Outfit | A little birdy told me

Hello loves,

Here's a super-casual outfit I wore when I stayed with my mum and step dad about a week ago.

I made a point of taking my camera and tripod with me when I stayed with my famalam because I have so little energy for outfit photos recently. Being woken up early in the am by my step dad stomping around when I stay there is a definite kick up the bum to get up no matter how crappy my sleep has been, and boy has it been crappy lately. I'm at my wits end. Someone send me drugs, lol. I haven't put makeup on or taken outfit photos in the last week, and all my recent outfit posts have been from a backlog I'd built up for crappy times just like these.


Everything I'm wearing is old again. I wore this dress on the blog about this time last year actually. It's faded quite a lot in the interim, as I've worn it other times as well.

I'm wearing:

Dress and belt, past season ASOS Curve
Leggings, Very
Shoes, past season Matalan - other pointed styles in stock at time of writing
Hobbit door necklace, Christmas present

Elasticated belts like the one I'm wearing are good in principle, but of course because they're stretchy they end up creeping up to your narrowest point, which on me is just under my boobs.

Have a nice relaxed Sunday.
Leah xoxo

Let me get it straight, I'm a plus size blogger

Hey.

I want to talk about the dark side of being a plus size blogger - the harassment I get from men all across the internet. I have been contacted by men thinking with their dicks on every branch of social media I'm on. In fact I don't know of a solitary female plus size blogger who hasn't been subjected to the same kind of crap as I have.


I'm a plus size blogger, but a lot of men seem to get that confused with other things. Like this muppet, who thought my blog's Facebook page was really Plenty of Fish. But the difference with dating agencies is you elect to put yourself on them. By virtue of being in the public eye in the tiniest way, men constantly assume I'm single and for the taking, like my whole life has been in some kind of suspended animation waiting for their dick to come along and boof, it rains poodles and candy and all is right with the world.

What the everlovin' fuck?

  • I'm not free porn for those too lazy to download it.
  • I'm not looking for attention from men.
  • I'm not fishing for compliments from men.
  • I don't seek male validation - the only male opinions I value are those of my husband, my dad, my brother, my step dad and a few male friends. 
  • I don't share photos of myself for the appreciation of men - I do that to celebrate my own body after years of being told it's something to be ashamed of, and to uplift and inspire other women to love their bodies.
  • I'm not a fetish. I'm a body type.
  • I'm not a BBW.
  • I'm not desperate because I'm fat. 
  • I'm not single.
  • I'm not a commodity to be bought. 
  • I'm not down for being contacted by DM or email by men who assume because they fancy me or because I'm fat my thighs will miraculously fall apart in delight and anticipation.
  • I'm not the person you think I'll be when you email me with 'I'm Bob, 36 from Glasgow' because I'm not some prize you can win by throwing a few sentences at me.
  • I'm not a person who should have to prove I'm married for men to leave me alone.
  • NOTHING I do with my blog or social media is for men, except this post. Now piss off. 
Awwwwwww, now the other one is jealous!
  • I'm the woman who posted a shot of her bum clad in underwear for 3 men on Instagram to say exactly the same thing: 'I want to eat that ass'. 
  • I'm the woman followed on Twitter by men who put me in Twitter lists like 'Mature BBW' and 'Big Butt BBW' so they can categorise their spaff material. They reblog my fully clothed photos amongst women with their tits and vaginas out . They also tend to tweet me to tell me what they think of my body. I. DON'T. CARE.
  • I'm the woman DM'd on Instagram by men who start with 'Hi' and end up with dick about 3 badly-composed, txt spk sentences later. 
  • I'm the woman whose body is automatically sexualised by idiots because they fetishise fat bodies and collect fat women on their social media like Pokemon cards. 
  • I'm the woman that when a man I don't know DMs me with 'Hi' who ALWAYS wants to reply 'I'm married, let's not waste anyone's time here.' No one DM's a woman to talk about the weather, you know. 
  • I'm the woman who has cut my head off lingerie photos before because if seedy fat girl collectors repost my photo to disgusting places then at least my head isn't in it. 
  • I'm the woman who wants to post more of my body to help other women but knows the more I do, the more unsolicited and unwanted attention I'll get from men.
  • I'm the woman who had some dude on Tumblr offer to send me serious amounts of money to buy clothes with so I could model them just for him, even though he knew I was married. 
  • I'm the woman with a lot of fat friends on social media and I see men copying and pasting the same thoughtless comments on ALL our bodies. Cast the net wide, yeah?
  • I'm the woman who receives requests to dress up in certain ways like I'm their personal fat Barbie doll. 
  • I'm the woman who had a douchebag message me through my blog Facebook page who, when I told him I was married said 'So what?!' then offered to speak to my husband on Skype to tell him how much he liked me. (Yes, really).  
  • I'm the woman that a man think it's acceptable to send me a message that just says 'Sex'.
  • I'm the woman who shouldn't have to put up with this shit to blog my outfits, to put myself out there to try to make other women feel better about themselves. 
  • I'm the woman who if I wasn't already married would definitely be batting for my own team because what I've seen of men on the internet in the last 5 years has turned my stomach. *Bonus - first one to say 'Not all men' gets a violent kick to the perineum.
At least he was polite, but I'm no one's fat Barbie doll!

Nah thanks, mate. 



I know there are some decent men out there, it's just that the stupid ones make themselves known so often.

You should also go read Charli's post Plus size, naked and fetishised.

Ladies, share your horror stories below.

Leah xoxo

Outfit | Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon dress from Navabi

Hello loves,

I've had this dress for over a month but have only just captured it in adequate enough daylight to share. I wore this out last week when I went to lunch in my hometown with my friend Abi.

It's a lovely dress and so well made. It's heavy, made of thick layers of chiffon and it has a stretchy lining. It isn't that nasty polyester a lot of garments are lined with - it's a breathable fabric. It's comfortable to wear and can be dressed up or down. It's probably one of the best quality dresses I own. I've been very impressed with Navabi - they don't body shame on social media, they offer free delivery, postage is very quick and it's very much no-fuss online purchasing. Just how it should be.

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon plus size black dress from Navabi
I'm holding my hair back in most of the shots where I'm facing the wind as it was so fierce on this day. You can see the movement of the dress in a few of the shots too. :) The wind knocked my tripod flying - thank God Canon DSLRs are hardy. I was expecting the worst when it clattered to the ground but it was totally unscathed.

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon plus size black dress from Navabi plus size smart occasion dress

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon plus size black dress from Navabi

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon plus size black dress from Navabi
This was in the midst of my foot and leg swelling and you can see my ankles are all puffy. They're better now thankfully. It was really painful for a few days.

As well as the wrap effect at the bust there's a little peekaboo section, which I'm almost busting out of! I'm wearing the dress in an XL and it fits brilliantly in the waist and hips, but my wide back is straining the confines of the bust. If you're wide in the back or have very large boobs, size up if you can. It has a slight high-low effect at the back, which is always appreciated by me because of my sizeable behind, and often garments are fine at the front and too short at the back. Not in this case.

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon plus size black dress from Navabi
Pucker up!



I'm wearing:

Zizzi wrap effect layered chiffon dress, Navabi
Black glitter cropped cardi, very old Debenhams
Leggings, Very
Shoes, past Matalan
Hobbit door necklace, Christmas gift

Here's a close up of the necklace.


Have you bought anything from Navabi? I will be on the lookout for more pretty things from them, and from Zizzi, now I know the quality is really good.

Thanks for reading! Leah xoxo

Outfit | Modcloth dress 2

Hiya!

This is another dress Mookie lent me and it's the cutest. She wore it at Plus North in 2014 and looked amazing in it.



Just about everything in this post is old or out of stock, which is probably a good thing as in 5 years of writing this blog I've accumulated over 6000 links here. Holy shit. I discovered this when I was checking my DA and PA the other day (metrics which quantify a blogger's influence) and it had them all tallied up. That's a whole load of links. Every month or so I go through and root out dead links, which is quite the job. Sometimes I spend aaaaages looking for similar things to out of stock items so I can assist people getting their shopping fix, but it depends how time poor I am at any given time. Does anyone click on similar item links, or are you less bothered about buying something similar to what I'm wearing? Because the less links I make, the less I have to maintain when they go dead. And with most items from fast fashion stores (most of the places I shop) items are in stock a very short time so 2 weeks after I write a post, the links could already be dead. I'm all about making life easier for myself this year.

When I wear a dress like this with so many colours in it, I pick out one to accentuate and wear accessories of the same colour. In this case it was the red, even though there isn't a lot of red in it. That reminds me, I need some red shoes in my life. ;)




This dress is much more lightweight than the other 3 Modcloth ones I have tried on, but it's just as well made. I was wowed from the first moment I tried a Modcloth dress on. Now I can see why everyone raves on about them!


I'm wearing:

Hairband, old, from clothes swap
Necklace, past New Look
Dress, Modcloth 2014
Cardi, past Yours Clothing
Leggings, Very
Shoes, past New Look similar here

I hope you had a good weekend? Mine was mostly great. I stayed with my mum and step dad from Thursday to Saturday, which was really lovely, but I became unwell while I was there. I did a lot of walking each day I was there and my legs and feet swelled up really badly from Thursday onward, so much so it was affecting my ability to bend my legs. They were like overstuffed sausages! I persevered around the shops every day though! ;) I met fellow blogger Abi on Friday and we had a lovely long Chinese lunch. By Saturday evening my legs were bright red, sore and hot, and a few people thought I might have cellulitis when I posted photos on Instagram and Twitter. My legs got better over Sunday, but I started to feel ill in other ways (headache, stomach ache, shakes, fever) and I'm probably coming down with the awful cold/flu thing James started to get on Saturday. Yesterday was spent on the sofa feeling totally spaced out, but hopefully I'll start to feel better soon.

How was your weekend? Have a great week!
Leah xoxo

Outfit | Modcloth dress 1

Hiya,

Here's a dress from Modcloth which Mookie gave me, and I've since bought one myself in their stylish surprise sale. ($20 for a dress, yay!) With the two Modcloth dresses Mookie also lent me I have a total of 4 to show you in the next couple of weeks.

This dress gives me shades of a sailor outfit, and it has POCKETS! Yessss. I'm wearing a 4X and it's a perfect fit. From the 2 Modcloth dresses I own and the 2 Mookie lent me I can see they're extremely well made and nip me in at the waist. This one in particular is a really heavyweight fabric with slight stretch to it, and it feels like it'll last years.

Rain cloud hair clip!





I'm wearing:

Brooch, Kaela Mills
Hairclip, Crown & Glory Glitterati box
Leggings, Very - as ever!
Dress, past Modcloth
Shoes, past Everything 5 Pounds

I've got my outfit mojo back and can't wait to do a zillion posts. I'm not too sure if I'll do Fatshion Feb this year though....... I'll have a think about that. Have a lovely Friday/weekend.

Thanks for reading!
Leah xoxo

Outfit | Photoshop This with Ready To Stare

Hi petals,

One of my aims this year is to support more small brands, and the ones which excite me the most are all in the US at the moment. I saw this tee on Ready To Stare and loved the message, plus I'm all over monochrome like cooties. Since I posted a sneak peek photo of this top on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter loads of people have asked me where it's from. That's always a good sign!

Photograph This middle finger tee shirt by Ready to Stare
Photograph This middle finger plus size tee shirt by Ready to Stare
I'm wearing the tee in a 4X so I can wear it as normal length tee if I wish, but I'm all about the crop tops at the moment, and knotting one up like this looks great. I'm confident enough to wear them anywhere now, and if people stare at 2 inches of exposed flesh then they can go for it. I don't care. It's a lovely thick cotton tee and really comfortable. I just love how tees age as they wash over the months and years and become even more comfortable. Some things are just better for lots of wear, like cotton tees and certain men. Ooh, you can't beat a silver fox. ;) Alysse is such a babe too, she included a sweet note with my order that made me feel really special. That's something little indie businesses do so well, and it's so nice to talk to the people behind indie companies online and get to know them a bit. Where your money goes is important - you can support a fellow plus size woman grow her business, or you can help nameless, faceless big brands buy another Mercedes. I know what I'd rather do. ;) I have my eye on a few other sassy slogan tees and a body chain too, so I'm going to invest in pieces as and when I can.

Postage on my order was about $10 and I got caught for customs fees of £11 so all in all the tee cost about £35, which is a lot for a tee, but there aren't going to many people I bump into wearing this tee AND I'm supporting a business run by a plus size woman. That feels good.

Photograph This middle finger plus size tee shirt by Ready to Stare as worn by Just Me Leah

Photograph This middle finger plus size tee shirt by Ready to Stare

I've got the hair frizzies something bad in these photos. It was foggy in places and the damp always messes with my hair.

Photograph This middle finger plus size tee shirt by Ready to Stare



I'm wearing:

Photoshop This tee by Ready To Stare
Boyfriend coat past season New Look Inspire, similar here
Skirt past season Yours Clothing
Boots, barely seen, Brantano

Have you heard of Ready To Stare before?

Leah xoxo

Homewares wishlist

Hello lovelies.

James and I are hoping to buy our first property together this year, and I've started to think about decor. We actually saw our dream home but were beaten to it, and I'm gutted and not looking at flats again yet as I can't bear to have my heart broken again. It was perfect - 3 huge bedrooms, in fact all the rooms were huge, and it was a bargain price as it's close to a railway line. I've lived near a railway line before and it bothers you for about 2 weeks and after that you don't even notice the noise any more so it wouldn't have made the slightest difference to us. It was less than 5 minutes walk to the sea and right in the town centre. *Wails*. In the meantime I'm starting to think about the delicious things I'd like to fill our new (hopefully) forever home with.

Now I've been planning the decor of a home of my own since I was in my 20s, and I've always wanted themed rooms, so our home will be eclectic. I want a Cornwall/Barbara Hepworth themed bathroom - think driftwood, smooth circular sculptures, deep blue and bright white tones, ships, nautical themes. I want the kitschiest loo in existence. I quite fancy purple for the smallest room of the house with gold photo frames and lots of tat like religious ephemera, and possibly a bit of Elvis. Why not?! I've always wanted a bit of a Hugh Hefner style pimpin' boudoir with leopard print walls and fluffy red rugs. I'm not sure about the kitchen and living room, but no doubt there'll be more kitsch in there too - possibly a 50s American diner themed kitchen. I have so many sides I'd want to express - my girly side, my goth side, my kitsch bitch side.

Asda are killing it on the homewares at the minute, so here are a few bits and bobs from them.




George Home Paris Clock, £6
George Home Mary Bell Jar, £10
George Home Copper Effect Pineapple Vase, £10
George Home Cord Doorstep, £8

I'd have to put some tinsel or fairy lights around Mary to jazz her up a bit though.

Also on my mind is a new bed, as ours is a bit broken. We also need a new mattress. I saw an ad on telly the other day saying you need to replace a mattress after 8 years. James and I worked out ours is 9-10 years old, and even though we've turned it several times, it still has some springs which dig in your back. Not ideal. We got it for a great price though - I think we got the king sized bed (our one before last) and the mattress for about £350 from Argos so not bad at all. It did us well. I quite like this one from Bensons, which is £299 at the moment, which is a steal.


We bought our last bed from Bensons 5 years ago and delivery is quite prompt compared to Argos. It's a behemoth of a sleigh bed with a massive thick headboard and footboard and huge side storage drawers so it takes up SO much room in the bedroom it's unreal, especially as our bedroom is long and narrow, so I can't have bedside table on my side at all and James has to move his to get his drawer open - what a ball ache! I can't wait to move somewhere with square bedrooms, as stupid as it sounds. I really crave having a sleeker bed so we have more room in this bedroom, and in our future bedroom too, wherever that may be.

It's been a great bed but it's time for a new one and I really like the look of this one. The end drawer storage would be so handy for clean bedlinen as well. I wouldn't buy a mattress from Benson's as they seem very expensive. I fancy a memory foam mattress or at least one with good springs that even out the big weight difference between James and I. My aunt has a really thick memory foam mattress and I get stuck in bed as it sinks so deep, but it's so blooming comfy! I've been looking at a Mattress Online and their prices are really competitive, as well as having big names like Sealy and Silentnight. I know it's important to have a good bed and a good mattress (especially for me with my ME and spending so much time in bed!) and I want to have a good comfortable sleep without spending hundreds and hundreds on a mattress. We'll probably end up spending a few hundred pounds on a bed and a couple of hundred on the mattress, which is not bad, as our big sleigh bed cost £600 without a mattress! I don't know what we were thinking then, to be honest. I guess we had no thoughts of mortgages then, though, and at least you can get interest free credit on Bensons beds, so we paid it off over a year which took the sting out of the cost a bit. 

Tell me, what's your bed like now, and what's your ideal bed?

Thanks for reading.
Leah xoxo

*This post was sponsored by Mattress Next Day. 

Because we are saving hard for a mortgage deposit there may be occasional sponsored posts in the future. 

Rifts in UK plus size blogging

Hey.

There's no doubt plus size blogging in the UK has exploded in the last few years, and new bloggers emerge by the week. In any community where a group of strong, frank women come together disagreements are inevitable. But I feel something bigger than any other previous quarrels building - something that may split ranks - and I want to address it. My thoughts on this go off into tangents with Fibro fog but I'm going to try to pull them together. I'm making generalisations here - big picture thinking rather than focusing on individuals - and this genuinely isn't aimed at anyone in particular. I've been plus size blogging since 2010-11 and I read plus size blogs for about a year before I started blogging myself, so I've seen things change a lot over time. Of course this post is personal to me, and it might feel personal to others too - I don't know a single blogger who doesn't invest themselves in their blog.

There have always been cliques, don't get me wrong, but I think what drives some bloggers is so far removed from that of others that it's going to need more than superglue to hold us all together. I believe there are 3 camps emerging.

  1. Bloggers who came into plus size blogging from a fat acceptance viewpoint, who wanted to start blogging to share what they'd learned so other fat women would feel better about themselves. They would talk about living in their fat bodies and what that entails, and were much more focused on that than the clothes they wore. Angry, politicial, radical, necessary discussions were the order of the day. What might be referred to as 'old school' bloggers, ones who've been around at least a few years.
  2. Newer plus size bloggers might have started off from a fat acceptance perspective, but have become less political over time because they felt they had to diminish themselves to do well in plus size blogging. Most brands clearly prefer bloggers who talk more about clothes than their bodies. Alternatively newer bloggers in this group may have started blogging because they came to it when brand influence was already rife, and they wanted some of the prestige/opportunities which can be gained by rarely touching on radical fatness/fat acceptance. They may not have known anything other than bloggers basically being mannequins with a set of links at the end of their posts. They may never have even read fat acceptance blogs.
  3. Plus size bloggers who are openly pro diet and evangelical about it, which is pretty much the opposite of what fat acceptance bloggers believe in. Groups 2 and 3 often intersect. Group 1 and Group 3 are at odds with one another, even publicly so.

Let me say I started off in Group 1. My biggest inspiration in my early days was Rachele Cateyes' blog The Nearsighted Owl (her blog was deleted as she was hounded by Reddit shitlords). She was ballsy to the max - I clearly remember she blogged a photo of her standing naked in her living room, not for the benefit of any man, but to make other women feel better about their fat bodies. She made me feel better about being me. She gave me the strength to love me. Most of her clothes were thrifted, and she had such fun outfits and always looked so happy in herself. I didn't even care what she was wearing, I just wanted to see more of her. She could've worn a bin bag and I still would've been rapt. She's one of the few people whose blog I read way back to the beginning after I discovered her. She changed my life, pure and simple. Before finding her and other blogs like Diamonds n' Pearls, Lolly Likes Fatshion, Does My Blog Make Me Look Fat, A Dress is for Life and My Big Fat Blog I was talking about makeup and my life in general, but I got inspired and s-l-o-w-l-y I started dipping my toe into showing full length outfit photos and talking about my fatness. I started doing outfit posts in 2010-11 but have reverted most of them to drafts (along with all my posts here from 2009) as the photos were awful - grainy, too dark or too bright, horrible backgrounds etc. So understand that in writing this post my background was very much in terms of radical fatness and less about the commercial side of things.

So in the years 2010-11 when I started off, of course there were some plus size brand collaborations with bloggers, but bloggers mostly bought their own stuff and talked about it. They weren't selling things for other people all the time. They were speaking for themselves. And this was the soil I grew in.

But somewhere along the way, I started to pay too much attention to what my peers were doing. Well, not just my peers, people way above me. And little by little, I started to look at all the things I was doing and thinking 'I need to do this, this and this' to become a better blogger. I don't share this as a woe is me because I've been down that road before. I'm sharing because I want to illustrate how lost you can become when the people who have all the money and power (brands) funnel that to the people they feel most worthy - who are often the same people again and again. Don't get me wrong, I've had my share of review posts and I do OK, but the nature of today's blogging (which is unduly infested by brand influence) makes it VERY competitive. Plus size blogging is such a close knit thing here that it's a double-edged sword and when you know everyone else's business it makes you question yourself all the time. I had to remove myself from certain situations to help my mental health, and to come to a place where I can be genuinely happy for the success of my peers and friends. I'm in that place now and it's great.

So in my period of comparing myself to others (and always feeling like I came off worse) I was wondering what I lacked. I've always been too frank for my own good, I've always liked a good swear and if I can say something with a string of words or describe it in a few rude words instead, the latter's my jam. But as brands made us all compete for the buzz and power, I lost some of me. I started to wonder why I wasn't good enough. Was it because I swear too much? Was it because I'm too angry? Was it because I'm *too* old and *too* fat? The wrong shape? What then?!

And you can see how very quickly insecurity and comparisons win when you see people coming out and playing bloggers by numbers, and doing great with it. By that I mean that you quickly get to know what brands want by being in this environment. You see young, conventionally pretty, mainly hourglass women of a size 24 or under, with no double chins and no belly hang being lauded, as well as women who are less political in their blogging. I knew that meant I'd have to not be ME to do great. And that's not a nice feeling. It's soul destroying and it kills creativity stone dead. And I started to see that some of the people who were doing really well were just talking about fashion. They perhaps had a better control on their feelings or they were happy being pretty little models for the clothes, as a lot of brands seem to like mannequins rather than opinions. That's not to say all brands do, or all bloggers bland themselves down, but I know some do feel that pressure, because I started to feel the need to do the same.

I diminished myself. I lost my fire. I lost the joy of getting dressed, even on days where I wasn't going to take photos of an outfit. All I did was consume and compare. My wardrobes (note the plural) were full to bursting and because I couldn't find anything I just bought more, more, more. I'd drifted into being a Group 2 person, as above. My mental health was in the toilet as I felt less than in everything I said and did. I was a few steps away from giving up altogether, or going in the opposite direction totally to become what I call a 'template blogger' - someone who follows the unspoken blogger rulebook, as such:

  1. Go to Starbucks and buy a yak milk triple shot wankerccino and a self-righteousness muffin. Sit in. Ensure to take a top down photograph of the drink and muffin, Macbook Air just in shot artfully in the corner, and Instagram the shot talking about hooooooooooow busy you are. 
  2. Send numerous tweets to brands inserting your tongue into their colon to try to get them to send you free shit. 
  3. Spend a huge amount of time contacting brands via email in the hopes of free shit and spend a lot of time talking to like-minded people about how to best screw free shit out of brands.
  4. When they do, post photos everywhere of your 'blogger mail' doing a humble brag or an overt brag.
And so on, ad infinitum. And I speak so vehemently about that because I've been blogging some 5 years about plus size matters and even I felt this pressure to be a something other than I am, a 'template blogger'. What does the average plus size woman feel like if she reads a lot of plus size blogs? What are we showing her? That unless you're in your 20s, hourglass and under a size 24 that you have little to no worth? That you have to spend hundreds of pounds a month on clothes to be happy? That something is old if it's worn once? That even feisty, strong women can't talk about their fat bodies or say how angry they are about the shit ways of larger plus size companies? That basically money and things are better than making women feel better about themselves? That selling clothes for millionaires is what it's all about?

I had to get away from that mindset. I had to divorce myself from making comparisons, because it was making me ill, and I nearly gave up blogging. By the end of last year I was going to walk away. And then I remembered what made me start - wanting other women like me to feel OK about existing. Making others feel they don't have to be ashamed to exist. That they can even feel proud to exist, just as they are.

And then we come to the third group - plus size diet bloggers, who for whatever reason want to change themselves. Your body, your rules - have at it! But what I don't think is right or healthy is for plus size bloggers to use the plus size arena to discuss it. Because we live in a world where EVERYWHERE is diet friendly. You can talk about that shit literally everywhere and be patted on the head for it. Doing it in fat spaces is so selfish. Literally the whole world wants to eradicate fat bodies, and then it gets brought into what is for many a safe space? Nah. Many, if not most fat people will have been told hundreds of times throughout their lives that they're wrong in every way for being fat, and many may have had disordered eating or actual eating disorders. It can trigger the hell out of someone who's trying REALLY hard not to hate themselves when a blogger suddenly starts talking about diet tea, or juice cleanses or whatever the frig else diet plan they're following. I'm not saying don't do it, I'm saying think about what you're saying and where you're saying it. The rest of the world celebrates weight loss for all reasons. Got cancer? Oh well, at least you're not fat any more! Husband left you? Ah, dems the breaks but at least you can shop on the high street now! Ugh. So yes, when other fat people choose to infest OUR spaces with weight loss talk, it does cause a rift and it always should create a rift. We should question what's more important to us - is it a right to a life without shame in the bodies we come in? Or is it feeling so entitled that your diet is more important than the mental health of your readers?

I think that some circles of plus size blogging are WAY too concerned with hawking clothes for huge companies, and not concerned enough with talking about fat issues or calling out brands when they screw up. I think as brands have more and more power over bloggers that there will be a huge divide between very commercial focused bloggers and ones who are more into talking about their fat bodies, fat issues and so on. And I'm with the latter camp. I'm going back to basics. I look at my blog posts from a couple of years ago where I reworked stuff often or went to clothes swaps or SHOCK HORROR bought my own fucking clothes instead of relying on brands to bestow their wares on me, and I was happy! I was happier when I cared less about brands. I was happier when I read blogs and didn't eat, sleep and breathe them. I was happier when I was less closely involved with my community as a whole, because I'm an introvert and I don't do well in huge group settings, be that in the flesh or online. And I don't do well with this hyper-commercialised, jealous and competitive scene we find ourselves in where some people might use my face as a stepping stone if it meant grabbing an opportunity to review a £30 dress before me.

If the Scarlett and Jo debacle taught me anything, it's that brands have WAY too much power over blogging, and look where it's left us in the aftermath. Some people are hanging onto S&J for dear life for their own reasons (NOT Hanna and Mayah who rely on that man for money - I have more respect for them now than ever). Some people appear to be trying to brown-nose their way into empty ambassador spots, and I hear some people are actually singling individuals out for abuse. You can hate a man, you can hate a company, but when it's handbags at dawn one on one it's all a bit much for a sensitive bird like me. This is not what I started blogging to become a part of.

I think brand influence has totally screwed plus size blogging, and I know I'm far from alone in thinking that everything's going to come to a head and lines will be drawn. What side of the line you end up on it up to you, but me, I'm trying to find the old Leah who was happy to prat around in her living room pulling silly faces in outfits I can't possibly link to because they're old. I'm trying to be the girl who thought of new ways to spin old clothes, rather than what new shit I could buy to feel a part of a scene which at times sickens me. I'm trying to lose the girl who thought she had to swan around doing street photography in dresses 5 days a week to be worthy. I have a wardrobe of swanky dresses and next to nothing casual as that's what bloggers are, isn't it? You buy dresses, and you play the game, and then you lose yourself. I want to be a girl who inspires my readers, not someone who does nothing but sell clothes for millionaires. So yeah, there are rifts coming, and I think they might be necessary, actually.

So what can you expect from me? Back to basics, as I said. Only working with companies I believe in, and there aren't a lot of them left, trust me. I'm all over indie companies in the US at the moment, because they're the only ones inspiring me. I'm loving alternative looks and I'm loving me. I am loving being me, and it's wonderful! I'm done comparing. I'm done courting the attention of brands. I'm done feeling like I'm not good enough because I let brands dictate my worth to me for a while. No more.

Where do you stand on this?
Leah xoxo