Am I Too Fat to Go on Holiday? The Fat Fear of Travel. – Snag
Am I Too Fat to Go on Holiday? The Fat Fear of Travel.

Am I Too Fat to Go on Holiday? The Fat Fear of Travel.

Am I Too Fat to Go on Holiday? The Fat Fear of Travel.

Have you ever had a panic attack because you're worried you won't fit into a seat?

It could be any seat. At a restaurant, in a theatre, on an aeroplane.

The sight of a chair with arms brings gut-wrenching feelings of full-on dread whenever I see one. Don’t even get me started on booths at a restaurant or deck chairs outside. Forget ghosts and boogeymen, I am totally, unbelivably petrified of chairs.

It may sound dramatic to get so het up over a seat. But for fat people, it's a reality. We are forced to squeeze ourselves into a world that isn’t big enough for us. To cram ourselves into corners and live in abject fear of taking up space.

It's enough to make you never want to leave the house.

And to be honest, a lot of us don’t. So many people choose to stay home instead of going out, because it's easier, because home is safe. You can’t be laughed at at home. You can’t feel the jeering stairs on your back as you walk down a crowded street. You can’t feel the embarrassment asking for a seat belt extender on a plane, and worry what the reaction will be when you do.

Living your life

So many moments in life that should be normal are tainted by the fact that I’m bigger. That there's no room for my body, so I should just be ashamed.
This is why travelling is a minefield for fat people. Holidays are supposed to be fun. To be a chance to relax while exploring new places, soaking up culture and new experiences and eating amazing food. But when the world judges you purely on the way your body looks, you don’t get to have your dream holiday. If you can even muscle up the courage to go outside it's fraught with anxiety and stress.

There have been countless times when I’ve just wanted to cancel a trip. I’ve gotten myself so worked up about being able to travel on a plane that I just think why do I bother?

Never again

I had a bad experience once on the way back from Japan, where the young man in the seat next to me made the cabin crew find him another seat, after spending half an hour sitting next to my seemingly gargantuan body, huffing and puffing about the fact I was too big.

I was mortified.

Now don’t get me wrong, I don’t want to take up your space. For 16 hours I was prepared to hold myself in as best as I could, to tuck my arms into myself, never get up and make myself as small and insignificant as possible so this man could have a reasonably comfortable flight.

This wasn’t enough, and I felt terrible. I felt terrible that he had to move, but I felt terrible for me too. And at that time I was a size 22, I dread to think what he’d say now if he was stuck next to all my size 28 glory.

It’s experiences like these that make you never set foot on a plane again. To put you off going away for life in fear of being confronted by feelings of shame and embarrassment.

But even if by some miracle you do fit into the seat, it certainly won’t be comfortable. On the last few plane rides I’ve taken I couldn’t even put the seat table down because my tummy was in the way. I had to pass on eating dinner on my long haul to America as I had nowhere to put it.

“Are you sure!?” a concerned air hostess asked.

“I’m not hungry I said,” I said.

I have no choice I thought, blinking back tears.

"Just lose weight"

I’m sure many of you will be thinking “Well if it's such an issue then just lose weight”, and god do I wish it was that simple. Losing weight is hard, and takes time. Am I supposed to just hide in a cupboard until then? Until society deems me worthy of its time and space?

And even if you do lose the weight, 90% of people end up putting it all back on. So it’s safe to say, I’m going to be fat for a while. Do I wish I wasn’t? Every single day of my life. But that's not going to stop me from actually having fun. You won’t catch me sitting at home in a dark room just waiting for the day to pass.

I’m going to get out there and live, and if that means I have to feel sick and blink back tears of anxiety and embarrassment while doing it then I guess that's what I have to do.

But I wish it wasn’t so hard.

Because until you’ve cried in a restaurant because you physically can’t fit into the stool they’ve provided, or nursed bruises on your thighs from cramming yourself into a seat at the theatre, or worried so much about fitting into a plane seat that you feel like you’re going to be sick at any moment, and think you may as well not go on holiday to save yourself the hassle.

Until you’ve gone through that, you have absolutely no idea what it's like.
I wish it was different. Travel is not ‘one size fits all’ and I wish people would realise that. Fat people have every right to travel as anyone else. They have every right to take up space like everyone else. If only people could be a little kinder as I try to navigate the minefield that is my summer holiday, maybe I wouldn’t have to feel so scared.

I hope the world will be different. I hope one day, I fit.

Comments

  • Great article. People are quick to judge. I’m a very self conscious 22, it takes so much to leave the house for anything other than work I am so ashamed. People can be so cruel. On holiday it stopped me going in the pool one day when I saw the giggles and nudges between a mother and teenage daughter. It stopped me wearing a new dress my partner got me after I saw 2 older women pointing and laughing in a restaurant. The things is I am lucky, I am proportionately fat, 3 sizes bigger than the UK average and yet I am ridiculed. I can’t imagine how awful it is for those who are bigger or different. We are not allowed to be outside the perfect box made by society/media. I can safely say I’ve tried every diet and I’m not lazy. Illegal to be racist, sexist, sectarianist etc. But it’s OK to hurt others by being fatist.

    Joy on

  • Great article which is so honest. I’m so pleased to have found snag tights and only just read this blog.
    I’d booked a coach trip but in the small print read that if a ‘big’ person was wider than their seat they, if the passenger next to them complained, then if there was a spare seat then that complainant could move. If the coach was full, then the ‘big’ person might lose their holiday !!! The seat size (depth and width) were in that small print.
    I rang the company and explained what the email read.
    She denied that they weren’t against overweight customers but then told me if there were spare seats at the back then the driver might move me. If that’s NOT biased against overweight people, then I’m a model size 8 !!
    I did travel and there was plenty of room.

    Debra on

  • Sadly we have to put up with the only form of bullying it seems thst is acceptable. I would not wish to inconvenience anyone but I wish they understood the reason for my size is not food but lymphodema. And people have it because of cancer or the fact thst the lymph nodes don’t work. I want to shout" I don’t eat as much as you, I have a chronic illness" but they wouldn’t believe it, and why because it makes them look better in their eyes. So sad, so narrow minded.

    Lynne on

  • Sadly we have to put up with the only form of bullying it seems thst is acceptable. I would not wish to inconvenience anyone but I wish they understood the reason for my size is not food but lymphodema. And people have it because of cancer or the fact thst the lymph nodes don’t work. I want to shout" I don’t eat as much as you, I have a chronic illness" but they wouldn’t believe it, and why because it makes them look better in their eyes. So sad, so narrow minded.

    Lynne on

  • I’ve found over the years travelling is more difficult. Seats have become narrower and I have become wider. Some flights I need a seatbelt extension. First time I was mortified. People look at you ! We shouldn’t feel awful and we shouldn’t be made to feel uncomfortable on a flight, especially long haul. If flight companies haven’t recognised tall people for leg room yet, what chance do us voluptuous people have ?

    Debbie Twigg on

  • I’m 65 and a size 22. I love overseas holidays, and flying, and yes, some seats on planes are a bit one size, but I manage to get the seat belt done up. A few years ago I was a size 28 and found it difficult to do the seat belts and was embarrassed having to ask for an extra bit, especially when other people give you “that look” of disapproval.

    I’m off again soon, this time with my 38 year old daughter who is a size 26, should be fun with seating arrangements, maybe we could squish someone in the middle seat.

    As for swimwear, we’ll, last year was the first time I wore a 2 piece/bikini, yes I was very conscious of what other people thought. But the longer I did it the easier it got, and to be honest, who really cares what you look like, they are all there to do the same thing. So, holiday here we come, get ready for dazzling white, full bodies, clad in colourful bikinis. If you don’t like what you see close your eyes.

    Lesley Nash on

  • Fantastic item. Very true to life of a lot of women and men. If only we could wake up one morning and we were our perfect weight and size. Chin up and don’t give in xx

    Pamela on

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