta with pesto to choke a horse, I’ve also got
an insidious and fairly strong competition gene.
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