No, the "pointy" part sticking out on her right side where her wrist is.
That is the angle of the pic. It's her hip. That is not saddlebags. Not everyone wants to be a size 0, 2 or 4.
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No, the "pointy" part sticking out on her right side where her wrist is.
You mean her hips and butt? I'm genuinely curious as I don't see what non-black/hispanic wome see....our definitions are very different. I honestly don't see saddlebags.
Oh yes....absolutely. The obsession with thinness is something foreign to me which is not so obsessed in those cultures....I can't speak for others only what I know.To be fair, hispanics can be black too.
What's crazy is that this is seen as a negative by some.....ain't a damn thing wrong with this woman's body. Some squats will lift her butt and she'd have a popping booty situation. Women are crazy...lol.
What's crazy is that this is seen as a negative by some.....ain't a damn thing wrong with this woman's body. Some squats will lift her butt and she'd have a popping booty situation. Women are crazy...lol.
I don't know that I would specifically say it's a problem to white women and more a reflection of the beauty/fashion/entertainment industry to push a fair/pale skinned rail thin woman as the standard of beauty. I literally never heard the term saddlebags before I came to the US nor did I know that people found it problematic. I can only say that in general within the black community, like stretch marks, these things are more celebrated than made to be a negative - obviously not true in every case but given that the standard of beauty has never looked like us, it forced a different type of body confidence. If folks gonna go out of their way to get chopped and screwed to morph in our natural bodies, they should also siphon off some of that body confidence too.I think to a white woman it's a problem, but black women see nothing wrong with it or see it as a good thing?
I don't know that I would specifically say it's a problem to white women and more a reflection of the beauty/fashion/entertainment industry to push a fair/pale skinned rail thin woman as the standard of beauty. I literally never heard the term saddlebags before I came to the US nor did I know that people found it problematic. I can only say that in general within the black community, like stretch marks, these things are more celebrated than made to be a negative - obviously not true in every case but given that the standard of beauty has never looked like us, it forced a different type of body confidence. If folks gonna go out of their way to get chopped and screwed to morph in our natural bodies, they should also siphon off some of that body confidence too.
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