I have definately experienced the wierdness of social interactiosn as the weight goes up and down.
When I got down to 264 pounds (on Weight Watchers) I was a lot more confident and the social interactions where changing. I was becoming... 'one of them'!
Women would talk to me (and grab my *** on the dance-floor - wierd!), and guys would talk to me more. It was easier to meet new people at a networking function for work.
But as I gained weight from 264 to 473 pounds, things started to change. I was the same person, but people changed. They stop responding to me, stopped listening, I became a bit of a social pariah.
One of the wierd things is that people remmeber me at shops I go to (probably because I was the biggest person there).
There actually (to me) seemed to be a sliding scale of correlation. Weight goes up, people's behavious/response goes does in a negative fashion.
That's hard on people's self-esteem!
When I got down to 264 pounds (on Weight Watchers) I was a lot more confident and the social interactions where changing. I was becoming... 'one of them'!
Women would talk to me (and grab my *** on the dance-floor - wierd!), and guys would talk to me more. It was easier to meet new people at a networking function for work.
But as I gained weight from 264 to 473 pounds, things started to change. I was the same person, but people changed. They stop responding to me, stopped listening, I became a bit of a social pariah.
One of the wierd things is that people remmeber me at shops I go to (probably because I was the biggest person there).
There actually (to me) seemed to be a sliding scale of correlation. Weight goes up, people's behavious/response goes does in a negative fashion.
That's hard on people's self-esteem!









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