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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,

 

This week I'd like to share a question and answer with you.

 

My friend P. asks, "It was a total shock to me to be told that I’m small fat. For me it was like being told I’m not really fat. My sense of myself is something very different. I struggle with self loathing every day. I’ve believed all the negative messages society feeds us. Thankfully I’m getting really good professional help, and it’s getting a bit better.

 

Here’s my question - are thin folks who deeply believe they’re fat getting so threatened having their self image questioned that they get rageful? I hope it’s not an inappropriate question. It certainly explains why I had a push back reaction."

 

It's absolutely an appropriate question, P., thank you. And yes. This is how privilege works: Because it's unearned and invisible, it's a shock to hear that we have any of it, and we immediately feel defensive because hey, we didn't DO anything to deserve that, and our lives are still difficult, so it's really uncomfortable to have it pointed out that we possess it.

 

And even if we wanted to, there's usually not much we can do to actively reject that privilege. It's not like I can go hand in my Official White Lady Card. I'm a white woman whether I want to own that status or not, and that brings with it a ton of privileges that I didn't earn and can't reject: I'm less likely to be murdered by police, I don't get followed in stores, I'm more likely to be hired and promoted, the list goes on and on. There are also many advantages conferred by being thin, as I've talked about ad nauseam on my Instagram presence.

 

So the path forward involves sitting *with* that discomfort and acknowledging that it's not our fault we have that privilege, that it doesn't make us bad people and it doesn't make our lives easier -- it just means our lives would be that much harder if we *didn't* have that particular privilege.

 

Then we can move into figuring out how we can use the privileges we have for good. As a white woman, my privilege there allows me to put myself more safely into situations that would be abusive or dangerous to a person of color, and work to end those situations (both individually and as a whole). People in thin bodies have many many ways (which I also talk about every week on my Instagram) in which they can use their privilege to advocate on behalf of fat folks.

 

But not everyone makes it through the discomfort, and a classic way to deal with discomfort is to take it out on someone with less power than you. That's ultimately what fuels both the trolls, concern trolls and haters I get on social media. When the spotlight has always been on you, having it moved elsewhere even just for a minute feels like standing in the dark, and some people have a really hard time recognizing that everyone else was standing in the dark all along.

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, vol. 3

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Image description: A 6" tall figurine of a feminine figure with golden brown skin and hair, no facial features, bare legs and arms, and a red one-piece bathing suit lies on a background of blooming clover.

New & Popular in the Shop

 
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Image description: Lindley, a fat white woman with shoulder-length blonde hair, leans against a brick wall in an alley. She is wearing glasses, a pendant necklace, and a sleeveless dress with hearts on it.

LISTEN: Everyday activism, using your power and fat admirers with Sara Stanizai (with transcript)

Think you can’t support a movement from your corner of the world? Think again! In this Instagram Live, Sara Stanizai, LMFT and I talk about capital-A activism (with hand gestures), using your power to change the world, what counts as activism and simple ways you can help the fat folks in your life. Listen to our chat or read it with the included transcript.

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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