autumnpalm
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2008
- Messages
- 3,246
I was sitting in lecture today (it's a history class) and right now we are covering the 16th century, in particular the rule of Henry VIII. As the professor was describing Henry's later years, he began to focus on his weight issues and obesity. In describing Henry's appearance, he used the term "revoltingly overweight". I realize that Henry actually was morbidly obese and his weigh caused significant health problems for him, but the using the word "revoltingly" just rubbed me the wrong way. I am not overweight myself but the usage of that word still bothered me. I don't think anyone's weight or appearance should ever be described as "revolting".
In chatting with a few people after lecture, I asked if any of them had noticed and nobody had any issue with it. Of course, it was only a small group of people, but I was still surprised that nobody had taken notice. Was I overreacting? I'm actually not usually the sort of person to be particularly sensitive about weight issues!
Would this bother you? Am I overreacting?
I would never email the professor about it or bring it up, just something I'm curious about!
In chatting with a few people after lecture, I asked if any of them had noticed and nobody had any issue with it. Of course, it was only a small group of people, but I was still surprised that nobody had taken notice. Was I overreacting? I'm actually not usually the sort of person to be particularly sensitive about weight issues!
Would this bother you? Am I overreacting?
I would never email the professor about it or bring it up, just something I'm curious about!
