My name is Pamela Celine Dudley. My friends call me P.C. No, I'm not always politically correct. By the time you get done with this story, you'll know what I mean. I am a young black woman living in Atlanta, Georgia. My whole life, I've been a big girl. Yeah, I stand five feet eleven inches tall and weigh two hundred and eighty pounds. I'm tall and thick, with large breasts, a somewhat plump body, wide hips and a big ass. What the guys from the hood call a ghetto booty. Yeah, that's me in a nutshell.
It's not easy being someone like me, especially in a society which worships females who look like living skeletons. I'm not built like that and I have no desire to be. Stick figures are annoying. I don't care what the modeling agencies say. Fortunately, I've never been the kind of person who sits around feeling sorry for themselves. I like my life. It's okay, I guess. I am a student at Georgia State University. I major in chemistry. And I devour everything that life has to offer, no pun intended. The way I see it, you only live once.
These days, I'm seeing a fine young man named Ralph Simon. He's a tall, good-looking black guy who attends the Atlanta Institute of Technology or ATL Tech. We met during my sophomore year. I'm a member of the Women's Rugby Club at Georgia State University. ATL Tech played against us and we lost. The captain of the ATL Tech Women's Rugby team was Rhonda Simon, Ralph's older sister. I've had my eye on Ralph ever since that first meeting. I couldn't help myself. The brother was fine. Ralph has the face of a Male Model, the body of an Olympic Athlete and the smile of an Angel. Yeah, he was all that and then some.
Until I met the Simon siblings, I've never set foot in the Atlanta Institute of Technology. It's a small private school with only ten thousand students. Founded in the year 1978 as the City of Atlanta's answer to legendary academic and athletic powerhouse Georgia Tech. Since then, it's become the flagship school of the city. ATL Tech has an equal number of male and female students among its population and it's the most diverse campus in the state. They've got some pretty decent dorms, too. I've been going to ATL Tech quite often these days, mostly to visit Ralph at his dormitory or to his football games to show support.