Fat Is Not A Feeling, Facebook
How recent graduate Catherine Weingarten '13 changed Facebook, by Bruna Lobato '15
Facebook offers more than 100 feelings that any user can list alongside their posts, ranging from 鈥渇eeling blessed鈥 to 鈥減issed off.鈥 As of 2015, 鈥渇eeling fat鈥 is not among them, after Ohio-based playwright and recent graduate Catherine Weingarten 鈥13 partnered with the organization Endangered Bodies to create a change.org petition requesting Facebook remove the emoticon.
Weingarten first got the idea when she saw a friend using the chubby-cheeked smiley face emoticon in her status. 鈥淚 think it was supposed to be funny, but seeing this status made me feel angry.鈥 Ninety-seven percent of women admit to having at least one instance of hating their bodies, and this emoticon was alarming because it reinforced those self-destructive feelings. Weingarten was so alarmed by the body-shaming 鈥淚 feel fat鈥 and 鈥淚 feel ugly鈥 emoticons that she contacted Facebook the very same day and put it on the radar of her Endangered Bodies network of activists.
Weingarten is not a stranger to this issue. She has struggled with eating disorders and unrealistic body expectations herself. In the United States alone, 20 million women and 10 million men suffer from a clinically significant eating disorder at some time in their life. The National Eating Disorder Association reports that 81 percent of 10-year-old girls are afraid of being fat and 35鈥57 percent of adolescent girls engage in crash dieting, self-induced vomiting, fasting, diet pills, or laxatives. For most young women (and, increasingly, men), trying to live up to unrealistic ideals associated with beauty severely affects self-esteem.
鈥淚 used to have this idea of 鈥業鈥檓 fat鈥 and 鈥業 feel fat,鈥 but what I meant was that I didn鈥檛 feel thin enough and like I wasn鈥檛 good enough,鈥 Weingarten explains. 鈥淓veryone has fat, regardless of their weight.鈥
This uproar came shortly after Facebook managed a different kind of media storm, when it was released that the company had experimented with news feeds to evaluate the impact content had on a person鈥檚 mood and disposition. The backlash focused on the involuntary experimentation, but the findings of the actual study demonstrated that Facebook content, even when seemingly innocuous, greatly impacts human emotions. Weingarten, along with 16,770 people who signed the petition to get Facebook to remove the 鈥渇eeling fat鈥 emoticon, were aware of the impact content and news feeds have on self-image and believed that the 鈥渇eeling fat鈥 emoticon would overwhelmingly be associated with something negative, and used as a way to put themselves down.
Before Facebook removed the chubby-smiley face they told People magazine in an official statement that 鈥淧eople use Facebook to share their feelings with friends and support each other [...]. One option we give people to express themselves is to add a feeling to their posts. You can choose from over 100 feelings we offer based on people鈥檚 input or create your own.鈥
Not good enough for the 16,770 users who signed Weingarten鈥檚 petition, which ultimately got the reputedly rigid social media giant to change their ways. A week after the petition was launched in March, Facebook from the list of status updates.
鈥淎s someone who struggled with body image, I am happy that I鈥檝e helped eliminate one form of body-
shaming hatred on the internet,鈥 Weingarten said. 鈥淚鈥檓 proud to have partnered with Endangered Bodies to lead this effort.鈥
Bruna Lobato 鈥15 studied comparative literature and creative writing. Her writing has appeared in The Christian Science Monitor, The Feminist Wire, and Creative Nonfiction. She is currently an MFA candidate at New York University.