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Number of entries: 36 Number of pages: 4 1 2 3 4
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Name: Alyson
From: Tennessee E-mail: Contact
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I love this so much, and hope that this site can become a community of sorts. Your article spoke to me in a way that most do not. I actually teared up while reading it, because I have always wanted to dance, yet I felt that my body looked akward. I am 5'6" and roughly 95 lbs. At 21 I had my son, and immediately walked out of the hospital in a pair of size 0 jeans. For the first time I had breasts, and felt somewhat like a woman, but they have gone. Not long ago, I put on my first mini skirt, with a pair of stiletto heels that my friend let me borrow. She forced me to look in the mirror and for the first time I saw them...my incredible legs! They reach up to my neck, and drop down in the most graceful and shapely sillouette. From that moment on, I've forced myself to look at my body without the hateful taunts in my mind. My neck is long, ending in coller bones that don't "stick out," but simply peek, in a teasing way, giving a hint at the small and flawless breasts beneath them. My stomach (the place in which my son grew into his glorious self), is slightly curved, but long and sexy . I will never hide again, because my body is beautiful. We thin women seem to flow, with ease and grace, in a way that is mesmorizing. Watch yourselves walk, and thing about the way your body moves and bends...like a small tree in the wind. We may be little things, but we all have a fire in us, that comes with grace which is to be envied. Smile.
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Name: RJ
From: NY E-mail: Contact
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So long as you are not unhealthy, don't worry about your weight. People may tease up, but the reality is:
1. Commercials run ads for weight loss program, not weight gain. 2. Competition shows are based on weight loss, not gain
Use this harsh treatment for personal growth.
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Name: aly
From: Malaysia E-mail: Contact
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I'm 15, and i'm 35kg...to some of my friends who know me better, their used to the fact that i'm naturally skinny,but to those who dont really know me.....well, lets juz say they dont have anything nice to say. I remember one of my classmates, she just walked up to me and said , "your skinny and i bet you have lots of sickness like, heart problem and etc...". The way she put it was like telling me i'm dying and that hurt. I dont even want to begin with the other mean things she has said to me or other people. But i don't take it personally, cause she's not perfect either. And i rather be skinny than to be such a mean person!!
I know i will gain a little weight in the near future, and i will never give up!! Thanks to this website.
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Name: RJ
From: NY E-mail: Contact
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I have a bust line and arms like a pre-adolescent child, but I have grown to appreciate what I have. I have gained weight in my abdomen area and my thighs slightly after 30. Don't be discouraged by negative comments and envy from others, especially women. I work in a mostly female office, and the comments about weight don't bother me anymore, but rather entertain me. Don't stoop to their level. :) :)
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Name: Tonya
From: Alto, La E-mail: Contact
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I am a very small framed, thin young lady. I have been very small my entire life. My legs and arms are the size of an 11 year olds.. seriously! LOL. I am 32 years old, 5'5" 98 lbs. I thought after I had my 1st son when I was 26 I may gain some weight... but went right back to my normal size after I had him. After having my second son at 29, I thought maybe now... but no... same size, just a little more fat in the abdomen area. I didn't even gain weight after 30. I have to admit, I don't ever exercise and eat anything I want. I do notice that I accumulate fat on my stomach and a little on my rear end. But is being so small framed making it impossible for my legs and arms to get bigger? That is what I'm dissatisfied with the most.. my VERY little legs and arms.. Anyone else feel this way?
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Name: k
From: atlanta E-mail: Contact
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i'm soooooo happy to have stumbled upon this site! i'm a 29 year old afro-am. woman who is 5'11'' and always weighed between 125-135lbs. doctors always told me i was underweight growing up and my family, friends, men and everyone else called me "anorexic", "toothpick" and all the other skinny hate words we hear. it has taken me a very long time to be comfortable with my own body, especially being in a culture that values curvy women as "real women" and skinny women as not. i'm not there all the way yet, (still don't own a pair of shorts), but i'm working on it. love, love, love this site. thanks for the self-esteem boost to help me love me!!! hugs for all the other naturally thin women out there!!!
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Name: Chelsea Q
From: Indiana E-mail: Contact
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at last! a site actually about POSITIVITY for and about thin women! almost all I ever see is "real woman have curves"; "men want meat not bones"; "I'd rather be big than a twig"; "don't you ever EAT?";, etc.
well firstly, ALL woman have curves. that's a biological fact that any woman can see for herself by standing against a wall and tracing her shadow. CURVES ARE NOT ROLLS OR BOOBS. I HATE how so many people think this, and use it to put down slimmer women! Curvy is also something any woman can be (except for mostly straight women, like Jennifer Garner for example... Rachel Bilson is TINY and she's got a great hourglass shape, as did the skinny Princess Grace and myself).
The insults are so hateful but we're told we should just ignore it. Are fat/bigger women? No. When they get insulted, absolute hell is raised. I'm actually pretty lucky; I've had some annoying and rude comments about my size but I don't think i've had it half as bad as some girls I've read about have. but no one does. and the fact that so many girls and even women have to go through such negativity just to make fatter women feel better (which everyone should if they try to be healthy) disgusts me. I'm so glad to see this site!
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Name: Victoria :)
From: Virginia
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Im 15 and 102 pounds at 5ft 6, but I have a very light frame and am active. i eat at least 2500cal a day like im supposed to but never gain weight. i get called an "anorexic barbie" all the time and then i start feeling horrible. but this site helps me embrace my smallness thanks
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Name: RJ
From: NY E-mail: Contact
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It's nice to see more activity on this site. As a naturally thin AAF, I was always bombarded with "brickhouse" figure stereotypes. It's okay if Monique has made a living commenting on skinny women. Just be happy that you are not that miserable; money does not always buy happiness. On another note, I work around mostly women, and have to deal with condescending comments about my being thin...but I must admit that ther are times when I enjoy being envied. Eat healthy, be skinny happy!
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Name: Ashley
From: US E-mail: Contact
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I love love love love love that this site exists. I am Black too so have spent my whole life not fitting my own culture's beauty standard and being reminded of it by strangers and acquaintances alike. I eat tons but don't hold much weight. I agree that you always hear about obese women being mistreated but it is silent with regard to naturally skinny women/people issues, particularly if you are from a culture where thin is not at all in. So hi-five to all my slimmies and keep eating whatever you want and loving it! And thank God they started making clothes that actually fit us! I hate going to stores that dont carry smaller than a 4/6!! And please tell Monique its not okay to make a career on the slogan "skinny bi*ches are evil." Not cool.
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