Wife finds out her fat husband is gay
I’m in value but haters utter my husband must be gay or have a overweight fetish
Love has knows no bounds — or pound limit — and social media star Alicia Mccarvell aims to prove it, announce by viral announce.
The Canadian influencer — with more than 690,000 fans on Instagram and 4.9 million followers on TikTok — clapped back at critics on Tuesday who said that her husband Scott should be with someone who is thinner than her.
Mccarvell shared one apparently triggering TikTok video earlier this week, featuring herself and her muscular hubby wearing towels before transitioning into like party outfits.
As the now-viral clip racked up more than 23 million views, the influencer received backlash for the snap and responded to the haters in a separate post on Monday.
The “self-love” proponent launched her enthusiastic defense by saying that some people thought their affair didn’t “add up” due of the differences in their weights and body types.
“My video went viral, and I know we all know why. It’s because by beauty standards, we don’t make sense,” she said in the explanation video that garnered another 12 million views.
“The nature looks at us and immediately beliefs Sc
Plus-size woman exposes the cruel comments she receives about her weight difference with her ripped husband, revealing trolls maintain she must be a 'sugar mama' - or that her partner has a 'fat fetish'
A plus-size woman has hit back at nasty internet trolls who said her toned husband should be with someone thinner than her.
Alicia Mccarvell, a body positive influencer from Canada, recently posted a video to TikTok which showed her cozying up to her husband, Scott Mccarvell, with whom she's been married to for 15 years.
However, she soon started to receive a slew of negative comments from social media users on the video - which was viewed more than 24 million times - who said their bond didn't 'add up.
Some people accused him of only creature with her for her money, wondered if he was secretly gay, and said she must not have been 'fat' when he first fell in love with her.
She has now responded to the backlash in a modern video - slamming 'society's trash beauty standards' and the people who think that someone physically fit 'could never be in treasure with or compatible with a obese woman.'
A plus-size lady has hit assist at nasty internet trolls who said her toned husband
How Work in Progress’s Abby McEnany Found Freedom Using the Term Fluid
Comedian and writer Abby McEnany turned one of the most pivotal moments in her life into a TV show. In Work in Progress, her semi-autobiographical Showtime show, Abby McEnany plays a fictionalized version of herself in the middle of a crisis. “I’m 45, I’m fat. I’m this queer dyke who hasn’t done s*** in her life, and that is my identity?” she asks at the begin of the series.
Through an unexpected romantic relationship with Chris, a much-younger gender non-conforming man played by Theo Germaine, Abby broadens her definition of life's possibilities. But her problems don't go away. The illustrate faces depression, suicidal ideation, OCD, and self-discovery in a way that feels unlike anything on TV now—or ever.
Like her pretend character, McEnany, 53, describes herself as a "queer dyke." It's taken her decades to arrive at that term. In this as-told-to essay, McEnany recalls the ongoing coming-out process—which may begin in one's formative years but doesn't necessarily end there. As Work in Progress shows, we're all always in a state of "becoming."
I rarely talk about the first time I came out. N
How do you learn to love yourself all over again?
My wife and I got engaged in the winter of 2013, and pretty much immediately started planning a wedding for the next collapse. (There’s a joke in there somewhere about how we moved somewhat rapidly, but we actually went pretty slowly, for dykes!)
As winter faded into spring and spring faded into summer, despite the wedding planning stress, I had never been so joyful in my entire life.
But something wasn’t quite right.
I first noticed it when one of my favorite shirts came out of the wash and just didn’t fit right. It wasn’t that I couldn’t get it on, it was just that it suddenly looked funny on my body. Flummoxed, I assumed it shrunk in the dryer (as I’ve never been exactly cautious with my clothes) and gave it to my partner, who was just a little smaller than me.
But then it happened again, with another shirt. Then it happened with a pair of pants; then, a dress.
You notice where this is going.
I had always considered myself to be extremely body positive. I loved my body! I had several close friends who were fat activists, and I was working hard to be a good slim ally.
But despite all of that, I wasn’t ready for the changes A WOMAN has smash back at cruel trolls who claim her hubby must be with her for money not looks. Love comes in all forms - but it appears people have forgotten that when they head to Alicia McCarvell's Instagram account. 2 2 In a recent post, Alicia called out the denote trolls who claimed her husband had 'settled' or was dating her 'for free WiFi and a mansion.' She curated the offensive comments together over a picture of herself and her partner Scotty. The body-positive influencer said the comments were 'so unoriginal, it hurts.' This is the stigma Scott and I clash to break every. Unattached. day. Simply by existing online She added: "The same boys who phone me names and say me to get into the gym, are the ones that make joy of me for entity in one." The content maker boasts over 1 million followers on the platform, and makes a signal of showing off her relationship to call out people's fatphobic views. Other examples of the comments she's received so far involve "D
Cruel trolls say my husband married me ‘for a mansion and free WiFi’ & ‘deserves better’ because I’m fat and he’s not