Image item
 
 
Image item
Hi friend,

One of the most important issues facing weight management, bariatric, dietetic, endocrinology, special interest groups, and other provider groups and practices today is weight stigma. It’s important to update your resources, handouts, training, certifications and other materials to remove stigmatizing language in order to improve patient compliance and positively impact clients.
 
Here are ten ways to highlight weight stigma and use more inclusive language in your weight management:
 
1. There is no way to make “weight management” inclusive. The entire concept of weight management is based on a long racist and non-evidence-based history of forcing bodies into smaller shapes to their own detriment.
 
There is no need for the existence of weight management without weight bias and weight stigma, which are inherently racist concepts.
The foundation of your house is rotten and cannot be fixed with a fresh coat of paint.
 
2. In case you’ve ever wondered: You are the bad guy. Hurting and killing fat people is evil, and doing it for profit is despicable, no matter what kind of shallow body positive, inclusive or “weight neutral” language you slap on it.
 
3. You can stop being the bad guy by reading Fearing the Black Body and understanding the banner of hundreds of years of racism that you have taken up and are running with. 4. Then, disband your organization. Right now. No excuses. No more profit from harming and killing fat people.
 
5. After you do that, take your profits and give them back to the patients you hurt, to the people you made think their bodies and minds weren’t good enough, to the people you denied life-enhancing surgery and the relatives of the people who died from preventable conditions your diets and surgeries forced them into.
 
6. If you don’t have the gumption to do that, find non-profits related to fat justice and body liberation and donate your profits. NAAFA, The Body Is Not an Apology, NOLOSE and Black Lives Matter are good places to start.
 
7. Read the book Body Respect. Learn the actual science around fat bodies.
 
8. Make an honest public apology outlining the harm you’ve done, what you’re doing to fix it and how you plan to honor and appropriately care for fat people in any future healthcare work.
 
9. Go do something less violent with your life, something that doesn’t involve the racist, sexist, classist elimination of naturally-occurring fat populations.
 
10. Stop killing fat people.
Warmly,
Lindley
 
P.S. Share this week's letter or save to read later here. It's only possible to offer the Body Liberation Guide and all its labor for free because people like you support it. $1 USD per month helps out, and $5 and up gets you access to the full Conversation, event listings and more.

The Conversation

Here's what's being discussed this week in the world of body acceptance and fat liberation:
 
I'm featured! The Best Lingerie For A Boudoir Shoot, According To Professional Photographers (read)
 
Fat people have always existed (watch)
 
SJ Thompson is now available for coaching (get info)
 
When NEDA's helpline workers unionized, NEDA replaced them all with AI (read)
 
New find: Every Sunflower, new plus-size store in Portland, OR (see)
 
Resource: Crip theory and disability book list (read)
 
🦄 Unicorn chaser: What if I'm doing bad? What if I fail?
 
 

Image item

"Learn self-acceptance and self-love. That's the kind of behavior change that really is effective." » Christy Harrison

Upcoming Events

 
Image item
 

Quick Resources: Indigenous Justice

Image item

Pssst! Did a friend forward you this email? If you'd like to get your own body liberation guide every week, just drop your email address here.
 
You're on this list because you're a current or past client or customer, or you signed up on my website.
 
*Links are provided as a community service and are not compensated unless noted by an asterisk. 
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Youtube