Psycho-Babble Psychology Thread 324037

Shown: posts 1 to 25 of 35. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by obSession on March 13, 2004, at 17:34:37

obviously without saying too much but who here has actually seen or met or spoken to u therapist wife...how is she like?

any intresting info abt her...
would love to hear and will share to promise hehe paranoid im the only one with stuff in wife regard so gonna wait to see response then reply so i dont feel too wierd kewl :P

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by lonelygirl on March 25, 2004, at 18:06:24

In reply to juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by obSession on March 13, 2004, at 17:34:37

I haven't met her, but he does have a picture of his wife. Unfortunately, it is positioned in such a way that I can't see it from where I sit. I can only glance for a few seconds on my way in and a few seconds on my way out. It is also very small. She is blonde and thin. I hate finding out that their wives are thin, because then I feel like they hate fat women (like me). Anyway, she looks like she's wearing a white lab coat so I think she's in the medical profession. Maybe a nurse or even a doctor, or possibly a pharmacist.

I always imagine him having a perfect, well-adjusted wife, you know what I mean? I imagine that he deals with crazy people like me all day long and he just wants to go home and talk to someone really sane. He has mentioned her to me twice. The first time, he was talking about a time when he got mad about something (paralleling it to something I was mad about), and he went home and talked to his wife about it. Then he said he was concerned because I don't have a support system like that. The other time, when I told him that I feel like he is playing tricks on me to make me think he likes me, he said, "My wife has a phrase I think you would like. She says, 'Are you using PSYCHOLOGY on me?'"

I recently saw "The Parent Trap," which opens with a wedding scene, the guy has dark hair and the woman has blonde hair, so I started imagining my psychologist and his wife at their wedding... Then I started crying.

I know that's not really what you were asking, but that's all I have. I would love to read yours if you are still willing to share!

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by Joslynn on March 25, 2004, at 21:16:35

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by lonelygirl on March 25, 2004, at 18:06:24

I saw a pic of my shrink's wife (didn't seek it out either) and she was completely ordinary looking. Not beautiful, not ugly, just an average-looking suburban woman. Brown blunt hair cut, brown eyes, glasses, slim, conservatively dressed, not much makeup.

I admit, I was relieved that I was younger and prettier than she is. I am not proud of that part of me. But she gets him all the time, and I just get him for sessions. Plus, I am not even sure I am attracted to him in a husband-type way. There is a feeling for him though, I feel it in my heart. I mean I literally feel it in my chest, kind of a fullness or longing.

But I want someone like that for myself, full time, not just a yearning. He has helped me recognize the qualities of a nice man and has encouraged me to hold out for that.

And it's kind of comforting to know that he did not just go for looks when he chose a spouse, but chose someone of average attractiveness. He's not shallow that way.

 

clarification

Posted by Joslynn on March 25, 2004, at 21:21:15

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by Joslynn on March 25, 2004, at 21:16:35

When I said I'm not proud of that part of me, I meant that I am not proud of the part of me that felt this petty triumph of being more attractive/younger than her.

(And who knows if the average person really would think I am prettier than she is...that's just my opinion, not necessarily his.)

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by lonelygirl on March 25, 2004, at 21:34:15

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by Joslynn on March 25, 2004, at 21:16:35

Oh yeah, I can't believe I forgot to mention this, but she did not look particularly beautiful. She looks kind of nerdy, I think. I am certainly not as attractive as she is (very few people are uglier than I am), but I, too, was kind of glad that he is not married to a Barbie. I was a bit disappointed in the fact that she is thin, but I think it is apparent that he did not marry her for her looks.

I get crushes on married men frequently, and I do find myself criticizing their wives sometimes (I found the blog of the wife of another married man I like, and I can't stand her!)... I realize how pathetic it is, especially considering that they are the ones who got the guy I want! When I don't know them, though, sometimes I actually have a lot of respect for them. My psychologist's wife, for example, must be really nice, if she was good enough for HIM, right? I think of her almost as a celebrity, because it seems to me like he could have any girl he wanted, even a supermodel or something.

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by obSession on March 26, 2004, at 16:16:23

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by lonelygirl on March 25, 2004, at 21:34:15

My therapists wife is ABSALOUTELY BEAUTIFUL!
She is blonde and gorgeous , ive seen her and she seems realy nice in one way but a bitch in another. she appears very stuck up and shallow which dosent make sense to me , but she is definately beautiful, he also has a pic of her in his office not facing the clients which annoys me because i really want to see it , would love to sneak a peak at it when he walks out the room......
she gets his mind 24/ 7........and shes blonde ahhhhh...no offense to anyone blonde thin and beautiful out there but really............
shes really cool in one way as well , i would love to have a full convesation with her.

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by Apperceptor on March 27, 2004, at 15:59:30

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by obSession on March 26, 2004, at 16:16:23

Would you be quite as interested if your male therapist had a boyfriend? I'm trying to get some sort of grasp on why we'd want to involve therapists' significant others.

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » Apperceptor

Posted by lonelygirl on March 27, 2004, at 16:44:21

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by Apperceptor on March 27, 2004, at 15:59:30

That's an interesting question. I personally don't think I would be interested if my male therapist had a boyfriend, because if he's not interested in women, I wouldn't think of him as a potential romantic match. I guess it is kind of silly when you think about it, because I have exactly the same chances (namely, zero) with a gay male therapist as I do with a straight, married one, but I think it would quell the fantasy part of it. The fantasy involves thinking something like, "If only I were beautiful and his wife left him, we could fall in love and live happily ever after." I wouldn't think that way about a gay man because if I were beautiful and his boyfriend left him, well, he still wouldn't like me! That doesn't apply only to therapists, but to men in general. I haven't had very many experiences of having a romantic interest men I later find out are gay, but if I find out that a guy is not interested in women, it immediately makes him seem "off-limits" (romantically) in my mind, in a similar way that women are "off-limits" romantically (to me as a straight female, anyway). I have had female therapists before and never had any interest in their personal lives or spouses or anything.

That's just me though; I know that sometimes, straight female patients form romantic attachments to their female therapists, even though they wouldn't ordinarily think of their female therapist as a potential romantic match.

As for why we would want to involve the therapists' significant others, there are probably several reasons. For one, I want to size up the "competition." See what kind of women he likes. Compare myself. I think that's part of the reason for the topic of this thread; some of us are, well, jealous! It's not very nice, but it sort of makes one feel better to put down the person one envies. Also, I want to be close to him, so I think it's natural to be intrigued by someone who IS close to him -- essentially, someone who is living my fantasy! Finally, a spouse is someone's "other half," so when I am interested in (or, um, obsessed with) someone, his "other half" is a huge part of his life.

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » lonelygirl

Posted by Fallen4myT on March 27, 2004, at 18:44:53

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » Apperceptor, posted by lonelygirl on March 27, 2004, at 16:44:21

Well I MET my T's wife and can say I am visually PRETTIER than she is and I have a good body. I use to model not too long ago and she must have 4 dress sizes up on me..BUT she may surpass me in her personality, kindness and so many other traits that I do not see the LOOKS being such an issue for me anyhow. I mean I AM way thinner, more fit and much prettier but has she been dumped for me? No :) So you girls who place so much value on looks please rethink that because, compatibility, shared intrests, social backgrounds, SO MANY things went into the reason as to why your T picked the person he did. Plus my T's wife did have some anxiety issues at one point but I am sure she is light years beyond me in the mental health department. But one can hope and I still do. I just want to stress the heavy and not so attractive girl can and does often WIN over the thin and pretty...its attitude and so much more.....

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » Fallen4myT

Posted by lonelygirl on March 27, 2004, at 19:36:32

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » lonelygirl, posted by Fallen4myT on March 27, 2004, at 18:44:53

Well she may not be AS thin or pretty but I'm sure she is at least decenta, like you don't turn to stone if you look at her... I am the most hideousy disgusting, monsterously fat-assed ugly beast on the entire campus, if not the entire state (and no, I am not exaggerating; I am not even one of those fat girls with a pretty face -- there is nothing at all good about what I look like). Even if I were the nicest, smartest person on earth, everyone would still be too revolted to love me in any way. But on top of that, I am a stupid, crazy, cynical, boring weirdo. Basically I am repulsive in every way possible. If I looked like Britney Spears, at least I could get some shallow guys to love me, but I don't have anything going for me at all. I even used to fool myself into thinking that I was a good person because I didn't do drugs or sleep around or fill in the blank, but refraining from doing something bad does not equal being good -- plus, it's not like I ever had any temptations since nobody ever invited me to any parties and not even the most desperate guy on earth would want to sleep with me if I were the only girl alive.

 

Re: looks » lonelygirl

Posted by Dinah on March 27, 2004, at 20:23:23

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » Fallen4myT, posted by lonelygirl on March 27, 2004, at 19:36:32

I'm ugly and fat, and my husband loves me just fine. And I'm not kidding. I've got skin tags around my eyes that look just like warts. All the little capillaries around my face broke the other day so I'm all blotchy. I've got little beady close together eyes and a few chins. Oh, and don't forget the thin hair.

People who don't know me well tend not to notice me at all, which I see as a sort of advantage to being fat and ugly. But it doesn't mean I'm not loveable. My husband loves me and finds me sexually attractive. My son thinks I look just right for a Mom. I've got a handful of really good friends. And my therapist feels comfortable with me and I think is at least a bit fond of me.

I think you overestimate the looks thing. And that's coming from an ugly fat person. I do know that there is prejudice out there, but people who come to know you can still like you.

As for your personality, you don't show any hideous traits in your posts. :) You seem intelligent and appear to care about the feelings of other people. What's not to like?

But if there are things about the way you act that you'd like to change, that's ok too. Isn't that why we're all in therapy?

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » lonelygirl

Posted by Fallen4myT on March 27, 2004, at 23:04:13

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife » Fallen4myT, posted by lonelygirl on March 27, 2004, at 19:36:32

Lonelygirl you have a bad self imagineesteem. I am thin and pretty but my husband is mean to me and does not really love me, he hits me he calls me a retard and more. Looks do not guarentee love. You say youre not smart but you are I read what you write and youre way smarter than me, youre also very funny and kind to a lot of people on the boards. Britney Spears looking would maybe get you a shallow guy you say but..thats not love. The inner person is what in the end gets loved.Ken may marry Barbie but he falls in love and cheats with Midge :)

 

Being fat

Posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 14:43:02

In reply to Re: looks » lonelygirl, posted by Dinah on March 27, 2004, at 20:23:23

I hate being so fat! I think that most of my problems stem from the fact that I am fat. I think that if I were thin and good-looking, I wouldn't be so shy, I would be able to make friends, I could get a boyfriend, I could do a lot of things. I swear, everybody hates fat people. And thin people think it is SOOO simple -- "Just eat less and exercise more!" The instant people look at me, they see that I am fat and form so many judgments. They immediately assume that I am a stupid, lazy loser (and I suppose they are right, but they don't even give me a chance to make them think otherwise). I think it is telling that any time anyone insults me, they invariably include a crack at my weight. I'm never just a bitch -- I'm a "Fat, ugly bitch." I'm not just lazy -- I'm a "Fat, lazy slob."

It is bad enough when people say it to my face, but it is almost worse when they don't say it, because I know they are thinking it. My brothers are always rating the looks of every female they see, from classmates to waitresses to random people they see anywhere, and they always make fun of fat girls. I read a message board at another site where people post their "rants," about anything that bugs them, and nearly half of them are about how much they hate fat people, especially fat people who dare to wear clothes that show their bodies at all, who dare to go swimming, who dare to go to a fast food restaurant, etc. They literally say that just the sight of fat people makes them SICK. One of them said something like, "If you're fat, don't go out in clothes that only thin people should wear. As a matter of fact, if you're fat, just don't go out at all. Please, think of the children." I am not mad at them for saying it, because they are just being honest, and even if they didn't say that, they would still think it.

People also write in their LiveJournals and stuff all the time stuff like, "Ew, this nasty fat person sat next to me today," etc. I am in a Yahoo groups list for avoidant personality disorder, and someone wrote a post recently about how she went to a conference and a disgusting fat woman sat next to her, and she was so disgusted by this woman, her clothes, how her stomach moved when she laughed, etc., and how she hoped nobody would think she was associated with the fat woman. She later found out that this fat woman was a writer she admired. Her point was that she was ashamed of judging a book by its cover, but do you know how hard it is to go through life knowing that everywhere you go, that is how people think of you, even before they know who you are? Sometimes I feel so overwhelmed just at the thought of leaving my room because I know that everyone who sees me is totally repulsed by me.

Anyway, I am very sensitive about this and I don't like talking about it. I don't think I could talk about it with my psychologist, but that's ok, because I don't think even HE wants to talk about it. He says stuff sometimes like, "I think you see yourself as not being very smart or likeable..." and he doesn't say the obvious, which is that I see myself as ugly and disgusting, because that is the one thing that he can't even bring himself to PRETEND to disagree with. He can find reasons tell me that he thinks I am not stupid, but I don't think he could even say with a straight face that I am not absolutely, appalingly, disgustingly ugly. I bet he has a hard time just sitting there looking at me for a whole hour. I get the feeling that he doesn't even want to get into talking about how my being ugly is a problem because there is just nothing he can say but, "You're right, you're revolting, and I don't see how you can expect anyone to like you if you look like that."

I decided that I want to get gastric bypass surgery, which is very expensive but can be covered by insurance. I am on my parents' insurence, since I am a full-time student. Initially, they said NO WAY, but I convinced them to go to an information session about it and they said they would let me get the surgery. But our insurance has very strict policies about it, especially on trying other ways of losing weight. Although I have been on at least a dozen diets, and gone to two dietitians, I have gotten fatter and fatter over the last 10 years. I actually sort of blame the first time my mom made me go on a diet, even though I was only about 10 pounds overweight (I would die of happiness if I woke up tomorrow only 10 pounds, or even 20 pounds, overweight), for starting the cycle of yo-yo dieting that has led to my being so hugely fat today, but I think I am being dishonest with myself in blaming that, and I know that it is just my fault and nobody else's. Anyway, nothing that I have done counts for the insurance requirements, which are to be under a physician-supervised diet for a 6-month period within the past 2 years. When I found out about this, some time in June of last year, I decided to go to a doctor and go on a diet for 6 months and then I could either get the surgery or continue with the diet if it was working. My last doctor had moved away so I didn't really have a doctor, so I asked my mom if she could find a doctor who is covered by our insurance. She said she would, but she took so long that I didn't get an appointment until 2 days before I had to go back to school (in another state). That doctor wasn't even any help -- she just referred me to another doctor, but I couldn't get an appointment with him before I left to go back to school. Then my mom said she would look into finding a doctor who is covered on our insurance in the area where I go to school. Well, she never did, so the time has passed and I haven't done my 6 months of dieting, so I can't get the surgery any time soon. I am kind of pissed because I have this feeling that my mom is doing it on purpose so I can't get the surgery. I guess it's my fault because I should just find a doctor myself, but I don't really understand how it works with our insurance so I have to get her to find a doctor for me.

Hmm, this is so long and rambling that I sort of forgot my point... It is just this enormous burden to walk around knowing that everyone who sees me instantly hates me. I even hate having my psychologist see me because I know how disgusting I look to him while I am sitting there so attracted to him. Even when people are nice to me, I can't stand it because I know that they are just thinking about how disgusting and fat I am.

 

Re: Being fat » lonelygirl

Posted by Dinah on March 28, 2004, at 15:01:21

In reply to Being fat, posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 14:43:02

I'll admit that's true of some people, maybe even many people. But... It can't possibly be true of all people because it's not true of me. You just need to surround yourself with people like me. :D And as much as I'd like to think so, I'm not really unique.

Perhaps you should include that in your factors of where to move. I understand some areas of the country are a lot more tolerant of heavy people than other areas of the country.

 

Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lonelygirl

Posted by Racer on March 28, 2004, at 15:44:17

In reply to Being fat, posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 14:43:02

Listen, this is one of my soapboxes, so bear with me if I go too far. It's only because I care so much about the issue.

First of all, I can name at least half a dozen beautiful, sucessful Fat Chicks -- not all of them opera stars, either. Alison Moyet is one of my very favorite singers, and she is hardly ever shown in photographs because of her weight. She is BEAUTIFUL, and wouldn't have that amazing voice without a big housing for those pipes. The singing Wilson sister from Heart, same story. What's so sad is that she listened to so many people saying, "be thin!" instead of listening to her voice on the records. Kirstie Alley is getting a lot of cr*p right now, and was her name Delta Burke? Cameras do weird things to bodies, so don't let the TV or movie screen make you think you know what "real people" should look like. When the show Cybil was on the air, I ran into Cybil Shepard at an event and her bottom was -- ahem -- much larger than you'd have imagined from watching the show, but her body overall was very strangely proportioned from dieting to fit an unnatural mold. Lucy Lawless -- Xena, Warrior Princess -- who looked so voluptous onscreen was thin as a rail, and barely this side of flat chested.

Here's Racer's Rules of Weight Management:

1. If you can walk around your life, you're doing OK.

2. If you can't walk from home to class to the library, fix that and don't worry about what you look like.

Don't forget that a lot of psychoactive drugs make you gain tons of weight. I'm the Queen -- nay, the EMPRESS -- of weight gain from anti-depressants, from 35 to 70 pounds depending on the drug. Go ahead, ask me how that affects my life? I dare you. Of course, from a doctor's point of view, well, "just eat less and exercise more..." Fortunately, doctors are starting to get the message. Unfortunately, it's taking them an awfully long time! If you're medicated, check with your doctor.

About the gastric bypass: do what you can to bypass the surgery! Believe it or not, the best results from diet plans come through Weight Watchers: people who complete their programs not only lose weight consistently, they also maintain the weight loss. Slow loss is the rule, and stick to it.

For very heavy people, check with your doctor first, and then follow Racer's Rules again:

1. Diet or don't, but EXERCISE! If you're really heavy, try walking 20 minutes three times a week. And wear a cute outfit, and thumb your nose at anyone who looks at you funny. Remember, some folks like chubby chicks -- and you're welcome to be totally sexy while overweight. I, personally, give you permission. Once you can manage a brisk, 20 minute walk three times a week, think about what sort of exercise you might like to do next: swimming is good, although it probably won't lead to weight loss, but the idea isn't to lose weight so much as to learn to feel at home in your body.

My theory is that sexy fat chicks are those who like living in their bodies, who have taken a good look in the mirror and decided that this is their body and they'll keep it rather than rejecting it. Think about how that fits with your self-image: could you be turning people away with your own self-rejecting attitude?

By the way, during my college days, I got a lot of cruel comments about my weight, too. My pdoc says that I wasn't anorexic, you know, since my periods never stopped, but I was down to about 75% of my healthy weight -- maybe a bit less -- and a number of people felt the need to tell me that seeing me distressed them greatly. "How can you go out looking like that? Don't you know how you look?" etc. People who are unhappy with themselves will always look for someone else to make unhappy. Too fat, too thin, too tall, too short, machts nichts -- they'll find something to criticise. Only one way to deal with them: ignore them, learn what you like in you, and laugh at the idiots out there with nothing better to do than make fun of others.

It also helps if you can make one friend to sit around and make fun with: "look at that skinny blonde chick, think hugging her is like hugging a shopping cart or what?" Humor, especially sick humor, can be a godsend. (Just don't sit around the ice cream parlor, right?)

If it weren't for the whole anonymous thing here, and the geography and the age difference, I would be your friend, so don't sell yourself short. Learn to live in your skin and stop rejecting that same skin. Your body wants you to like it, so that it can be happy. Once you give it what it needs, you'll be happier, too.

Good luck -- hell, BEST luck.

 

Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » Racer

Posted by lucy stone on March 28, 2004, at 16:43:10

In reply to Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lonelygirl, posted by Racer on March 28, 2004, at 15:44:17

I've been lurking here for a month or so and finally decided to post since this topic is so close to my heart. I can feel your pain, lonelygirl, and I'm another fat woman. I am doing a psychoanalysis, four times a week on the couch, and I'm currently entering my 4th year. We are JUST NOW getting around to my weight and body issues. For me, these issues are the hardest ones to talk about, much harder than my abusive father, the early loss of my mother, and all the other stuff that causes me problems in my life. I am not only fat, I am very tall (over 6 feet), which makes me very conspicous. That combo has been very bad for me in many ways. I was bullimic for 20 years and finally stopped with extensive therapy. I was pushed into getting help when my daughter developed anorexia, I felt like a virus that had contaminated her with my eating issues. My very kind and patient analyst helped me stop even though we never directly talked about it. You are not alone in your pain, many of us share it. I don't think you are digusting at all, you are very smart and thoughtful. You are so articulate, I would also be your friend if I could.

 

Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lucy stone

Posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 17:36:52

In reply to Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » Racer, posted by lucy stone on March 28, 2004, at 16:43:10

Hi Lucy... I'm glad you decided to post and I hope you will continue to do so. I am sorry to hear that you know how I feel :-( I don't know why it is such a hard thing to talk about, but it really is, isn't it?! I can understand why you are self-conscious about being tall, although I am at the opposite end of the spectrum -- I am about 5'2" and I feel like this short, fat, round blob. I wish I could be a little taller so it would make me at least a little more proportionate.

Well, I would say "welcome," but I guess you have been here lurking longer than I have been posting!

 

Re: Welcome » lucy stone

Posted by Dinah on March 28, 2004, at 18:19:36

In reply to Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » Racer, posted by lucy stone on March 28, 2004, at 16:43:10

I'm glad you decided to post. :)

You know, my therapist rarely mentions my weight or ummmmm.... lack of beauty unless I mention it first. Of course, he's a big guy himself. And when I do mention it, he's very quick to remind me that it was the medications that put on the weight.

The medications didn't strip me of good looks, though.

I wonder if it's a tough thing for therapists to talk about in general. Maybe we greater than size ten and/or less than attractive clients should get together and write a book for therapists. Let them know the best ways to breach that subject.

 

Honestly I never dislike anyone for looks (nm)

Posted by Fallen4myT on March 28, 2004, at 20:38:29

In reply to Re: Welcome » lucy stone, posted by Dinah on March 28, 2004, at 18:19:36

 

Re: Being beautiful, as you are.. » lonelygirl

Posted by Karen_kay on March 28, 2004, at 21:13:54

In reply to Being fat, posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 14:43:02

If you think you are beautiful, you are! I'm rather tall, and used to weigh quite a bit when I was in high school (did I just admit that? Shhh! You won't tell, will you :) And I used to hate myself. I moved out on my own and literally starved myself. I dropped 80 lbs and still thought I was fat and ugly. And it's because growing up my mother used to tell me I was. (Don't get me wrong, I LOVE my mother dearly) But, I've realized that even though I don't have a perfect body I still am beautiful. Am I'm quite sure you too are beautiful. My best friend in the world has put on some weight. But, she is one of the sexiest women I know. Beauty isn't determined by dress sizes or hair color or any thing like that dear. Beauty is something that just exudes from a person. Once You know that you are beautiful, everyone else knows it too! That I promise.

I posted one of my favorite poems on Social that really helps me when I'm having one of those "ugly" days, and also when I'm not. It's under the subject "Dee, Falls, Daisy and Cubic" (Sorry, not so good at providing links).. You should read it. It's very empowering. don't just read it once, read it a few times. I have it hanging on my fridge. I used to use it as a make-shift CBT of sorts. I'd read it until I believed it. And I honestly do now. I hope that you will too!

 

Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lonelygirl

Posted by Racer on March 29, 2004, at 9:38:58

In reply to Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lucy stone, posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 17:36:52

One of the most drop dead sexy chicks I've ever known *admitted* to being over 170# at just under 5'0", and we're talking drool cups handed out to the audience when she was on stage. Weight really doesn't have much to do with beauty or sexiness or any of those things. Attitude has EVERYTHING to do with it. This woman simply WAS sexy as all get out.

And if you believe you're carrying around a beautiful aspect, maybe lovely eyes, pretty hands, whatever, you'll convince everyone else of it, too. Trust me on this, since I've been trying to figure this out for a lot longer than you've been alive! Again, I give you permission to be beautiful at any size -- and with all the problems I've got right now, you don't want to invalidate me by not taking advantage of that permission, do you? (Hey, that sort of guilt thing works on me when I'm being hard on myself. Figured it was worth a try...)

Healing thoughts with you, and with Lucy Stone, too.

 

Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » Racer

Posted by lonelygirl on March 29, 2004, at 9:45:22

In reply to Re: Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lonelygirl, posted by Racer on March 29, 2004, at 9:38:58

I weigh more than that. And I don't have any beautiful aspects. Actually, you know how everybody has "pretty eyes?" It's one of the most generic compliments you can possibly give because it's true for everyone. Well, I actually have ugly eyes. One eyelid opens more than the other, so they look really lopsided and I look like I'm retarded. Also, my eyelids have these ugly veins on them that look horrible. My hands are hideous. They are so fat and disgusting, you would have to see them to believe it. I cut my fingernails really short, too, so they look bad... There is nothing beautiful about me.

 

Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife

Posted by obSession on March 29, 2004, at 12:07:16

In reply to Re: juicey funny bits abt u therapists wife, posted by Apperceptor on March 27, 2004, at 15:59:30

To A yes I would be as intrested if my T had a boyfriend , the significant others in a T's life I find very inretsing to me , I am not sexually attracted to me T nor do I have any level of erotic transferance .....yet I really am intrigued by the significant others in his life MAYBE IT IS BECAUSE THEY GET MORE OF HIS MIND THAN I DO!

 

Re: Being fat

Posted by platinumbride on March 30, 2004, at 5:11:53

In reply to Being fat, posted by lonelygirl on March 28, 2004, at 14:43:02

Oh, Lonelygirl.....

I can relate to so many of the things you said.
I also think that it is pathetic as well as unfair that we live in a society that so reveres the thin and is repulsed by the overweight. It is almost as if not being normal weight is a mortal sin! And yes, it does make one want to crawl into one's own shell and be avoidant.....

Regarding the matter of your shrink:

I think you should bring it up! It is YOUR dollar being spent in there, and this is clearly a major problem for you. My guess is that the shrink (if he/she is any good) is waiting for YOU to bring it up so that you can have a good cry and a breakthrough, or whatever......

Losing weight only happens when one is ready deep in ones soul to make a committment to it.....not a moment before! I had such a time 10 years ago...Since that time (guess I kept it off for 5 years) it has been one struggle after the next with no results past about 7 or 8 lbs. But I KNOW it won't happen again until I am dead focused on it. Until then, I get fatter...fatter than I ever imagined possible for me.

I wish I could take those people who are phobic and grossed out by fat and give them all a lesson in compassion. I wish they could spend one day in the shoes of a fat person! Their derision only makes me want to stay in the house more and exercise like - NEVER!
Anyway, talk it over with your psych. It might be a really good thing to do.......

Diane

 

Here's lots of folks who love chubby chicks!

Posted by EmmyS on March 30, 2004, at 6:17:04

In reply to Hey, some folks like chubby chicks! » lonelygirl, posted by Racer on March 28, 2004, at 15:44:17

http://bbwdating.com/

Many, many, men who love lovely chubby ladies!


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