inspirations and contemplations on life, ethics, gender, love and the world at large.

15.3.10

belly full of fire




If you know me well, you will know that I love dance and musical theatre of all sorts. I don't care if the effort is amateur or polished, I will ferociously applaud anyone with enough guts to get up on stage in front of people and perform! I was at the resort show every night in Dominican and I loved every second of it!!


What I loved most was this: the dancers came in all shapes and sizes! The women (and the men too!) were tall, short, heavy set, waifish, light skinned, dark skinned, curvy, glamorous, plain, EVERYTHING! It was  so exciting because sadly you would never see that in North America in a dance show. There were beautiful bare bellies of all descriptions and not one of those dancers was self conscious. 


I want to include this article from Sexis  because it is a brilliant read! Enjoy:

Fire in the Belly: Self-Love and Navel Gazing 
By G.L Morrison


My lover made up a modern proverb: “A woman who loves her belly loves her body.” I don’t think it will catch on. It’s true that women, particularly modern women in Western culture, have a love-hate (or even a hate-hate) relationship with their bellies. Why? What did that sweet bump of skin (located as it is under the two much glamorized and beloved fat-bags) do to deserve such scorn?

 Belly History

“The ideal shape tends to be whatever is most difficult to achieve during a given time period. If too many women were able to meet the ideal, then standards would have to change for the ideal to retain its extraordinary nature.”
—Pauline Weston Thomas, Fashion-era.com


Circa 24,000-22,000 BCE, the Venus of Willendorf was the hottest chick around. Literally the oldest representation of a person, Ms. Willendorf is the ultimate BBW. Beautiful round belly exposed; the figurine is carved with attention to detail, right down to her fat dimpled knees.

Something happened between 24,000 BCE and 1800 CE and bellies got the worst of it. The Victorians, (so sexually uptight they covered up furniture legs as too suggestive!) may not have invented, but certainly perfected the corset. The “new ideal woman” was plump of hip, butt and breast but belly-bound. Restrictive corsets caused a variety of health problems with breathing and digestion; forcing the fashion victim’s internal organs to migrate as they were literally squeezed out of the belly in favor of the “hourglass” figure.

 I, Belly: Present Tense

“Loving yourself in a world of hate is the most radical, the most political thing you can do.”
—G.L. Morrison, from
 Weighing Desire

I am a SSBBW. Super-sized, Big, Beautiful Woman. My belly would make Ms. Willendorf gasp with envy. And yes, I do own a bikini or two. (I prefer to swim nude but so few pools accommodate that. We took over the hotel pool at NAAFA fat feminist conferences to go “chunky dunking”—that’s big girl speak for “skinny dipping.”)

The past is not a blueprint for the future. I am committed to live my life the way I want and to create the world I want to live in. So far, my influence hasn’t extended to ending war or world hunger, but I personally have helped hundreds of women love their belly bumps... and get jiggy with each jiggly roll.

I’ve read my happy fat poems all across the country, and women of all sizes come up and thank me; and tell me stories of struggle toward self acceptance. I have had dozens, possibly hundreds (who has time to count?) of lovers whose big, beautiful bodies are reflected lovingly in my eyes. I tell them what is sexy often enough they believe it, know it. Together we are making a “new ideal woman” for the future. She is full of herself. She has a belly full of fire. A big, beautiful belly.

Every day isn’t a hailstorm of self-applause. I have moments of weakness and intolerance. Weird moments in the mirror; not recognizing who I see there. Flashback 1982: First trimester of my pregnancy, I rubbed lotion into my scar-free skin every night. The routine waned as my belly waxed: huge, pale as a full moon. By week 30, my belly was an angry melon someone had attacked with a fork. 2010: Red, swollen welts like tire-tracks still cover it.

An important part of self-love is surrounding myself with good mirrors. Love is the best mirror. I don’t accept lovers who don’t love me big and delicious as I am. It’s impossible to watch your lover trace your scars or wide curves with pleasure and fascination and not catch some of his/her enthusiasm. How can you scorn something someone you love worships?

 Belly, Belly Well

“Lifting belly fattily. Doesn’t that astonish you.
You did want me.
Say it again.”
—Gertrude Stein


How do I love my belly, when billions of dollars every year is spent teaching me (and others) to hate it/me? Just remembering: This is my body, not their billboard. I live here. I love here. I feel what’s right “in my gut.” I hold days and thoughts and certain hours in every cell. History is etched in my DNA. My history and the history of every big-bellied woman in my bloodline back to the big, fat dawn of time. My body remembers all that; it stretches with what I fill it with. My ample hip remembers the lips that lovers pressed there while their kisses traveled the generous road of belly. The rippling belly swells to remember my last lover, my first child and a hundred dinners (breaded crab on a jazz-blasted balcony in Bourbon Street; the cheap magic of chili dogs; dim sum one New York Sunday; all-you-can-eat sushi Sundays in Salt Lake City). There is hardly room for the memories I am storing there. There is no room for self-doubt. And when some creeps in, I crowd it out with all the good belly stuff. Chase it away with a heart-felt belly laugh.

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