gwendolyn
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2007
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- 6,770
The reason I brought it up was half to do with that (I have two cousins and a friend in the film biz), and half to do with the fact that the vast majority of the people you see on TV, the movies or in magazines are very, very slim (disproportionally so), and that they in no way correlate to the size of the "average" woman out in other job fields. Although many people are fine with never looking like their favourite actress or supermodel, others feel that's the way they are *supposed* to look (like, most of the guys I was ever interested in, and then, subsequently, I also felt that way). We as a society have moved away from sex symbols who aren't at the smallest end of the size chart--we went from Marilyn Monroe, to Twiggy, to Kate Moss. If anything, "too skinny" became en vogue, making plus sizes even more unacceptable by society.Date: 9/11/2009 7:15:10 PM
Author: musey
Date: 9/11/2009 1:32:05 PM
Author: gwendolyn
And for what it's worth, whenever the term 'real' is used in reference to women who are larger than average, to me that isn't done to belittle smaller women but rather put them on the pedestal of 'supermodel' level. To me, 'real' equals 'obviously flawed.'
That's what it means in my world, which of late has been casting. 'Real' is the exact term that casting directors use to communicate that they're looking for someone who is either plain looking or on the larger side. Although, it's meant to be 'real' versus what most actors are (or try to be) - which is in absolutely amazing shape and far more beautiful than average. So it's not grounded in reality. For them, 'real' usually means larger than a size 4 and not pretty enough to join the cast of America's Next Top Model.
A bit of a digression, but I just thought that it was interesting/coincidental that you brought that up.
And although it is no doubt frustrating to go into a shop and not find your size, it is another thing altogether to go into a store and not find your size *anywhere* because they just don't make things that big. Often the salespeople are extremely condescending (I have been laughed at, asked, "Why are YOU in HERE?" been told I should leave because they have nothing for me there, ignored when asking for help, etc.), as if it's impossible that I am shopping for a gift for a friend. It's like the place stops functioning as a store and suddenly becomes a private club and I am not invited. Why wouldn't they want my money? Is it because it's more fun to laugh at the fat girl who got lost and found her way into the shop with clothes that are way too small for her? Is it because they find it embarrassing to have someone like *me* in their shop, walking around with a bag of their stuff? Do I not fit the image well enough? I really have no idea, but this isn't based on one or two freak occurrences. This has happened to me dozens of times, so clearly there must be something behind it.
I don't think that anyone has a problem with specialty stores; they exist for a multitude of products, not just clothes, and if there is a market for it, then more power to them for offering better choices and size ranges. I honestly do not believe anyone would have a problem in the slightest.People come in all shapes and sizes - naturally or otherwise. I am a US 2-4 (depending on brand), and I do not think of myself as 'tiny' or a 'waif,' I think of myself as average. However, the sizing system (at least here, can't speak for other countries) does not accommodate me as average, it accommodates me as being very much on the 'small' side. So where does that leave the many, many women who are naturally much smaller than I am? It's helpful for women who are on the larger end of the spectrum, but at least they have the specialty stores referenced in this thread. How do you think the 'real' public would react if specialty stores started cropping up to serve specifically the very thin population? I shudder to think.
Meaning that instead of using the word "curvy" to denote larger women as well as hour-glass shaped women (which it still can and does refer to, in my experience--they don't have to be mutually exclusive unless you make it an 'us vs. them' type of thing), you'd rather us be called what exactly? Apologies if this isn't how you meant to be interpreted, but when you say you wish you could be honest *instead of* shifting labels, it sounds as if you've got some nasty words in reserve for larger women that you refrain from sharing for the sake of politeness. For the record, I think being referred to as a "real" woman is a bit stupid and "curvy" doesn't really accurately describe me because my weight is in my waistline, making me sadly almost curveless, but if it's between those labels and "big fat blob" (for example), I'll take the former since having neutral or positive labels is more pleasant than some people's truth.Everyone's discriminated against, but I would venture to guess that those who fall into the plus size range get it a lot more and take it a lot harder than those who fall below the size chart (and again, do so naturally). I'd be lying if I said I don't take issue with terms like 'real women' and 'curvy' being applied plus-sized women - as though to imply that my physique is somehow not 'womanly' or 'curvy.' A big part of me wishes we could all be honest about things instead of shifting labels around to give them new meaning (there was a time when 'curvy' meant 36-24-36). At the same time, I understand where the impulse to shift labels comes from - and I'm not about to cry over someone thinking I'm 'too thin' (not that that really happens).
So "curvy" is the nice way of saying what then, exactly?
Indeed.It is okay to be plus sized, just as it is okay to be very thin. Everyone has reasons for being the size they are - and sometimes appearances can be deceiving: not every plus-sized person inhales McDonald's and not every thin woman starves herself. Generalizations and stereotypes are often founded in truth, but it's important to realize how harmful it is to apply them across the board to any one type of person.