My general overview of this thread:
Someone pointed out that it seems cruel that through the media, society can so quickly judge a celebrity because of a weight gain. Then it was , in my opinion, correctly pointed out that society, again through the media, has a warped view of acceptable weight. That the "ideal" is not realistic or even necessarily healthy.
Which is true. I spent about 2 minutes googling the report, and I can't find it, so you can either believe me or not. A study was published that in the categories of underweight, healthy weight, overweight, and obese, that those in the underweight category has as many co morbidity factors as those who are obese.
The we moved on to an entirely different subject, which was how to lose weight and and personal actions and feelings were criticized. I can easily see how feelings were hurt.
I believe in speaking the truth. But you can speak truth in several different ways. You can speak from experience, you can speak from condemnation, you can speak truth judgmentally, you can speak truth with compassion, you can speak with understanding. Truth is important, but no one will hear what you have to say if they feel belittled.
Fire dancer - this is the only part of my post specifically for you. You pointed out that you can't understand why anyone would emotionally eat. So I thought, as a discussion, you would like to know why anyone would emotionally eat.
It's not a simple as believing that food is only fuel. It is easy for you to understand that food is only fuel, because you don't have a food addiction.
You mentioned that your father had a problem with gambling, and he chose gambling over your family. I am sure that it hurt. In response to that- you never gamble, which is a good idea for you. I personally could go to Vegas for the weekend - spend my allotted $500 and be done with it. I wouldn't do that because I get no enjoyment form gambling, but it wouldn't be a downfall for me. In the same way that you can take or leave a cupcake. A cupcake is not a downfall for you.
Now imagine that your father did decide that he wanted to recover from gambling. And gambling is a great example here, because it is the action that give the pleasure, much in the same way that the action of eating gives pleasure.
Back to the recovering gambler. A gambler says "I'm done." But then you put that gambler in a casino for 8 hours. You give him $1500 - that he has to carry in his pocket. Then you tell him that he has to gamble with $100 of that. No more, no less. And he has to do this every day. When this person fails, is it because of a lack of will power or is it because the situation is stacked against him? Overall can this gambler adapt to the situation, sure. But is the day or two when he blows the entire $1500 a sign that he doesn't care about changing?
This is just to point out that while healthy eating is very black and white to you. It is not so black and white to others. That to a lot of people, it is not as simple as don't eat it.
Orchid - this is totally unrelated to the anything else in this thread, but I wanted to let you know that hearing that you are on prednisone, and have found a way to control your wild mood swings has giving me more hope than I have had in a long time. My DH is on ever increasing amounts of prednisone, and I am the recipient of the wild mood swings. He is working on behavior changes, and I am proud of him. But I had no idea if anyone had success with it. So thank you!