I'm glad you were able to find the humour in this and that you're finding a silver lining in this shit storm. I feel like this is a great example of the reason why we shouldn't comment on changes in people's bodies unless you are close enough to them that you know that any weight gain/loss was intentional or they raise it themselves.
Generally speaking, I have always been thin person with an athletic build, and although there have (of course) been some mild fluctuations over time (pregnancies, etc), I have been fortunate to have never struggled with my weight. For reference, my BMI generally hovers somewhere near the lower end of normal. Note: I provide this background only to point out that I have never in my life "needed" to lose weight in any way.
There have been two occasions in my life however, where due to extreme stress/illness/trauma, I unintentionally dropped about 10-15+ lbs. For reference, this was enough to clearly put me in the "underweight" BMI category. Physically, my clothes were hanging off me, and I was tired, anemic, not sleeping well, my face was gaunt and pale, and I was cold virtually all the time. I certainly did not feel great, and mentally I was just barely hanging on. That said, during these periods, I got an embarrassing amount of attention from colleagues, acquaintances, family members, store shop owners, strangers on the street etc complimenting me, asking for my secret, and lamenting about how lucky I was to be able to eat like I did and stay thin. Others gossiped aloud as to whether I had an eating disorder (and not out of concern). In those instances, I felt put on the spot, and felt the need to explain that I was not trying to lose weight and I was just stressed and the response was always, "oh you don't know how lucky you are...", which made me want to scream. Whether the attention was positive or negative, I hated all of it. I have never, in my life, been so aware of how much attention other people paid to my body. Nobody seemed to notice (or care) that I was falling apart but they sure as shit noticed that all of a sudden I was a clothes horse. The knowledge that I apparently "look better" to others at a clearly unhealthy weight and mental space, also speaks to how screwed up societal perceptions of idealized womens' bodies are.
I will tell you, my default reaction now if I notice that a friend has had a major fluctuation in their weight is to not mention it but to check in with them to see how they are doing.
[This message edited by emergent8 at 9:40 PM, Tuesday, June 25th]