"Chemically... black fat may be the same as white fat. Culturally it is not."

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Apr 25, 2002
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"Chemically... black fat may be the same as white fat. Culturally it is not."

Black Women and Fat
By ALICE RANDALL
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/o...-fat.html?_r=1&smid=pl-share&pagewanted=print


FOUR out of five black women are seriously overweight. One out of four middle-aged black women has diabetes. With $174 billion a year spent on diabetes-related illness in America and obesity quickly overtaking smoking as a cause of cancer deaths, it is past time to try something new.

What we need is a body-culture revolution in black America. Why? Because too many experts who are involved in the discussion of obesity don’t understand something crucial about black women and fat: many black women are fat because we want to be.

The black poet Lucille Clifton’s 1987 poem “Homage to My Hips” begins with the boast, “These hips are big hips.” She establishes big black hips as something a woman would want to have and a man would desire. She wasn’t the first or the only one to reflect this community knowledge. Twenty years before, in 1967, Joe Tex, a black Texan, dominated the radio airwaves across black America with a song he wrote and recorded, “Skinny Legs and All.” One of his lines haunts me to this day: “some man, somewhere who’ll take you baby, skinny legs and all.” For me, it still seems almost an impossibility.

Chemically, in its ability to promote disease, black fat may be the same as white fat. Culturally it is not.

How many white girls in the ’60s grew up praying for fat thighs? I know I did. I asked God to give me big thighs like my dancing teacher, Diane. There was no way I wanted to look like Twiggy, the white model whose boy-like build was the dream of white girls. Not with Joe Tex ringing in my ears.

How many middle-aged white women fear their husbands will find them less attractive if their weight drops to less than 200 pounds? I have yet to meet one.

But I know many black women whose sane, handsome, successful husbands worry when their women start losing weight. My lawyer husband is one.

Another friend, a woman of color who is a tenured professor, told me that her husband, also a tenured professor and of color, begged her not to lose “the sugar down below” when she embarked on a weight-loss program.

And it’s not only aesthetics that make black fat different. It’s politics too. To get a quick introduction to the politics of black fat, I recommend Andrea Elizabeth Shaw’s provocative book “The Embodiment of Disobedience: Fat Black Women’s Unruly Political Bodies.” Ms. Shaw argues that the fat black woman’s body “functions as a site of resistance to both gendered and racialized oppression.” By contextualizing fatness within the African diaspora, she invites us to notice that the fat black woman can be a rounded opposite of the fit black slave, that the fatness of black women has often functioned as both explicit political statement and active political resistance.

When the biologist Daniel Lieberman suggested in a public lecture at Harvard this past February that exercise for everyone should be mandated by law, the audience applauded, the Harvard Gazette reported. A room full of thin affluent people applauding the idea of forcing fatties, many of whom are dark, poor and exhausted, to exercise appalls me. Government mandated exercise is a vicious concept. But I get where Mr. Lieberman is coming from. The cost of too many people getting too fat is too high.

I live in Nashville. There is an ongoing rivalry between Nashville and Memphis. In black Nashville, we like to think of ourselves as the squeaky-clean brown town best known for our colleges and churches. In contrast, black Memphis is known for its music and bars and churches. We often tease the city up the road by saying that in Nashville we have a church on every corner and in Memphis they have a church and a liquor store on every corner. Only now the saying goes, there’s a church, a liquor store and a dialysis center on every corner in black Memphis.

The billions that we are spending to treat diabetes is money that we don’t have for education reform or retirement benefits, and what’s worse, it’s estimated that the total cost of America’s obesity epidemic could reach almost $1 trillion by 2030 if we keep on doing what we have been doing.

WE have to change. Black women especially. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, blacks have 51 percent higher obesity rates than whites do. We’ve got to do better. I’ve weighed more than 200 pounds. Now I weigh less. It will always be a battle.

My goal is to be the last fat black woman in my family. For me that has meant swirling exercise into my family culture, of my own free will and volition. I have my own personal program: walk eight miles a week, sleep eight hours a night and drink eight glasses of water a day.

I call on every black woman for whom it is appropriate to commit to getting under 200 pounds or to losing the 10 percent of our body weight that often results in a 50 percent reduction in diabetes risk. Sleeping better may be key, as recent research suggests that lack of sleep is a little-acknowledged culprit in obesity. But it is not just sleep, exercise and healthy foods we need to solve this problem — we also need wisdom.

I expect obesity will be like alcoholism. People who know the problem intimately find their way out, then lead a few others. The few become millions.

Down here, that movement has begun. I hold Zumba classes in my dining room, have a treadmill in my kitchen and have organized yoga classes for women up to 300 pounds. And I’ve got a weighted exercise Hula-Hoop I call the black Cadillac. Our go-to family dinner is sliced cucumbers, salsa, spinach and scrambled egg whites with onions. Our go-to snack is peanut butter — no added sugar or salt — on a spoon. My quick breakfast is a roasted sweet potato, no butter, or Greek yogurt with six almonds.

That’s soul food, Nashville 2012.

I may never get small doing all of this. But I have made it much harder for the next generation, including my 24-year-old daughter, to get large.

Alice Randall is a writer in residence at Vanderbilt University and the author of “Ada’s Rules.”
 

Ike Turner

CDCR_#k775281
Jul 17, 2011
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#3
it's not just the women, statistics show that middle aged black men don't live too long either. Out of all ethnicity's middle aged black men are ranked #1 in dying of sudden heart attacks. And it's not because of obesity or high blood pressure either.
 
Dec 25, 2003
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#9
Disagree with article.

Out of all the girls Ive been with black girls typically had the worst eating habits.

They also ask some specific ass questions while ordering food - "how thick are the potato skins" "could you take the vegetables out add extra meat and cheese" - shit like that. Like really they imagine the food in their mind and look at it from every possible angle.

You really look at a bitch like did you just ask that?

Also you see shit you dont see among white people. Butter and salt added to buttery and salty food. Sugar on rice. etc.

"she invites us to notice that the fat black woman can be a rounded opposite of the fit black slave, that the fatness of black women has often functioned as both explicit political statement and active political resistance."

I really doubt it has ever been either of those things.

Poverty -> breakdown of family -> poor eating habits. Add to that a zeitgeist of underclass status, disenfranchisement, and discrimination, only helping to perpetuate poverty and poor support structure.

Also Poverty -> cheap food -> lack of access to healthier options. I dont really see it as anything more complex.
 
Mar 18, 2003
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#10
2 things;

1. I'm a little disappointed that everyone was able to read all of that.

2. CB can we please refrain from posting articles within the realm of the open forum intelect? I love nothing more than to see frustration when people are faced with ultra-long reads. Thanks in advance.
 
Jul 25, 2007
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#12
I use to be health conscious but then I realized that we are all going to die soon. If not I don't want to be around to witness all the bullshit and when skynet takes over and blows us all to hell. I lived thru the glory age so deep fried chicken skins dipped in BBQ sauce is what I'll eat for breakfast if I want to.
 
Apr 13, 2003
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#14
I gotta keep it real. Some fat bitches overly embrace being fat because it gives them an excuse to be fat and a reason to eat like shit and not workout..don't get me wrong, I like thick bitches, meaning big ass, big tits, curvy hips and a flat stomach. There are a lot of chix out there built like that believe it or not...I can't get down with fat bitches that don't give a shit about their health
 
Dec 25, 2003
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#15
Dude said I cant fuck with no bitch with a mcdonalds bag in the back seat, jack in the box bag under the passenger seat, a old half full soda cup from in n out in the drink holder and some old fuckin opened sauce packet on the floor
 
Nov 24, 2003
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#17
"she invites us to notice that the fat black woman can be a rounded opposite of the fit black slave, that the fatness of black women has often functioned as both explicit political statement and active political resistance."

I really doubt it has ever been either of those things..

hahahahahaha

Btw did you know that bald guys are really choosing to make a political statement against Jewish people and their little hats.