harborshore: (Default)
harborshore ([personal profile] harborshore) wrote2010-04-01 11:01 am

on eating in company

Short meta on eating and the pressure women put on one another. As usual, I'm starting from myself, I make no claim to have all the answers, and I'm very open to be disagreed with. Warnings: mention of very severe eating disorder without discussing it in detail.

ETA: as [livejournal.com profile] unlurkster points out, this isn't even about weight, so I took the word out of the first sentence above.



There was a moment during the Israel trip that I particularly liked: Saturday night, when sitting down to dinner with four other women in all shapes and sizes and ordering food, I suddenly realized none of us had made a comment sounding anything like "I really want that, but I shouldn't--" or "Are you sure you want to eat that?" and fuck, it was such a relief. We just ordered! One of us had a tofu salad, one of us had lasagna, one of us had pasta, one of us had a goat cheese sandwich (ME, and it was EXCELLENT), and one of us had vegetable soup. It was done, just like that.

Because this isn't about what you eat. This is about judging someone else based on what they're eating or feeling like you're failing at something because you're on a diet or because you're not on a diet, because I just--every woman I know has some kind of body image issue. Every woman I know. They range in severity, but still. We really could stand to skip the part where we make each other feel guilty about what we eat (the lunches at my old job, for instance, were hell on earth), because the last thing we need is to make food more difficult.

I recognize the incredible privilege I've had of growing up in a house where food was a joyful thing, a healthy thing, something we loved and enjoyed. Dad's sister nearly died from anorexia when she was sixteen and mom was a dancer--those two things together made them try very hard to keep food being not scary. I wish I could give others that feeling. Barring empathy manifesting as a Heraldic power (yes, I read Mercedes Lackey at fourteen), I want to ask at least this much: is there a way that we can keep from making it worse for others? Accept people's food choices, let them eat without feeling guilty about it being a salad/a hamburger/a dessert? Maybe?

[identity profile] ciel-vert.livejournal.com 2010-04-01 11:37 am (UTC)(link)
Yes to all of this. I LOATHE when someone comments on what I'm eating. Where I work now, I have honestly never been around so many people who comment so much about what I'm eating for lunch. This is why I eat at my desk every day instead of in the breakroom. As much as I disliked and didn't get along with the girls I worked with at my old job, I will say this about them, we ate lunch together basically every day, and neither of them ever commented on what the others ate. I kinda miss that.

Luckily, my group of friends isn't judgey like that. And that includes my best friend who's been battling anorexia for 10 years, because she's self aware enough to know that her issues with food are HERS and she doesn't dump them on other people.
ext_3762: girl reading outside in sunshine (Default)

[identity profile] harborshore.livejournal.com 2010-04-01 12:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I find it completely baffling! Why would you care about my food? EAT YOUR OWN AND BE HAPPY. And if you're not happy about it, eat something else! Please. There was a girl on the non-carbohydrates diet who spent every lunch that I brought pasta talking about the evils of carbs and how they made you hungry all the time. I sort of felt like she was going to jump me and steal my lasagna.

And that includes my best friend who's been battling anorexia for 10 years, because she's self aware enough to know that her issues with food are HERS and she doesn't dump them on other people. That's VERY self aware of her, and very impressive. She must have worked hard to be able to do that. ♥