WCSGarland
Tequila Guzzler
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2024
- Posts
- 1,094
Nope... that's two inches, but I use it like it was eight."You serious?" Her eyebrows rose in exasperation. "You're really gonna tell me that this is eight inches...?"
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Nope... that's two inches, but I use it like it was eight."You serious?" Her eyebrows rose in exasperation. "You're really gonna tell me that this is eight inches...?"
Bill scrunched up his face. He didn't realize that the size of his penis was unaffected by the size of his belly. He'd never measured it--who does that? Accustomed to lying about his weight, he naturally lied about the size of his dick as well."You serious?" Her eyebrows rose in exasperation. "You're really gonna tell me that this is eight inches...?"
Unless it's a Subway inch.at least you can trust an inch to be an inch
And clothes sizes purporting to be inches, like breast band sizes or waists on jeans, aren't any more accurate.Unless it's a Subway inch.
If you take someone close to average female height, i.e., somewhere between 1.5 m to 1.7 m, an extra 22.5 kg can easily take them from the normal range (BMI <25) and well into obese (>30).but also depending on height.
def foo(h, w):
return w / (h ** 2), (w + 22.5) / (h ** 2)
"You serious?" Her eyebrows rose in exasperation. "You're really gonna tell me that this is eight inches...?"
Wait, you mean I don't either?The husband was most disappointed when he realised that fitting into 34 jeans didn't mean he still had a 34 waist. Though he nearly does, again, now.
The husband was most disappointed when he realised that fitting into 34 jeans didn't mean he still had a 34 waist. Though he nearly does, again, now.
Are you just wanting to come here so I put my hands round your waist to measure you?Wait, you mean I don't either?
3 stone 8? I thought a stone was 14 lb not 15. Or are there multiple stones?50lb is in English (3 stone 5 or 22.5kg)
Welp now I want to go back and reread all the feedback you have ever given me...for me 'this needs a bit of work' means 'you need to do a total fucking rewrite'!)
This requirement almost reads like a contradiction in terms: (remarkably) attractive but (wishfully) "average" at the same time. How is this supposed to work, especially in today's America?I'm trying to figure out the sizes for what folks would consider an attractive, but "average" sized woman.
From the Wikipedia article you cited:This requirement almost reads like a contradiction in terms: (remarkably) attractive but (wishfully) "average" at the same time. How is this supposed to work, especially in today's America?
According to the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) the average BMI for American women (aged 20–49 years) is ~29.4 kg/m². This is a mere 0.6 kg/m² below the defined obesity range (BMI ≥ 30); for the 40–49 age group the average is actually already above the obesity threshold at ~30.7 kg/m².
Now, you may feel free to propagate obesity as the new "'average' sized" beauty standard (or at least "attractive"), but you would then have to accept to basically contradict everything we know from cross-cultural research about female human attractiveness.
One of the advantages of being an evolutionary dead end is that it liberates you from such shallow considerations.Evolutionary psychologists attribute such attraction to an evaluation of the fertilitypotential in a prospective mate.[60]
Indeed, it is, as @SamanthaBehgs has made it clear herself that the male SOs of some of her FMC's friend group's female characters are supposed to have told the latter "they were too fat/ugly without makeup!"This appears to be to do with what heterosexual men think - silly me, that’s the only relevant metric, right?
So citing Managerial and Decision Economics and The NY Times Book Review is not filling me with a massive amount of confidence. But maybe I’m too pickyFrom the Wikipedia article you cited:
Research indicates that heterosexual men tend to be attracted to young[60] and beautiful women[178] with bodily symmetry.[179] Rather than decreasing it, modernity has only increased the emphasis men place on women's looks.[180] Evolutionary psychologists attribute such attraction to an evaluation of the fertilitypotential in a prospective mate.[60]
This appears to be to do with what heterosexual men think - silly me, that’s the only relevant metric, right?
*flutters eyelashes*
For what it's worth, this is what Cecil Adams wrote in response to a letter about bra sizes:
I can’t claim to have made the detailed study of the fine print in bra ads that you have, but the folks at Playtex tell me that the best-selling bra sizes these days are 34B and 36B. The next best-selling sizes, in order, are 36C, 34C, 38B, and 38C. Cecil’s informants in the field confirm that women have been getting somewhat larger over the last 10 or 15 years; at one point 34B substantially outsold 36B.
However, students of female architecture will note that this doesn’t mean that breasts per se are getting larger. (Breast size, of course, is indicated by the letter, not the number.) Rather, women are getting somewhat, ahh, broader through the chest and back, if you follow me.
There are several possible explanations for this: either women are in better physical condition than ever, and thus have better developed (i.e., wider) backs, or women are in worse shape than ever, and have become corpulent slabs of lard. (Incidentally, some say that breasts per se have gotten larger over the last 15 years due to the use of The Pill, but this apparently hasn’t had much impact on bra sales.)
As for the disappearance of sizes like AAA, it’s not because there aren’t any small-breasted women around anymore, but because such women frequently don’t bother to wear bras these days.
This requirement almost reads like a contradiction in terms: (remarkably) attractive but (wishfully) "average" at the same time. How is this supposed to work, especially in today's America?
According to the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) the average BMI for American women (aged 20–49 years) is ~29.4 kg/m². This is a mere 0.6 kg/m² below the defined obesity range (BMI ≥ 30); for the 40–49 age group the average is actually already above the obesity threshold at ~30.7 kg/m².
Now, you may feel free to propagate obesity as the new "'average' sized" beauty standard (or at least "attractive"), but you would then have to accept to basically contradict everything we know from cross-cultural research about female human attractiveness.
The attribution of "attractiveness" itself signifies some "remarkableness" about the person's appearance thus (positively) distinguished. It could be argued that to judge someone "attractive" eo ipso lifts them out of the unnoticed mass of people (the "average").I never suggested these women would be "remarkably" attractive. Rather that they are of the sort that it would seem unheard of to say they are too fat or ugly without make up (though the original post was focusing on the "too fat" aspect of it).
Body weight tends to correlate with certain "proportions." E.g., it will be extremely rare for an obese person (BMI ≥ 30) to have an hourglass figure. Hence, by perceiving and appraising the gestalt of other people we indirectly gauge their body weight too.Oh and last I checked, cross cultural psychologists have suggested that we tend to focus not on body weight but rather proportions.
Many of the prehistoric statuettes commonly called "Venus figurines," which might be interpreted as representations of fertility goddesses, show (obese) curves, definitely, but no hourglass figure, e.g., Venus of Willendorf or Venus of Hohle Fels.It was only reletively recently and in Western societies that the hourglass figure stopped being peak beauty regardless of weight (most fertility goddesses as well as goddesses of beauty through the ages showed some curves).
I think the average height for women is around 5'6".I'm trying to figure out the sizes for what folks would consider an attractive, but "average" sized woman. Someone you'd never call fat or too curvy, but you also wouldn't say is a stick thin 5'11" size 2 with breasts so big her back should break either
One of my characters is described as having "modest but perfect breasts."Describe her instead as strikingly attractive with gentle curves and breasts so perfect, any man would surrender his soul to suckle at their pert perfect nipples.
I'm late to this party so much of this has probably already been posted, but these are my rules about descriptions.Okay, so I know everyone is looking for the size 2 woman with DDD breasts and all, but I'm trying to figure out the sizes for what folks would consider an attractive, but "average" sized woman. Someone you'd never call fat or too curvy, but you also wouldn't say is a stick thin 5'11" size 2 with breasts so big her back should break either (some person actually tried to make their proportions look like 1980's Barbie and legit ended up with broken bones as a result, you just CAN'T!).
So would it be something like a Size 6 with a C cup? Size 8? B cup? What would you consider "what's wrong with this person for telling this woman that's she's too fat" sized? (That's the plot point I'm writing in a story. Someone's husband is calling her "fat" and telling her to get off the "baby weight" but she's already, like, perfectly good looking just the way she is).
~Sammy
PS I know, as a womanfolk myself I should know this, but I've been a little teapot (short and stout) my whole life, so I'm trying to get a perspective that isn't just "I *wish* I could look that good" and is instead "this is the average good looking when you're NOT comparing yourself to my self esteem issues.
There's a ton of hypotheses who those figures depict and how they were carved. One is that they weren't fertility goddesses at all, but rather self-portraits of pregnant women. Since they only got their own skewed perspectives of how their bodies looked like, the result is those exaggerated shapes.Many of the prehistoric statuettes commonly called "Venus figurines," which might be interpreted as representations of fertility goddesses, show (obese) curves, definitely, but no hourglass figure, e.g., Venus of Willendorf or Venus of Hohle Fels.
I'd put less stock in the "recent development" characterization and more in "wishful thinking" (on the part of women who don't fit said allegedly obsolete standard).Hence, if anything at all, it was only relatively recently in Western societies that not being overweight (let alone not being obese) stopped being considered a basic prerequisite of beauty; likewise it could have been only a relatively recent development, if at all factual, that body weight stopped playing any role at all in "peak beauty" (supposedly respresented from then on by the "hourglass figure" regardless of weight).
The late, great Karen Carpenter, whom we know died of anorexia nervosa at 32 (way too soon, and leaving so much great music unsung), was always bothered by one mean critic who described her as "the chubby little sister." Even at her heaviest, Karen was anything but chubby.Hmm. Your plot point kind of reminds me of David and Natalie in "Love, Actually." It seemed to be a running inside joke that people around them kept calling her fat, but David (Hugh Grant) and the audience (me, at least) were mystified as to how anyone could call such a trim woman "chubby."