I really really really want to get fatter.
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@hogust
I really really really want to get fatter.
Intentional Weight Gain as Body Modification
A reflection on body architecture, ethics, and cultural norms
When people hear “body modification,” they tend to picture tattoos, piercings, implants, stretched lobes, or surgical enhancements. These are visible, often celebrated ways to reshape the body. They're viewed—depending on the cultural lens—as art, rebellion, identity, transformation.
But there's another kind of body modification that is rarely acknowledged: Intentional, sustained, and celebrated weight gain. A transformation not sculpted with needles or knives, but with calories, time, and will.
🧱 The Architecture of Growth
In an architectural sense, gaining is construction. Just as a builder adds volume to a structure, the gainer adds mass to their form. Just as cathedrals are raised layer by layer, a body grows in soft, rounded stages—first subtle, then significant, then monumental.
There is planning:
How much should I eat?
What will expand first—belly, thighs, chest?
How will my center of gravity shift?
What rituals will mark each stage of my build?
Gaining is not passive. It is design. The body becomes a living structure—elastic, warm, and evolving—responding to internal and external forces like pleasure, gravity, resistance, and desire.
🧬 Body Ethics: Consent, Control & Self-Ownership
Ethically, we often accept body modifications that are medicalized or commercialized: Botox, cosmetic surgery, orthodontics. Even extreme plastic surgeries find tolerance, if they promise "betterment" or conform to beauty standards.
But gaining? It disturbs people.
Not because it harms others—but because it violates deeply internalized rules about control, health, and conformity.
Yet from an ethical standpoint, intentional weight gain is:
Consensual
Self-directed
Bodily autonomous
And for many, deeply fulfilling—psychologically, emotionally, erotically
In the ethics of body sovereignty, pleasure is as valid a motivator as pain or trauma. If someone can cut into their skin to feel whole, someone else can fill their belly to overflowing to achieve the same result.
🧠 Cultural Perception: Subversion Through Flesh
Culturally, fatness is stigmatized. It's associated with lack of control, weakness, or medical failure. Yet, gaining flips this script:
It’s not accidental, it’s deliberate.
It’s not shameful, it’s celebrated.
It’s not a side effect, it’s the goal.
In doing so, intentional gaining becomes a radical act of resistance. It resists diet culture. It resists the demand for minimization. It resists a capitalist logic of “efficiency” and “fitness.”
Instead, it embraces:
Abundance
Visible pleasure
Softness as strength
Mass as meaning
The growing body becomes both a canvas and a mirror—showing the world not just what is taboo, but what is possible.
🔍 Closing Thought: A Modification Made of Flesh
What makes gaining unique among body modifications is its medium: Flesh, not ink. Volume, not incision.
It is alive, and responsive. It jiggles, stretches, folds, and settles. It’s unpredictable—yet cultivated. It’s taboo—yet intimate.
It is, at its core, the slowest, heaviest, most embodied art form there is. And for those who choose it—whether for fetish, identity, defiance or joy—it is just as real, intentional, and worthy as any scar, tattoo, implant or piercing.
You are allowed to sculpt yourself. Even in cream. Even in fat. Even in fullness.
This is like it was taken directly out of my head. Is exactly how I feel about gaining and what this journey is about.
Stuffing me with donuts and I can’t keep my hands off myself as I feel the weight gain in real time🥵
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I’d like this to be part of my bedtime routine
Loving this onsie
I used to try to seem "respectable" and "reasonable" about this kink.
Fuck that!
I'm a proud FAT FETISHIST.
My biggest desire in life is to get as obese as I can. It turns me on, it gets me off. All I want is to bloat up fatter, softer, wobblier.
I don't care anymore. If people hate me for it, even better. Just means I'm doing the right thing for ME and nobody else.
100% this. Very much my feelings as well!
Same!
reblog if you have a fat belly, love fat bellies or just think being fat is rad
EXERCISE 👏 IS 👏 NOT 👏 FOR 👏 BURNING 👏 FAT 👏 IT'S 👏 FOR 👏MENTAL 👏 AND 👏 PHYSICAL 👏HEALTH 👏
why i walked to get lunch and proceeded to stuff myself
As a trans man who has had to put painstaking work into body positivity, body neutrality, and my own sense of manhood, I can't help but feel so bad for men who have, seemingly, never felt permission to have any positive feelings about their body and their manhood.
Yes, body positivity and body neutrality are for you, men. You owe nobody washboard abs, or beautiful facial hair, or clear skin, or unblemished skin, or "masculine" features. Genuinely, you are under no obligation to perform any of it. The weight of those expectations is genuinely suffocating. Let yourself remove that yoke from your shoulders and actually live.
Idk who needs to hear this but if you're on the fence with gaining, if you like stuffing but are afraid of the effects, if you want to be fat when you're horny but get "post nut clarity", just do it. Just gain weight. Will you be insecure? Yes, but I promise you will have insecurities at your lowest weight as well. Even your ideal perfect body comes with insecurities. You might as well make yourself happy by eating food you like and being full, and if you don't 100% love the body that comes with it, that's okay too. It's a body made out of love rather than hating yourself into being thin. You can learn to love yourself over time, or you can just exist! Your body is the least interesting thing about you and being fat likely won't be as noticeable as you fear.
I’ve been feeling so good since I decided to gain and enjoy it!
Thinking about how being really fat results in not being able to sit down in most public spaces, not fitting into clothes at stores, not fitting behind the wheel of most cars, not receiving proper medical care, and not being protected from being denied jobs or being fired based on your appearance.
All because thin people want it to be that way.
All of these things could be fixed if thin people cared about fat people and saw them as human. Because as a class thin people make the rules. Standards for public spaces, vehicles, medical devices, laws that provide workplace protections. All of these are decided by people who are not super fat.
This is what we are talking about when we say that fat liberation is about destroying systems that oppress fat people. If every moment of your life is spent navigating a system that makes your life harder because it is created and perpetuated by people who do not value your humanity you are oppressed.
Few things motivate me to eat more than a massively fat man telling me he wants me as fat as he is 😮💨
Does your doctor know about your will to get bigger? How does he react to that?
I have never discussed my actual desire to gain fat with my doctors. That part of it is personal and not something I feel the need to justify in a medical setting. My body is mine, and what I do with it is ultimately my own decision.
What I have made very clear is that I am not interested in moral lectures about my weight. Prevention and longevity are not the highest values in my life. I am not trying to become some optimized, restrained, medically approved version of myself just to maybe exist a little longer. What matters to me is living a life that feels good and meaningful on my own terms.
If I feel like eating something or doing something, I am not interested in constantly denying myself. I have had and survived cancer, and that changes your perspective. Life feels too short to spend it in constant self-restraint and self-punishment. I feel good the way I am.
So my stance is pretty simple: If I develop a condition related to obesity, then I expect that condition to be treated, nothing else.
Of course, from time to time doctors bring up GLP-1 medications or bariatric surgery. I simply tell them that I do not want either of those, and most of them eventually accept that. The only exception is when I get assigned a new, younger doctor for my diabetes care for example, then these conversations tend to start from the beginning again.
That said, I am not careless about my health. They monitor my blood work, my heart (especially because of the chemotherapy I had), my HbA1c, and I get my eyes checked every year. So I am very aware of what I am doing and of the risks involved.
I know that what I am doing is not life-prolonging and may potentially even be life-shortening. But the joy, comfort, and sense of personal rightness I get from living this way are stronger than the pressure to deny that part of myself.
And one thing I think is especially important to understand:
No one is making me do this.
I do not have a feeder pressuring me. Yes, I enjoy encouragement. Yes, I enjoy being seen and understood in that way. But this is not something being done to me.
This is something I am doing for myself — deliberately, fully aware… Unapologetically fat
A little 10+ year later sequel perhaps?
Half the backlash to fat lib content essentially boils down to "I can't believe you're FORCING me to not be mean to you"
Thin people are absolutely relentless with this. "But I have to TELL them!" "I can't just not SAY something!" "We can't just PRETEND it's fine to be fat!"
They really seem to think the main reason people are fat is because we're simply drowning in approval and no one has been brave enough to inform us that it's better to not be fat, actually
I genuinely think it's related to what I observe about singleness, virginity, and ace/aro topics: people's entire worldviews are threatened by fat liberation. And having your worldview challenged is scary... especially because so many people have put so, so much personal effort into Not Being Fat, so much self-hate into gaining weight, so much self-denial of food they like and forcing themselves into activities they hate, to avoid being fat.
And fat liberation says "It's okay to be fat!" and fat people say "I'm happy being fat and I don't try to become skinny!"
And it scares people that that is an option. It scares people to think that they have sunk so much time, so much effort, so much misery into avoiding being fat. And this person in front of them is just... not even trying. Rejecting the game. Saying You Don't Have To Do That.
If they accept that they didn't have to do that... then they made themselves so unhappy, for so long, for no reason.
They want their effort, their unhappiness, to have been worth it. To have meant something.
So they have to believe that being fat is wrong, bad, gross, a moral failing, and the only reason anyone would be happy that way is if they just don't know better. Because the other option is to realize and admit that they suffered unnecessarily for years and it meant nothing at all.
This is also why people violently resist the reality that weight loss dieting does not result in sustainable significant weight loss for the vast majority of people who attempt it.
People fear what they don't understand.
It's why women were executed as witches because they had common sense from the 1500s
It's why children were labelled as satan worshippers in the later 1900s when they liked to sit down and play a game of make-believe
When people do things that seems counter to the current culture and people don't get it, they fear it. It wasn't abnormal to even want to be at least a little fat just a couple hundred years ago. But when you have stuff such as how for a good 50 years everyone thought sugar was really good for you, but fat is pure evil, it's no wonder that everyone is hypnotised into such a black and white setting.
Everyone's been taught to fear fat because its an easy target to paint. It's easy to spot, the symptoms are often easy to spot and its easy to distract from bigger problems. Government corruption? But look at all those fat people! It's hard NOT to see em! War looms over us? But do you understand that we need to only stock fat free yoghurt in stores now because the alternative will kill you! Ignore how processed the good gets, just hate fat.
It's reached such a point now where people inherently find fat people disgusting. Just the view of someone can now make people feel sick to their stomach, refuse to eat and even relapse on their eating disorder because they're so afraid.
It's one of the greatest distractions of modern civilization.
autistic feedee brain: conceptualizing feedism as a way to access the divine and engage in the type of hedonism I thought I would never be allowed to experience… indulgence in pure joy so radical that it never even crossed my mind until now… what an act of resistance, what a gift
ADHD feedee brain: DOES THIS FOOD HAVE DOPAMINE IN IT
Melted ice cream + heavy cream = more doughy soft fat! @Feedfig helping me stay topped up!
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