“Hi,” the woman said to me brightly with a smile. “How are you?”
I looked at her and my eyes met hers. I didn’t recognize this beautiful stranger. I had been lost in my own thoughts as I walked through the store, so I hadn’t even noticed her. I smiled back and returned a friendly greeting and that was it.
There was nothing important about the exchange, but it made me feel good as I realized once again what was going on.
I’ve recently shed 70 pounds. I’m not yet down to the weight I’d like to be, but I look much different from how I looked four or five months ago. I’ve struggled with my weight for years, so I’ve seen this pattern enough to understand what had just happened with the woman in the store, even though she almost certainly didn’t understand it herself.
When I’m as overweight as I was last spring, I become invisible to attractive young women in public. I don’t mean I’m treated badly. I just mean that unless I have reason to initiate contact — and she has reason to respond — I might as well not be there. I’m not someone she wants to talk with.

Search for sexual pleasure can slowly destroy genuine intimacy
‘All animals are equal, but [deaf] animals are more equal than others’
Does this look like a child abuser? Voters must not have thought so
For rest of my life, I’ll constantly re-interpret mother I didn’t know
Reality check: A stupid racial prank isn’t ‘the worst thing anybody can do’
Politicians trying to stamp out innovation to help monopolies
If Boston bombing suspect doesn’t have rights, neither do the rest of us
‘What if I asked you to marry me right now, without knowing more?’