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Learning to love your body

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  • #69126
    Floella
    Participant

    Hi, just wondered if anyone had any advice on how I can move on from my current position.

    I’ve been really trying to learn to love my body. I’ve been reading books and blogs recommended to me by people who have been on the same journey. It was also part of some counselling I had earlier this year. They all told me to work on the same thing – find something about your body that you DO like and focus on that. The premise is that whilst you might hate your stomach, you might love your legs etc.

    Problem being, there is nothing about my body that I like. If I could, I would change every single thing about it. The colour of my hair and eyes, my blemish prone skin (face and body), my brittle nails, my thick calves and thighs, my huge butt and stomach but tiny saggy breasts. Even structurally it is damaged and has required surgery and gives me regular back and neck pain. Every inch of it is so far from what I would like it to be.

    So without anything to focus on this suggestion is actually making me feel worse about things each time that I try it. If I ask other people what they would choose they umm and ahh for a while and then say something lame like “there’s nothing wrong with you” – not really answering my question.

    Thoughts, ideas… please I need to find a way to start loving something.

    #69141
    Bec
    Participant

    Hello there!

    In my own personal experience with these matters, I have found the reasons I dislike certain aspects of myself physically is because they remind me of the way I live my life.

    For example, I have flabby arms (nobody else sees it, just me) and I dislike them. But my “flabby” arms are simply just a “reminder” that I would like to get fitter and I’m not doing it, so I’m now “lazy”.

    In truth, there’s nothing wrong with how I live I’ve just got a lot of expectations for myself. So in order to overcome this I tried to be more reasonable and see my arms as part of me. Flab or not, my arms are still mine and as they reflect me and all that I do, I love them.

    Honestly, your fine just the way you are. Just because you don’t look like a supermodel standards doesn’t mean your wrong and cannot love yourself.

    It seems to me that the reason you cannot love yourself is because you want others to accept you. Your loving of yourself may revolve around others loving you. If someone said “I really love your eyes” you’d suddenly see them in a different light, wouldn’t you?

    Fact is, you can’t live your life on the basis if what others like. Trust me when I say that if the people you were asking knew how to express love and compassion, they would tell you that they love you just as you are because all of it represents you.

    If I were you, i’d stop putting so much emphasis on what I like and put emphasis into the aspects of my physical self that reflect my good qualities. Example: a scar for a time of emotional or physical strength ect.

    Hope this helps.

    #69205
    pandapeach
    Participant

    Hello
    I have also struggled with body image but I notice that it ‘flares up’ when I am depressed or going through a hard time.
    So I wonder if there is something in life that is making you unhappy at the moment.
    As women we feel so much pressure to be perfect but there’s no such thing as perfect.
    We are flooded with images of models and airbrushed beauty but that’s not the norm !
    You only have to look around in the changing room to see that women’s bodies come in all shapes and sizes.
    What helped me alot is exercise and yoga.
    When I get the flood of feel good chemicals after exercising I appreciate my body more, and not only that I am grateful for what it can do!
    I can’t change my body but I can change the way I feel about it and what I do with it. Maybe try feeling good inside your body through exercise like swimming, going for a massage, or pampering yourself.
    hope that helps

    #75252
    Julie
    Participant

    In high school I suffered from eating disorder but eventually got better. When I left for college, I weighed 120 pounds and was 5’6. At that weight, I drank large coffees from Dunkin filled with sugar, all kinds of unhealthy food. But I could still wear my size 0 jeans. When I went away to college, in semester, through binge eating on junk food, super unhealthy dining hall food, not having dance in my life anymore and binge drinking at least 2 times a week, I gained 17 pounds. When I went to the doctor in December and saw that number I was shocked. I knew I had gained weight. None of my jeans fit, I felt disgusting. All I wanted to do was cry. All those old thoughts I used to have returned. The first thought I had was to not eat for the rest of the day. When I would eat, I had to battle the urge to make myself throw up. I hated who I’d let myself become. I transferred in the spring and made it my mission to lose those pounds. I started calorie counting to lose weight but with a healthy weight loss goal. I stated eating more fruit, eating salads for lunch. I don’t drink anywhere close to how I used to. I joined a Zumba class and aim to go to the gym 3 times a week. Sometimes I can do more, sometimes less. I feel so much healthier. Even then when I was 120 pounds. Do I still have moments where I hate how big my hips look or how my stomach isn’t perfectly flat? Of course. But when I do, I try to remember how I’m doing the best I can. Although there are things I want to change, I can honestly say that I’m happy with how I look. I totally get not liking the focusing on what you like. I don’t like that either. I could say to tell you that you can dye your hair, use nail strengthening treatments, etc. But that won’t truly help you. You need to stand in front of the mirror and look at yourself. Really look at yourself. Acknowledge everything you hate. For me, I ate my thighs, my stomach, my hips, how my arms aren’t as toned as I want. Be brutally honest. But then focus on the good. Not just physically. For good, I’ll say how I like my eyes or something but I also say how I choose fruit over that piece of cake, or how I made it through the ab portion of Zumba without stopping, how I got a good grade on that test. Anything good. Realize there is so much more to you than your looks. Eat healthy, exercise, be around positive people and the rest will follow.

    #88563
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Dear Floella,
    I read a while ago something profound – that people with terminal illness of all ages are unified by a common regret that they will soon lose their mortal bodies, the vessels that have carried them throughout their lives and shared every aspect of their being.
    Could you not think of your body as your friend and partner in life? That it has taken you on every adventure and held you up through great joys and profound sorrows?
    Walk barefoot on the beach maybe, and marvel at how your toes grip wet sand and leave behind perfect prints on the surface of Earth, at how your ankles delicately bear your weight and the strength and determination of your legs, strong and confident as they stride forward. Your hips sway and hold you steady.
    You speak of your chest negatively, but think how it shields your heart and it’s to this that you hold tight the things and people you love most, even when you cross your arms over your breasts and hug yourself. If you don’t hug yourself, you should. Your arms are strong and your hands are capable. They write your thoughts and prepare your food and make special things when you want to express love. They caress and create every single day of your life.
    Feel the softness of your hair on the nape of your neck and the fringe of your eyelashes against your cheek. Your lovely eyes take in all manner of wonders; a puppy carrying a stick that’s way too large or the way the sun lights up the edges of a cloud or even the way your coffee steams in the mug when you pour it hot. And the same too, your nose, for sniffing the traces of your mom’s perfume and ears for hearing the rustling of trees and your lips are lovely because they taste honey and fresh bread and the cool sourness of ripe fruit. They form your words and sing and express a childlike giggle. How could you not love them?
    Your body doesn’t exist for you, or anyone else, to pick apart and judge. It exists to house you and keep you safe and to express your needs and meet your desires. And that makes it beautiful, achingly beautiful.
    So treat it well.
    Drink lots of refreshing water and eat nutritious food. Slather cool lotion over your skin and get a manicure. Wash your hair with gentle shampoo and a strong conditioner, and then let it dry behind you in a gentle wave. Exercise your body just to feel it working so diligently – take long walks, or go kayaking or take a dancing lesson or stretch in a yoga class without ever lifting your eyes off your mat to dare compare your very own body with that of anyone else.
    There’s not ‘one thing’ you should like about your body. You should love every aspect of it, even the scars and stretch marks and bumps and blemishes that are souvenirs of your remarkable ability to survive and flourish.
    Love your body. All of it. Marvel every day at its strength and resiliency and beauty. Celebrate it. Care for it. It’s yours, the physical manifestation of you. And that makes it freaking amazing.

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