Hiding In Clothes
At some point, clothes stop being clothes and become camouflage. You stop asking what looks good and start asking what hides best. Which shirt hangs away from the stomach. Which jacket makes the shoulders look broader. Which fabric does not cling. Which cut lets you disappear a little.
Then shopping becomes its own kind of humiliation. You avoid trying things on because the mirror is not the problem. The fit is. The fit tells the truth immediately. You can convince yourself a number on the scale is temporary or that a bad photo caught a weird angle. Clothes are harder to argue with. They either sit on your body the way you hoped or they do not.
So you adapt. You keep wearing oversized things. You repeat the same few safe items. You tell yourself comfort matters more anyway. And of course comfort does matter. But if you are honest, sometimes the loose clothing is not just comfort. It is cover. It is the wish to move through the world without your body being outlined so clearly.
That has a cost. You stop expressing anything. You stop enjoying style. You stop buying with confidence because the whole process feels like a confrontation. Even when you find something that technically fits, you may still hate how aware it makes you feel.
This motivation is not about vanity. It is about no longer wanting to hide all the time. It is about wanting clothes to go back to being ordinary. You want to open a wardrobe and choose based on preference instead of damage control. You want to walk into a store and not feel like the whole exercise is set up to expose you.
That is a legitimate reason to lose weight. You do not need to pretend this part does not matter. It does matter. Clothing is one of the daily ways body discomfort keeps showing up. When you are tired of dressing around a problem, that tiredness can become fuel. Quiet fuel, maybe. Embarrassing fuel, maybe. Still real.
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