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My offering for you this week

Through the end of 2020, all of my blogging and writing clients receive a free low-resolution stock photo from Body Liberation Photos with each piece created. That means that for each blog post you hire me to write, I'll include a free photo to go with it.

Just reply to this email to get started.

Hi friend,

 

It's definitely the fat kids' fault.

 

That was the gist of a discussion I witnessed last week, in which a woman claimed that "childhood o*" is a problem because fat kids don't fit in car seats. "I wouldn't be able to live with myself," she said, "if my kid died because he was too fat for a car seat."

 

I'd like for us to stop and consider the positioning of this statement. The fault is automatically assigned to a body rather than a piece of equipment, which is a very, very common response to institutional and infrastructure-based weight stigma.

 

It is wild to me that diet culture's first reaction to infrastructure barriers to child safety is "Well, clearly, it's the children's fault." Is it any wonder fat children are incessantly bullied and tortured, by both children and adults, for their "unacceptable" genetic heritage?

 

We see this tactic consistently aimed at fat adults, too. Can't fit in one airplane seat? Lose weight, fatty. No chairs you can sit in at the doctor's office? Lose weight, fatty. Can't access healthcare due to open bigotry? Lose weight, fatty.

 

Fat people, of any age, are never at fault for infrastructure that was designed to exclude them.

 

Expecting human bodies to conform to arbitrarily- and discriminatorily-designed physical infrastructure is fatphobic/fatmisic, racist, sexist and ableist. These pieces of our world don't just magically appear. They're not ground spawns or virtual objects in a video game. Chairs and buses and restaurant booths and curbs and counters and airplane seats and children's car seats were all designed by flawed humans who built their own biases right into those designs.

 

Actual people made decisions about which children are worth protecting and which children aren't. If car seats aren't available to fit all children, it's because of weight bias and stigma, not the unworthiness of some children's bodies.

 

"Just make the kid lose weight" is never a reasonable answer to this situation, either. Even if we had a way to make fat children into thin children, which we don't, fat children would still be equally worthy of care and protection. (What we do have is putting children on diets, which isn't a scientifically-backed way of making developing bodies thinner, but is absolutely a scientifically-backed way of giving them poor body image, disordered eating patterns and eating disorders for life.)

 

If fat children are dying in car crashes because protective equipment was designed to exclude them, that is entirely on the shoulders of the people who designed and sold that equipment without making suitable equipment available for every type of child body. Not fat kids' bodies.

 

*The words "obese" and "obesity" are increasingly considered to be slurs due to the way they stigmatize, dehumanize and medicalize fat bodies. I often use an asterisk in place of the full word to minimize harm when I'm quoting someone or otherwise need to refer directly to the term.

Warmly,
Lindley

 

P.S. If you'd like to share this week's thought, it exists in blog form here.

My favorite photo this week:

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The Conversation

 

Quick Resources: On Body Size + Fitness

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New & Popular in the Shop

 

September Free Stock Images

Click the link below to claim your free stock images for this month. The link will expire in two weeks, so be sure to grab them soon.

If you enjoy the free photos I provide each month, please help support Body Liberation Photos by purchasing stock images or becoming a supporter. Low on budget? Consider linking and/or giving photo credit to bodyliberationphotos.com when you use these free photos. Your support makes it possible to continue creating and offering these images. 

 
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LISTEN: Lindley on the Rising Whole Podcast (with Transcript)

On this episode of the Rising Whole podcast, Prim Ormanovich and I talk about how coherency in your business comes from having an underlying ethical framework or cause, and how my own underlying framework led to me splintering my business into many separate parts — and then bringing it together again.

You can listen to the podcast or read it with the provided transcript.

Change to Body Liberation Stock launch – now launching November 1

We’re making so much progress on the new site (more details below), but it’s taken longer than expected and 2020 is being particularly 2020-ish right now in my personal life, so I’m pushing the date of the Patreon-only launch to November 1 and the public launch to November 15. That gives me more time to upload all the images, do proper beta testing and otherwise make sure the site is stable and a great customer experience for you.

 

At one point weeks ago I had all the images uploaded to the new site and thought I was –>thisclose<– to being done, but it turned out that I was trying to stuff a metaphorical Clydesdale into a metaphorical dog crate, and the metaphorical horse refused. The site worked — sort of — but it was incredibly slow and half the pages would time out before loading.

 

So the last few weeks have looked this this around these parts, with the assistance of my software developer husband, without whom none of this would be happening:

 

– Upgrading my site hosting to a WordPress-support-specific plan, then promptly having to downgrade it because the size of the site was way too large for the plan with 4,300 full-resolution images

 

– Researching and doing a lot of fiddling and testing with cloud storage solutions to hold the images and serve them to the site (that also had to be compatible with the tech that processes the images and makes them available in multiple resolutions)

 

– Finding a solution to that, then realizing that using cloud storage would cause a massive SEO hit unless we also use a CNAME to mask the domain, make it look like all part of one site and make Google happy

 

– Set up a CDN and CNAME to accomplish that- Feel accomplished for about two hours until we discover that the tech that processes the images into multiple resolutions and creates products for them (mentioned above) can only process one image every five minutes (and not even the full-res image) or it crashes out

 

– Realize that means that I can’t sell full-res photos (sigh, fine) and even then I can only upload 250 photos per day, meaning that it will take almost a month to re-upload all the images

 

– Postpone the launch date so that uploads, speed testing and beta testing can happen before the launch. Cross fingers that the site speed is still good once all those images are re-uploaded.

 

It’s all coming together, just a lot more slowly than I’d anticipated. Stay tuned.

Hi! I'm Lindley.

- she/her

- photographer

- author

 

Hi! I'm Lindley.

 

I'm a professional photographer (she/her, pronounced LIN-lee) who celebrates the unique beauty of bodies that fall outside conventional "beauty" standards. I live outside Seattle, WA. 

 

I talk about and photograph fat folks because representation of large bodies in the world is vital to our body liberation.

 

 

People come to me for:

  • Body-safe portrait, boudoir and small business photography sessions
  • Diverse, body-positive stock photos
  • Fat fine art photographic prints
  • Health at Every Size (HAES)-aligned consulting, writing and editing
  • The Body Love Shop, a curated resource for body-positive and fat-positive art and products

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