The weight of judgment

The weight of judgment
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The weight of judgment

Highlights

When it comes to dating, obesity-related discrimination is weightier than anywhere else

It is hardly news that obese people suffer tremendous discrimination. The bias gets often overlooked in other fields, but when it comes to the dating world, obesity-related discrimination is weightier than anywhere else. Dating app, QuackQuack, ran a survey and a poll among users between the age of 23 and 33, both from tier 1 and 2 cities, to analyse the impact of obesity on an average human's dating life.

Among many others, the opinion poll asking people if their weight issues have weighed in on their relationships says around 27 percent of people have faced rampant judgment and rejection owing to the stigma around obesity. They mentioned that even after you lose the "unwanted" weight, it remains a challenge to gain back your lost confidence and self-esteem.

Body image issues

With technology on the constant rise and filters, social media platforms are full of pictures that would put supermodels to shame. Body image issues are rising at an alarming rate. Young people challenge themselves at a dangerous rate to stay fit and in shape. 33 percent of young daters between the age of 20 and 25 commented on feeling an overbearing need to look their best at all times. They mention that it seems like the only way to find a date because society's deep-seated and flawed ideas say an obese person is not worthy of true love.

Love vs love handles

With the rise of online dating, the dating pattern has seen a drastic change. 45 percent of the platform's female users above the age of 28 voiced their disregard for their match's weight. These women expressed that a person's nature and core values weigh over their body type heavily enough to make it seem insignificant.

While some find their match's weight trivial enough to overlook, 21 percent of users ranging between 23 and 26 disclosed that they would prefer someone on the fitter side. They backed their statement by saying they think everyone has a choice to be healthy and obesity should not be encouraged in the name of body positivity. It can lead to life-threatening conditions.

Numbers game

Dating is a numbers game of more levels than you know. From the number of appealing qualities you have to the number displayed on your scale, everything decides the number of matches you will get, regardless of the mode of dating. According to more than 46 percent of daters from tier one and two cities, while body-shaming is called out and discouraged with slogans of 'all bodies are beautiful,' the slim and trim body type still remains a crowd favorite, especially when it comes to dating. How desirable you are is often dictated by your body weight.

Men and women alike

The survey shows that obesity-related discrimination is not partial toward one gender bringing little respite to either. 28 percent of male users above 28 disclosed having faced multiple rejections owing to their weight. Similarly, 31 percent of women between 25 and 30 said they faced difficulty in finding a date who did not mind their size. On a tragic note, many of these daters faced several failures in the traditional form of dating before finding their ideal match from online dating platforms.

The virtual world is kinder than the real one

The findings from the survey show that 47 percent of people with failed attempts at finding love through a more traditional format of dating found their perfect match in the virtual world. 28 percent of these people, between 26 and 28 years and working professionals, mentioned that online dating platforms offer you the chance to know your match before you meet them in person. It not only lets an overweight person disclose their condition to their match, if it was not obvious, but also allows the couples to discuss it at length, making it possible for one to gauge the other's view around the issue.

QuackQuack's Founder and CEO, Ravi Mittal, commented, "Our app sees approximately 24 million chats per month, and we notice our users discussing fitness-related matters more than obesity, possibly stemming from the stigma around being overweight. Our app, trusted by 20 million users, is trying to evolve in manners that make our users feel more comfortable in their own skin."

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