unexplained weight loss after pregnancy
I first wrote about the pet diet industry in an article for the short-lived Yes! (a mainstream British womens mag about fat) in 1997. Don Kulick also wrote about this in 2009, and there may be others that Ive missed since then. At the time I felt I was really avant garde in having identified this little niche, but this was before the Obesity EpidemicTM kicked in at the turn of the century and pets became an extension of weight loss industry rhetoric. Now you cant move at the vets for charts, scales, special expensive food, and a general air of uneasiness about fat pets. I imagine there are TV programmes dedicated to this stuff too, and only a matter of time until some series like Emergency Obese Cat Weight Loss Surgery spawns its own z-list celebrity universe. This stuff is everywhere.
Last night it was time for the Furry Mans flea jab. The vet cooed over him and said that he was perfect. She gave him his jab and inspected his teeth. Then she weighed him and told us sternly that he is at his optimum weight now that he has fully grown and he mustnt put on any more. Then we packed him back in his hated travel carrier and took him home.
Its very weird witnessing how cultural anxiety about fat is enacted upon an animal. Its also very weird how that anxiety is transmitted to pet owners, especially fat owners like us, by vets. Do they see themselves as our doctors too? Should I relate to them as health care professionals? It makes me wonder what kind of treatment fat owners of fat pets get, and if this has already become a mirror of the grim experience of being fat in the (human) clinic more generally. It also echoes the rhetoric about fat parenting and fat children, exemplified over the past couple of days by a new witless wonder in the news opining that "parents are to blame for fat children."
These experiences with the vet highlight how unreal obesity epidemic rhetoric feels to me. Its a kind of going through the motions, a make-work project that has nothing to do with my cats well-being, or my own, but which is reproduced in the strangest and most pernicious ways.
References
Kulick, D. (2009) Fat Pets in Tomrley, C. and Kaloski Naylor, A., eds., Fat Studies in the UK, York: Raw Nerve Books, 35-50.
PS. Yes indeed, I have peppered this post with cat pics in a brazen attempt to up my viewing stats. Busted!

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