So I was helping a friend do some interviewing last night, for a fairly important role in her business. That happens a lot when you work in human resources, you’re sort of seen as the oracle on all things people-related. It’s one of those professions where you try and avoid telling strangers what you do for a living because as soon as they know you get the tale of woe. You know the score…everyone’s got a ‘friend’ who’s having some bother at work, and what should they do. It’s the equivalent of someone inviting you to check out their rash if you’re a doctor, or having to listen to complaints about someone’s hotel if you’re a travel agent…you just sort of learn to keep schtum.
Anyway, given this was my friend I was happy to help…we saw a couple of people who were a bit less than impressive, and then in walked Mr Charisma – we loved him instantly. He had exactly the right sort of experience, amassed over a number of years. He was really open and friendly, and the answers he gave to our questions were terrific, there’s no question he could do the job. And yet, he was possibly the most self-conscious person I’ve ever met.
I know, it’s really easy from the interviewer side of the room to say relax and enjoy the meeting, and I totally get it, as an interviewee you’re probably going to have a few heebie jeebies. But genuinely, I don’t think he was nervous about the interview – he knew his onions, and to be fair he aced it. This poor bloke was in his own private version of hell because he was self conscious about his weight.
There’s no getting away from the fact that he was very short and very round. And I can say with absolute certainty he was desperately hoping that it wasn’t the only thing we noticed about him. My empathy-ometer was nearly off the scale and If it hadn’t been highly inappropriate, I might have hugged him…I’ve walked a mile in his shoes, which is why I can tell you exactly what was going on in his head. He so wanted to be judged on his ability rather than his appearance, but I guarantee that in that moment, how he looked and how he felt was leeching 95% of his focus.
The chair we offered must have been agony. He had a bloody good go at sitting in it, but it just wasn’t built for a man of his proportions. He spilled over it you know? He looked so uncomfortable. His suit jacket was a little snug, and when he sat down it kind of bunched up around his shoulders. He spent the best part of the interview adjusting his tie to cover the buttons on his shirt which were straining across his frame, and tugging at the lapels and the sleeves of his jacket.
The irony is, I was having a moment myself at the same time. I wasn’t sitting up to a table, you know in true HR style we’d set the room up with no barriers so I was writing my interview notes in a pad balanced on my knee. I’m still too fat to cross my legs and as I looked down at my notes, the asshole in my mind couldn’t resist the opportunity to point out how my stomach and my pad were fighting over the right to rest on my leg.
I so badly wanted to say to him it’s okay…quit fretting about the fat thing, we see you. Of course I didn’t…but I was so in sync with his thoughts I felt like Mystic bloody Meg. The really ridiculous thing is that out of the three professional people in the room, at least two were preoccupied with how they looked and what other people might be thinking about that.
Being free of that distracting and destructive thought ball and chain is the thing I’m looking forward to more than anything once I get to Skinny Town 🙂
This is one reason i love the way orchestras select musicians. The musician sits behind a screen and none of those on the final committee know the person’s name or any other detail. The committee just listen to how s/he plays. If there were only a way to do that with other jobs!
Is that what they do..? I never knew that!
This is beautifully written. I think being fat gives a person a special sympathy for people. When I was young and small, my heart was also small, concerning bigger people. I actually remember being a teenager and laughing at a lady who got her ample butt stuck in a lawn chair. Believe me, I now hate that version of me, thin or not.
Even when you get to Skinnytown, you’ll remember how it feels to have those buttons gape and how you used to cross your own arms across your belly, and you will be merciful…and that is a beautiful thing.
Della
Thank you Della…I think you’re right, I don’t think I’ll ever forget how mortified you feel when someone looks at you ‘that’ way you know?
God, I love this post. It hits home with every single fat person out there. I work with a women who is fat and she always puts clothes on and says… “I can’t get this , I look fat in it.” .. So I told her “We are FAT!” “There isn’t anything we put on that is going to change that!” .. When I said it to her I think she had an A-HA moment… we are fat…
That guy will go home and think the same things I think every time I go out…. I’m going to do this -this time… and I hope he does!
Rosie
Hello Rosie…thank you 🙂 I hope he does too! D x
I look forward to it too – but wish it weren’t reality – sigh – poor guy – hope he gets the job 🙂
I hope so too…he was terrific 🙂