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My (amazing, totally awesome) blog:  Stirring and Whirring. Moving from Chicago to NYC - and doing my  best to keep working in a field I love: intern...
 
 
 
 

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The Importance of Repitition: Sending Out Positive Body Image Messages

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At least once a day I forget everything I've ever learned about keeping a positive attitude about my body image. A negative trigger goes off and suddenly I berade myself for eating too much or not exercising enough. Everywhere I look I see bulliten board GAP models laughing at my waistsize and magazine cover celebrities poo-pooing my forming wrinkles.

Now, nobody's perfect, and I don't expect to prance through fields filled with flowers shouting about how freaking great my body looks. But I do have remember how many images bombard women everyday that feature skinny, beautiful models that have been retouched and perfected. Statistics exist on just how many (an enormous number) but what's more important is how many messages are we seeing that say the opposite? Not nearly enough.

I listened/read Podcast: Interview with Kelly Park from 'How to Look Good Naked' and realized how strong the reaction is from people when they are finally given the message that their body looks good. Why is it so hard for these women, for us? Because we are fighting an uphill battle.

The Dove Campaign for Real Beauty has started some of the conversation, and we need even more. We need to be telling each other how good we look, and we need to be seeing images like the ones presented on HTLGN or other shows that celebrate, not berate. 

One solution I've come up with is to target one of the biggest proliferators of this message: women's magazines. Showing our role models and celebrities (sometimes one in the same, sometimes not) with no imperfections does not inspire, it depresses. One of the worst examples happened on the cover of Redbook, a magazine that's supposed to appeal to the maturity and interests of women.

My humble efforts have been put in place through a campaign that asks a major women's magazine to publish an issue without using retouching or photoshop on their cover or in their magazine. Anyone that joins the campaign commits to buying two issues. 

The only way to combat the negative body images we see everyday is by sending the positive ones out there ourselves. This is important for young girls especially, but we don't become immune at any age. I hope to at least pass this message on to my friends and (someday in the far future!) my daughters. Again, and again, and again!

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GlindaofOz 5 pts

I read something about this not too long ago. Unfortunately I can't remember the exact specifics or where I read it (sorry). But they were talking about how we will never see real women in magazines because the advertisers and magazine editors don't want to see it. They all believe that they are selling a "fantasy" and apparently being 5'11 and 100 pounds is a woman's fantasy. Who knew?

I always say that I would love to be able to start my own fashion magazine where no one under 150 pounds would be allowed on the pages. Who wants to see what clothes look like on a model? I want to see how they are going to look on me, not someone 6 inches taller and 50 pounds lighter.

I completely agree with your assertion. Magazines that boast being supportive of women still feature the same stupid diets and airbrused model pictures of every other magazine. I get that advertisers support the magazine industry but if the readers are tired of seeing the same stupid vacant, starving models on the inside who is really driving the industry?  

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