Enough with the “Fat Talk”
I haven’t written a blog post for three days, three days devoted to finishing a 34-page photo book, the fundraiser for my son’s preschool class, by PhotoWorks’ 25-percent off deadline last night. Now that my volunteer duties for the preschool project are complete, I’m back to normal life, if I can call being on bed rest normal.
Tonight, I’m going to vent about “fat talk.”
First, I have to admit that my family’s comfort with “fat talk” has been generated by me—by my jokes about my extreme weight gain. Because I am self-deprecating, my family members assume I am comfortable with them being me-deprecating. And, while I usually am, laughing along with the teasing, I hit my limit in the past few days.
Of course, being on bed rest for three weeks has minimized my sense of humor, while maximizing my size. My bra size is now a 38E—an E, for God’s sake—up from its normal 34C. And, the frightening thing is that, sitting atop my massive pregnant belly, my breasts actually look petite.
I am so happy to be pregnant at 41, elderly in the reproductive sense—as in literally reproductively elderly, as my diagnosis is “Elderly Multigravida with Antepartum Condition or Complication.”
I am so happy to be pregnant considering my “antepartum complication or condition,” which is my uterine abnormality, the result of my mother unknowingly taking the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol (DES) for nausea when she was pregnant with me.
But, while I feel so blessed to be pregnant, it’s not easy to live with the significant, body-altering side effects of the medications necessary for my two in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles, one of which is weight gain. Nor is it easy to live with the fact that the initial IVF weight gain is then topped with the necessary pounds of pregnancy.
But, because of the loss of one of my twins in September, I added unnecessary pounds through emotional eating in my attempt to cope with the death of my son, whose tiny body was still inside me. I added unnecessary pounds as I hoped that my body would absorb him, rather than abort him, so that my other son would be saved.
So, I have gained well beyond the recommended amount of pregnancy weight. I’m not only pregnant, but also fat. I know it. My family knows it. But, I don’t want to hear “fat talk” anymore.
My nearly 5-year-old son is the main perpetrator. Sunday night, while we were lying in bed talking before he went to sleep, he asked if would put my arm around him. I did. After 30 seconds, he grunted and said, “Can you move your arm? It’s too heavy. I think it weighs 188 pounds.”
Monday, out of the blue, he said, “Mama, you’re a big, fat ninja.”
I know why he called me big and fat, so I asked, “Why do you think I’m a ninja?”
“Because you’re fat,” he giggled.
To me, fat would be the least likely adjective to use with ninja, but, then again, I’m not 4.
Yesterday, at bedtime, he started singing, “You’re a fat ninja. You’re a fat ninja.”
Today, he announced that we were going to play “dinosaurs vs. people.”
“Who gets to be the dinosaur?” I asked, because he has a remote-controlled dinosaur robot that can kick the asses of any of his toy people.
“You do,” he said. “Because he’s fat.”
“Nice,” I responded sarcastically, knowing full well that he thought I should have the fat dinosaur because I’m fat. “Fat dinosaur should be matched with fat Mama” makes complete sense in his young mind.
Hearing my tone, he tried to recover. “Well, his tail is skinny.”
So, tonight, when he once again complained about the intolerable weight of my arm around him, I decided to have “the talk”— as in “the talk about fat talk.”
I started by asking him how he’d feel if people called him fat.
He said, “If I was fat, and people called me fat, I would punch them in the face.”
“Do you want me to punch you in the face?” I teased.
He giggled.
I explained, “I know I’m fat. But, after the baby is born, I will lose the weight. And, until then, it sometimes hurts my feelings when you call me fat. I know it’s true, but sometimes it hurts my feelings to be told the truth every day.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Sweetie, it’s OK. You didn’t know it hurt my feelings. But, now that you do, can you please not call me fat anymore?”
“OK.”
We’ll see how tomorrow goes…

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