For many men and women, loving your body is no small challenge. But if youâre fat and have the audacity to love and be confident in your body, even the compliments are barbed.
Rapper Chika highlighted this dynamic on Tuesday night, responding to a well-intentioned Instagram commenter who asked her how she â[stays] positive about her weight,â adding that they were only asking because they were âseriously struggling with itâ themselves.
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âThis is a rude question,â Chika responded. âI know you meant well but Iâm tired of talking about my body with strangers.â
The 23-year-old Nigerian-American artist continued, âhow can I stay positive about my body when Iâm being asked about being fat every 10 minutes.â
Itâs the kind of comment that, while appearing on its face to be complimentary, is only ever lodged at women in the public eye. Chika expanded on her response on her Instagram stories, which she posted to her timeline Wednesday morning.
âFor me itâs a double-edged sword because this topic is likeâitâs something I hate talking about, but if I donât talk about it, people will keep doing it, so Iâm put in a very uncomfortable position,â she said, adding that this was the last time she will address the issue.
âStop fucking asking me about my body. In fact, stop asking everyone about their bodies,â Chika continued, adding, âI donât give a fuck if you look like me, you donât look like me, if youâre looking for some kind of confidence boost, if youâre looking for some kind of advice. Bitch, I am not a therapist. I am not somebody whoâs designated to let you know how to love yourself.
âDo not come in my comments asking me how the fuck I would dare love myself,â she said. âLike, I donât give a fuck what place youâre coming from, itâs fucking rude. Who raised yâall?â
The artist, who also models and acts, says she feels gaslit into not speaking up about the barrage of comments about her body because itâs coming from well-intentioned fans who are âgenuinely struggling with their own shit.
âBut at the same time, intention versus impact,â she said, adding that the accumulation of interest in her body was âdamagingâ and pointing out that, no matter if she lost, gained or maintained her weight, she had nothing to gain from the attention.
âI am not the spokesperson for body positivity. Iâm not the spokesperson for being dark-skinned. Iâm not the spokesperson for having a nappy-ass dread head. I am none of those things. Stop asking me questions that you should figure out for yourself,â she said.
Itâs not the first time the âIndustry Gamesâ rapper has called out toxic comments related to her body, but discussing ostensibly positive remarks from fans is a harder needle to thread than calling out more blatant examples of misogynoir and fat-phobia. While the âbody positivityâ movement has created more space for fat women in fashion and music to be visibleâwhich is to say, to simply share the same platforms and get similar opportunities as smaller, more âconventionally attractiveâ womenâthey are still tasked with constantly having to explain themselves and their relationships to their bodies to the public.
While some might be happy to take on this mantle, itâs presumptuous to assume any woman wants or needs to talk at length about something as personal and complicated as their relationship to their bodyâor that theyâre qualified to dispense advice. Even complimenting fat women on their âconfidenceâ or âbraveryâ emphasizes the idea that such feelings are anomalous or strange: that being fat betrays a norm, and fat women ought to feel shame and insecurity over it. On top of being a loaded assumption, itâs a ludicrous oneâespecially considering many skinny women in the entertainment industry have spoken at length about their struggles embracing their appearance.
As Chika alluded to, the deluge of commentary about her body is also distracting, reducing the talented and outspoken artist time and again to a handful of her physical traits: her weight, her skin, her hair. So while Chikaâs strongly worded response may seem abrasive to some, itâs nevertheless a helpful reminder that greater proximity to celebrities via Instagram doesnât allow you to forget your home training. Fans, after all, still have the option of calling an artist âbeautifulâ and âinspiring.â But the backhanded interrogations praising marginalized women for daring to be themselves can go.
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