Opinion Me, Myself, and McDonald’s

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Me, Myself, and McDonald’s​

I fucking love McDonald’s.

Wait — let me clarify: I don’t mean the multinational corporation known for its shady labor practices and an almost universally misunderstood lawsuit over hot coffee. I love the food at McDonald’s — thick McFlurrys studded with frozen M&M’s, the weirdly shaped yet perfectly crispy chicken nuggets, the way that the aroma of that aforementioned coffee mingles with hot grease and grill smoke to produce the chain’s classic scent. There are few things I find more comforting than a cardboard tray of McNuggets paired with the carbonated zing of a McDonald’s fountain coke and fries so salty that I can lick the sodium grains from my fingertips. What I don’t love, though, is how many years I spent hating myself over such a simple pleasure.

I am a fat person, and have been for pretty much all of my life. I started counting calories somewhere around age 10, attended Weight Watchers meetings as a chubby tween, and took my first prescription diet pills (read: legal speed) before I graduated high school. With that, of course, came years of dieting and restriction, of rigidly defining foods into “good” or “bad” categories, and trying so hard to only eat the “good” foods — or nothing at all — until I ended up binging on the bad. Often this vicious cycle led right to the McDonald’s drive-thru, where I could end a week of amphetamine-induced, intentional hunger with a feast that would make an all-you-can-eat buffet look puny.

These binges were, without exception, conducted in secret shame in my car, and ended with all evidence being tossed in a trash can on the way home. I couldn’t let anyone know that I’d had any McDonald’s at all, much less a double cheeseburger, McNuggets, large fries, a giant drink, and maybe even a McFlurry all in the same trip. Even being seen by someone familiar in the McDonald’s parking lot was terror-inducing, because I knew that they’d think I was just another lazy fat person on their way to becoming a drain on the American healthcare system because they couldn’t put the Big Macs down.

My hiding did not entirely exempt me from that abuse. Even if jerks that I went to college with or who commented on my stories online didn’t know that I was eating at McDonald’s, they just assumed that I, and every other fat person, spent my days shoving burger after burger into my face, and were happy to tell me that. I got snide looks from teenage cashiers in the actual restaurant, who often “accidentally” handed me a Diet Coke even though I hadn’t ordered one. I was once called a “fat bitch” in a McDonald’s drive-thru line because I was, apparently, taking too long to order my Quarter Pounder with Cheese.

I know that this kind of side-eye is not directed only at fat people. Harmful stereotypes about the types of foods eaten by marginalized people across all intersections are often rooted in racism, classism, and pure ignorance. Low-income individuals are frequently shamed for relying on fast-food restaurants to keep their families fed despite almost zero other reasonable options, and Black and brown people are disproportionately likely to face fatphobic discrimination in healthcare settings and beyond. This kind of treatment has wide-ranging impacts on everything from a fat person’s job prospects to their healthcare outcomes. If thinness is a moral good, then those who cannot achieve it must be morally bad.

For much of my life, McDonald’s and fast-food chains like it have been blamed for the fact that bodies like mine even exist. First came the issue of childhood obesity, which some argued was fueled by the introduction of the chain’s iconic Happy Meal. In 2002, two New York teenagers filed one of many lawsuits against the chain for “making them fat,” as was widely reported — and derided — in the media. Then, as the “clean eating” trend of the 2000s grew into a full-blown phenomenon, fear-mongering over ingredients like high-fructose corn syrup, trans fats, and preservatives argued that those too, along with the grease and the carbs and the sodium in McDonald’s food, were making Americans fatter.

Perhaps the peak of that phenomenon came in 2003, when Morgan Spurlock’s blockbuster documentary Super Size Me was released. The premise was simple: Spurlock would eat nothing but McDonald’s for a month, then track his health along the way. Eating around 5,000 calories per day, Spurlock said that he gained 24 pounds, added fat to his liver, and experienced erectile dysfunction.

I knew that they’d think I was just another lazy fat person on their way to becoming a drain on the American healthcare system because they couldn’t put the Big Macs down.

I wasn’t eating anywhere near 5,000 calories per day, much less entirely from McDonald’s, but after watching the documentary for the first time a few years after its release, I was sure that McDonald’s was my problem. I vowed to stop eating at the chain, holding a funeral for my favorite “bad habit” in the parking lot of a McDonald’s in Lubbock, Texas. I even “celebrated” the occasion with an apple pie, which was not usually part of my binge-eating repertoire. And for the next several months, I kept this twisted promise to myself. The Lean Cuisines, cigarettes, and Diet Cokes I replaced it with were not in any measure healthier than McDonald’s fries, but I definitely felt more virtuous.

But even after years of yo-yo dieting, continued diet pill use, and outright food restriction, I never actually lost any meaningful amount of weight. Sure, I’d drop 20 pounds here or there because I was eating almost nothing, but as soon as I fell off the wagon, even just for a week or two, I’d gain it all back and more. My mental state continued to deteriorate thanks to my eating disorder and a host of other factors, like being stuck in a miserable West Texas town for college, and I eventually dropped out and moved back home with my parents to get my proverbial shit together.

It mostly worked, at least for a while. After a couple of months of fighting with my mom, surreptitiously smoking weed, and spending way too much time watching Rachael Ray on the Food Network, I moved out again. I worked as a live-in nanny for a while, for a rich family that I hated. In the evenings, when I got any bit of free time, I would get in my car and chain-smoke cigarettes, blasting music and trying to forget that I had to wake up in just a few hours to chauffeur the world’s most annoying four-year-old to preschool. And so when the Golden Arches appeared after one especially stressful day, like a grease-drenched North Star in the dark of night, I wasn’t the least bit surprised when I turned my car into the drive-thru and ordered the usual.

I was not prepared, however, for the wave of shame that would crash over my body as soon as I threw away the wrappers. I felt like a failure, someone who wasn’t even able to do something as simple as stay away from fast-food restaurants in Dallas, a city with so many other good restaurants, ones where I could actually order something “healthy.” I attributed that failure to my fatness, that I cared more about satisfying my appetites than my health, and not the fact that I was depressed and looking for a modicum of comfort in an absolutely miserable time.

It was by sheer luck that I happened across the online fat positivity community just a few months later, in a desperate online search trying to figure out why the hell I couldn’t seem to lose any weight. I was still dieting, which meant that the work of fat activists like Ragen Chastain, Marilyn Wann, and Sonya Renee Taylor felt almost like heresy. I wasn’t yet ready to believe that the science on obesity was wrong, that fatness wasn’t inherently a bad thing. I read study after study, dispelling truths I held almost religiously, like the flawed notion of BMI or the outright lie that simply being fat was inevitably going to kill me one day.

I can’t remember when exactly I started going back to McDonald’s every once in a while, but I did. Maybe it was during a late-night road trip, where a double cheeseburger and fries was the only option. Only now, I wasn’t binging. I was ordering a normal amount of food, and actually enjoying it. I didn’t care whether or not someone saw me walking around with a cup from McDonald’s, but I never lost sight of the fact that there would still be people in this world who would think awful things about me based only on where I had chosen to eat lunch that day.

When I finally learned about intuitive eating, everything really clicked into place. I figured out that the reason I was craving cheeseburgers and fries was that I had been depriving my body of fats and sodium for years. My body couldn’t trust whether I was going to fuel it regularly or not, so it offered its own input. Working with a therapist, I was able to finally recognize that there wasn’t anything specific about the food at McDonald’s that was “making me fat,” that it was entirely possible that I was just one of many people whose bodies were naturally at a higher weight. Years of thrashing my metabolism via an endless loop of dieting had only made that more true, but I was finally ready to make peace with the body that I’d been given.

My McDonald’s shame still creeps up from time to time. In 2021, as most of us were still stuck inside due to pandemic regulations, I saw a clip from comedian Bill Burr in which he admonishes fat people for daring to demand respect. Outside of parroting the typical “calories in, calories out” nonsense, Burr of course turns his attention to McDonald’s, which he describes as “the reason for why everyone’s fat.” He shames those “out-of-shape” people who asked the chain to add healthier options, like wraps and salads, to their menu. Listening to that bit definitely stung, despite my knowing that everything he said was complete bullshit.

Now, I neither obsess over nor deny myself McDonald’s. I’ll catch a craving for McNuggets every once in a while, and those salt-coated fries remain my favorite PMS snack. It’s nice to have McDonald’s as an option when I’m road-tripping across the country in the middle of the night with my best friend, hangry after a day of traipsing around in the woods. And though there are some who will still insist that there’s no amount of McDonald’s that’s healthy in any diet, I think I’ve finally found the happy medium in mine.
 
This person needs to reevaluate their relationship with food. There is no such thing as a food craving on your period, it's just an excuse fat women use. Food should always just be a way to stay alive, not a form of entertainment or brief amusement. There are lots of healthy restaurants everywhere now-a-days so this bitch explicitly chooses to eat McDonalds right next to healthier options. Just own up to your fatness.

You can eat McDonalds, but you also need to put in the work to balance that fat and sodium with exercise and water intake. Healthy food is called healthy because it does not require that additional work after eating it. Healthy food has no strings attached.
 
'Outside of parroting the typical “calories in, calories out”'

These fat fucks always think they're magical. Physical laws no longer apply to them because they're valid, and they need to be seen, and everyone else needs to pick up the pieces from their disgusting habits.

Also, what is this shit about McDonald's being the only option in 'marginalized communities'? This fat white whale was probably scared away by all the niggers outside her nearest restaurant and is now grasping at social buzzwords. There's always plenty of black restaurants that will serve you the greasiest shit imaginable in the ghetto. Niggers disgust me, they don't scare me; I've eaten so much mac salad with literal inches of grease left in the bottom of the cup afterwards but it was always a 'fuck everything, literally everything, I'm willing to die at 70 instead of 80 if it means a hot meal right now' choice.
 
'Outside of parroting the typical “calories in, calories out”'

These fat fucks always think they're magical. Physical laws no longer apply to them because they're valid, and they need to be seen, and everyone else needs to pick up the pieces from their disgusting habits.

Also, what is this shit about McDonald's being the only option in 'marginalized communities'? This fat white whale was probably scared away by all the niggers outside her nearest restaurant and is now grasping at social buzzwords. There's always plenty of black restaurants that will serve you the greasiest shit imaginable in the ghetto. Niggers disgust me, they don't scare me; I've eaten so much mac salad with literal inches of grease left in the bottom of the cup afterwards but it was always a 'fuck everything, literally everything, I'm willing to die at 70 instead of 80 if it means a hot meal right now' choice.
To answer your latter question, probably because in 'marginalized communities', many food outlets (restaurants and stores) get run out of business because 'local color' like to rob the places and shoot them up.
 
People who eat a lot of fast food or non-nutritious foods have an unhealthy relationship with food, usually due to some underlying unaddressed trauma or issue. Then you glom onto a movement which excuses and reinforces your retarded beliefs, good job. Hand wave some bs about fear mongering over HFC (which is not fit for human consumption) and solidarity with the blacks and you've got your moral justification to continue being morbidly obese.

A simple question - if you could no longer eat non-nutritious food for every meal, would you still be fat? Nope.

Also you're in Dallas, get some class and dine at the real fast food places: In-n-Out, Whataburger.
 
Also, what is this shit about McDonald's being the only option in 'marginalized communities'? This fat white whale was probably scared away by all the niggers outside her nearest restaurant and is now grasping at social buzzwords. There's always plenty of black restaurants that will serve you the greasiest shit imaginable in the ghetto. Niggers disgust me, they don't scare me; I've eaten so much mac salad with literal inches of grease left in the bottom of the cup afterwards but it was always a 'fuck everything, literally everything, I'm willing to die at 70 instead of 80 if it means a hot meal right now' choice.
Its the bullshit excuse used to talk ever more shit about "gentrification" (fuck people for actually wanting to live in nice clean places, am I right?) because it (supposedly) drives niggers to even poorer neighborhoods (for """some""" reason) where they apparently have no choice but to buy from dollar stores and fast food joints rather than take the 5 mile detour to a Safeway or the thousand other grocery outlets/alternatives available in every major and most minor cities in the world to get some real food at far more reasonable prices.

Yet it can never be the niggers fault in modern society, nope has to be a "systemic" problem caused by the white man. Because god forbid niggers act like normal human beings and actually think a few days ahead rather than satisfy their immediate cravings and become flabbergasted at the consequences of such shortsighted thought processes.
 
I am a fat person, and have been for pretty much all of my life. I started counting calories somewhere around age 10, attended Weight Watchers meetings as a chubby tween, and took my first prescription diet pills (read: legal speed) before I graduated high school.
Why would I listen to someone who cannot even do the bare minimum to manage their food intake?
 
Is there any particular reason I should care enough about the author to read this, or is it another "Look at meeeeeeeee!!!!!!!" disguised as an article?
 
This reads like a parody where Fatty eats at McDonald's because of course she does, inhaling fries, Coca-Cola, and McNuggets like they were air.

Its the bullshit excuse used to talk ever more shit about "gentrification" (fuck people for actually wanting to live in nice clean places, am I right?) because it (supposedly) drives niggers to even poorer neighborhoods (for """some""" reason) where they apparently have no choice but to buy from dollar stores and fast food joints rather than take the 5 mile detour to a Safeway or the thousand other grocery outlets/alternatives available in every major and most minor cities in the world to get some real food at far more reasonable prices.

Yet it can never be the niggers fault in modern society, nope has to be a "systemic" problem caused by the white man. Because god forbid niggers act like normal human beings and actually think a few days ahead rather than satisfy their immediate cravings and become flabbergasted at the consequences of such shortsighted thought processes.

It's also because grocery stores have tons of "shrinkage" in so-called "marginalized communities", where everything from pork chops to shopping baskets will just start mysteriously disappearing from the store.
 
Food should always just be a way to stay alive, not a form of entertainment or brief amusement.
Hard disagree, dude. Not to sound like a fag, but food is one of those universal constants that connects all human beings together from all parts of the world and even through time itself. Have you never spent a cool summer night grilling burgers with your buds in the backyard or roasting hotdogs over an open flame? Did you never experience the pleasure of going to grandma's house and being spoiled with an abundance of food? Sure, you could live off of soylent and bugs, but why would you? Food is pleasurable, and eating a delicious meal together with your friends and family strengthens bonds and creates lasting memories together.
 
McDonalds is a Sometime Food. You can eat it, or any fast food, in moderation and not be a fatty. Christ, look at Reviewbrah. He's a connoisseur of fast food and weighs 98 pounds.

But this person is just using this revelation to go full HAES and whole hog at the McDs trough. Enjoy your death from "natural causes" at 33.
 
This reads like a parody where Fatty eats at McDonald's because of course she does, inhaling fries, Coca-Cola, and McNuggets like they were air.



It's also because grocery stores have tons of "shrinkage" in so-called "marginalized communities", where everything from pork chops to shopping baskets will just start mysteriously disappearing from the store.
Probably didn't make it clear enough when I said """"some""" reason", but that was what I was implying lol.
 
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