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AIBU?

To wonder why we hate our curves?

291 replies

malificent7 · 20/03/2018 13:42

Ive been reading the beauty myth by Naomi Wolf and she makes some very intetesting points about the diet industry.

In the 1950s etc when women weren't in the workplace, curves were celebrated. Monroe was a size 16.

Since the 1960s when Twiggy was a role model, women were more succesful at work so the patriarchy had to make women slaves to being thin to keep them in check.

So do men prefer curvy women? Isn't fat on females healthy? Ive read on here that men stop fancying their partners when they put on weight?

So are thinner women more attractive or is that just what society wants?

From experience and after reading threads on here, dieting makes us miserable and we have a bad relationship with food..so why hate our natural curves (not obesity rolls of fat.)?

OP posts:
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Blahblahdoll · 21/03/2018 16:53

For me to have bones showing/thigh gap I would have to be so thin as even as a teen doing a bit of modelling (5ft 9 & was 9.5 stone then) I didn’t have them. Now I’m older & heavier no chance! I have friends who have less fat then me who are a size 12 due to their build whereas I have fat to pinch at a size 12.

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bustoschool · 21/03/2018 19:16

I am horribly thin to look at, but seemingly totally healthy have had children, very fit etc. Always been the same size.

That photo is of two 'curvy' athletes but they are unusual, mostly very athletic women are very straight up and down, like Paula Radcliffe for instance.

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ilikebread · 21/03/2018 19:19

I love my curves if you mean hips, boobs & bum - fat belly’s, fat arms, face Face however is not curvy - it’s just fat and unattractive because it’s unhealthy.

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MsHarry · 21/03/2018 19:21

I love my curves. By curves I mean what makes me a woman. I am a size 10/12 but shapely. I don't like excess fat on my body, that is different to curves. I hate the way people use curvy to describe fat.

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gamerwidow · 21/03/2018 19:30

I see no reason to love or hate my curves there is no ‘better’ body type there is only healthy or unhealthy. If you are well and healthy and can do moderate exercise without feeling like you are going to die then your body is just fine. What’s in fashion changes all the time, embrace what you’ve got.

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ThickSocksWoolyHat · 21/03/2018 20:25

I think it's more about being aware of your health. I've had people telling me I look better & healthier with a bit more weight on - I'm nearly 2 stone overweight & frankly, was a lot more curvey when you could see I had a waist.

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Forevertired19 · 21/03/2018 20:38

Monroe wasn't a size 16. I've been to see her clothes at an exhibition in bath. The clothes especially around her waist were tiny.

Honestly.. I think curves are being more celebrated now if I'm honest. Its that beautiful figure of a big bum, boobs and a tiny waist. The exaggerated hourglass to me. Also big thighs as well, especially where I am.
I just wish more women would be comfortable within themselves. You cannot change your body type really. So dress for what you have and keep yourselves healthy.

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StickyPlum77 · 22/03/2018 02:23

I have a pair of size ten flared trousers I wore in the late nineties. I wear a ten now, sometimes an 8. I couldn't fit my left toe in said trousers. As someone above said, vanity sizing is real.

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HuskyMcClusky · 22/03/2018 03:02

That photo is of two 'curvy' athletes but they are unusual, mostly very athletic women are very straight up and down

I’m not convinced at all. I think a lot of women athletes look curvy. Of course, it depends on the sport - e.g. swimmers tend to have broad shoulders and narrow hips.

I think if you are naturally curvy (broad shoulders and hips, narrow waist), fitness and low body fat accentuates that shape.

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ushuaiamonamour · 22/03/2018 08:30

HuskyMcClusky Yes, indeed. I follow World Cup biathlon avidly. The sport is possibly the most demanding one of all & requires astonishing fitness in every part of the bodyarms, legs, core. The range of the athletes' builds and shapes, in both sexes, is a wonderful thing; skinny, stocky, curvy, straight up and down, large-thighed, etc. etc. (As for their performances, it's swings & roundaboutsa heavy athlete has one sort of advantage, a lightweight one another.)

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TalkinPeece · 22/03/2018 08:30

I am naturally not curvy.
But its the flab that needs to go.
Flabbiness is unhealthy. Full stop.

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Jaygee61 · 22/03/2018 09:12

I am currently slowly losing weight - at 5ft 1.5 and 9st 6lb I am a healthy weight. But my target is around 9st. Bearing in mind my frame size (medium), shape (hourglass) and age (late 50s and post menopausal) and my quite chunky .muscular build I think I look absolutely fine at that weight. When I weighed 8.5st after doing Weight watchers 5 years ago my face looked a bit pinched. If I went down towards 7st, the minimum for my height, I would look as though I'd been very ill. It would put years on me. It is unfortunately true that when you get to a certain age you have to choose between your face and your arse (unless you can afford surgery of course).

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bustoschool · 22/03/2018 09:41

Yes ok Husky maybe does depend which sport, I am thinking running, heptathlon that kind of thing as what I enjoy watching.

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MsHarry · 22/03/2018 13:44

Monroe wasn't a size 16. I've been to see her clothes at an exhibition in bath. The clothes especially around her waist were tiny.

Yes Ia free but remember they would have worn 50s style undies /girdles that pulled you in at the waist so clothes fitted that silhouette rather than her natural one.

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MsHarry · 22/03/2018 13:44

Yes I agree!!! No Yes la free!

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Yazoop · 22/03/2018 13:53

OP - You can be attractive with or without curves, thin or fat. Women of all sizes attract partners. Certain figures might be in "fashion" at any given time, but that doesn't mean you are not attractive if you don't conform to that ideal.

So no, I don't think thinner women are necessarily more attractive but I think it is also wrong to insinuate that curvier women are, either. Attractiveness is in the eye of the beholder. Popular culture can have some influence on this, but in my experience individually we are all attracted to different "types" and it is rarely solely dictated by what's in the fashion magazines.

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