
As a former plus-sizer myself, I lean more to the characterization of this body-acceptance movement as encouraging obesity than helping people feel confident in their bodies.
For years, I decided that weighing 275 pounds and being a size-42 (men’s sizes are less forgiving than women’s) was just my own reality.
But then in 2014, I began the new year with a resolution to lose 50 pounds, which would get me to within 10 pounds of the weight that I’d been at when I graduated high school 25 years ago. To get there, I set myself on a course that was anything but draconian. I simply cut back my caloric intake to 2,000 calories a day, and altered my fitness routine from basic weight training to include more cardio.
Within three months, I’d lost the 50 pounds that had been my goal, and decided that I wasn’t yet done. I took up running, which I hadn’t been able to do at 275, for lots of obvious reasons, and by the six-month mark, I’d lost 95 pounds, from 275 to 180.
I now wear size 29 pants, small shirts (down from XXL). My asthma is completely gone. I no longer have to suck down three to four Excedrins to get through a day headache-free.
A year ago, I couldn’t run a mile; now I run 35 miles a week, with no pain despite a sports-related torn ACL suffered in high school.
I understand the motivations behind the feel-good-in-your-body movement. I also know from personal experience that it’s a cop-out.
No matter who you are, where you are in life, what size you are, you can do things today to make you a better person today and a better person tomorrow.
Never settle; that’s my message, counter to what Holliday would have you believe, which is that you just need to accept a fate that isn’t actually pre-ordained and do the best with it.
– Column by Chris Graham