I'm sick of hearing this one.
I'm sick of people implying that skinny women - whether naturally slim or through consistent effort - aren't "real" somehow. It creates an "us vs. them" situation that pits women against each other.
With that said, I can recognize the phrase for what it was meant to be, which is an indictment against the impossible standards of beauty we see in the media. Women of any shape or size are going to find it difficult to look like Angelina Jolie. Even Angelina Jolie doesn't look like the Angelina Jolie we see in movies or airbrushed in magazines.
But lately, it's been co-opted by overweight women who want to feel better about themselves. I can appreciate that desire. I've always wanted larger breasts, so I can see the appeal of repeating an easy little quip that implies that flat chests are better. But I don't think attempting to make large-breasted women feel inferior is a good solution to my self-esteem issue. Nor is implying that smaller women are somehow less genuinely feminine than their larger counterparts.
I suppose saying that "average women have curves" would be slightly more accurate, although I have a problem with people calling rolls of fat "curves". I don't have a problem with fat or those that have it. Just call it what it is.
I'm sick of people implying that skinny women - whether naturally slim or through consistent effort - aren't "real" somehow. It creates an "us vs. them" situation that pits women against each other.
With that said, I can recognize the phrase for what it was meant to be, which is an indictment against the impossible standards of beauty we see in the media. Women of any shape or size are going to find it difficult to look like Angelina Jolie. Even Angelina Jolie doesn't look like the Angelina Jolie we see in movies or airbrushed in magazines.
But lately, it's been co-opted by overweight women who want to feel better about themselves. I can appreciate that desire. I've always wanted larger breasts, so I can see the appeal of repeating an easy little quip that implies that flat chests are better. But I don't think attempting to make large-breasted women feel inferior is a good solution to my self-esteem issue. Nor is implying that smaller women are somehow less genuinely feminine than their larger counterparts.
I suppose saying that "average women have curves" would be slightly more accurate, although I have a problem with people calling rolls of fat "curves". I don't have a problem with fat or those that have it. Just call it what it is.
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