I hate my body

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apronepisces
not a newbie
Posts: 17
Joined: Sun Mar 10, 2019 8:45 pm
Age: 22
Awesomeness Quotient: I will never give up on a relationship
Primary language: English
Pronouns: she
Sexual identity: bi-sexual but mostly straight
Location: OH

I hate my body

Unread post by apronepisces »

I am 17, a teenage girl, have social media. I am overweight but it’s quite evenly distributed throughout my body (like I don’t have really skinny legs and a big stomach or big legs and a small looking stomach). I don’t even want to say my weight while typing this it’s so unbearable to think about. I used to play basketball and volleyball but broke my knee and had to have a knee reconstruction—was bed ridden for two weeks straight and on very intense pills. I’ve always tended to be one of the big kids but it used to just be in height. Now I am unable to do any cardio-heavy sports like basketball with running and I do track instead. I throw so our workouts are weightlifting instead of running. I am completely uncomfortable in my body and my mother doesn’t help with it at all. All of my friends are skinny and a lot of bodies I’d be insanely happy to have. I don’t know how to become comfortable in my own skin and it’s taking a toll on me mentally.
Heather
scarleteen founder & director
Posts: 9537
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 11:43 am
Age: 54
Awesomeness Quotient: I have been a sex educator for over 25 years!
Primary language: english
Pronouns: they/them
Sexual identity: queery-queer-queer
Location: Chicago

Re: I hate my body

Unread post by Heather »

Welcome to the boards, apronepisces. I'm sorry what's brought you here are what sound, in your posts, like a few different struggles. I'll do my best to help.

It sounds to me like two things are going on here:
1) You have a body type that doesn't match the current white, mainstream standard of beauty or what you see in your friends bodies.
2) You're used to being very active and athletic -- a thing that not only tends to physically feel good, but often tends to deliver the goods when it comes to positive body image boosts -- had to deal with all the impacts a major injury commonly has on that (I so hear you, have been there and it blows), like changes to your body and what you can do and losing some loved activities (and, it sounds like, kinds that did the job better for you with body image).

On top of that, it sounds like you're also saying you have a family member who plays a part in your body image woes.

Does that all sound about right? If so, is there one of those areas you want to start talking about first?
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead
apronepisces
not a newbie
Posts: 17
Joined: Sun Mar 10, 2019 8:45 pm
Age: 22
Awesomeness Quotient: I will never give up on a relationship
Primary language: English
Pronouns: she
Sexual identity: bi-sexual but mostly straight
Location: OH

Re: I hate my body

Unread post by apronepisces »

Very much so. You’re point on with all of those things. I feel like atm I’d like to focus on you’re number 1 because I feel like that’s what affects me most directly on a day to day basis.
Heather
scarleteen founder & director
Posts: 9537
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 11:43 am
Age: 54
Awesomeness Quotient: I have been a sex educator for over 25 years!
Primary language: english
Pronouns: they/them
Sexual identity: queery-queer-queer
Location: Chicago

Re: I hate my body

Unread post by Heather »

You got it.

I don't know if this will or won't work for you, but I know that in general -- and for myself, through my life -- the way I tend to tackle that is by checking myself with two main things:

1) History (and also capitalism and white supremacy). Fashion is fleeting and ever-changing, and that includes with body types. There is pretty much NO body type that has not, at some point and place in history, been the fashionable, desirable one at at least one time. It's so easy -- especially if you haven't been around a few decades to experience those changes directly, or aren't familiar with history in this regard -- to get the idea that whatever the current body type is it is the ONLY one (it never is, but the one that makes white people the most money usually gets the most airplay, go figure) at the time and the only one that has ever been.

It isn't. So, right now, it's a whole lot of white and skinny (or white and skinny except for -- mostly surgically enhanced -- boobs and butts or white and skinny except for appropriating Blackness or other cultures in tiny, white-acceptable and profitable pieces). And it has been before. But it's also been other things before. I remember, for instance, a period of time in my lifetime where muscles and fitness took precedence over skinny, and in other cultures during my lifetime, including right now, that's not the ideal, either. But every "ideal" not only leaves someone out, it leaves most people out, especially over a lifetime. Even your skinny friends won't always look that way: in fact, some of them won't even in a few years. In cultures or other ideals where the ideal is for people to be bigger, go figure: the skinny people in those cultures feel like you do.

Long story made very short: beauty ideals are, particularly in the last 200 years or so, MEANT to make people (especially women) feel like garbage, not to feel included. They generally aren't how most people look. That's because they're meant to be something to make people aspire to so they spend money and time to make other people money so they can live their best lives on our dime and our eroded self-esteem and crummy body image because some people just really such. :( . So, this stuff is working on you just like it's meant to, unfortunately. It'll do the same on your friends, too, who will probably have a hard time with all this too, in time, either because the beauty standard will change and then THEY won't fit it (ever read the Sneetches by Dr. Suess?), or because they will have gotten used to meeting it, but then, as tends to happen with bodies in time, their bodies will change and they won't fit it anymore that way.

2) What I know about how looking a certain way doesn't mean someone feels good about themselves: In a word, while it's easy to think that why you feel bad about your body is because of those standards you can't meet (and like I said, that is part of it, for sure, though it's more about how you internalize this stuff), know that a looooooot of people who do match a given beauty standard still struggle with poor body image. They STILL don't like their bodies. Sometimes that's because they feel like they are thisclose to meeting the standards, but something about them is never quite right. Other times, it's because they actually are working very hard to stay meeting those standards and it's stressful and dehumanizing and just feels on the whole, exhausting and crummy.

Positive body image doesn't actually come from meeting beauty standards, nor do they necessarily make it easier for people who happen to meet them. That's why people can even look like an ideal but still feel...well, like you are, like they hate their bodies. There are so, so many things that can give us poor body image: beauty ideals are only one of them.

How do you feel about any or all of that? Can I also ask how diverse your friend group and community is, as well as the media you take in? One thing I've often noticed over the years in talking to people with poor body image, saying some of the same things you are, is a frequent lack of diversity. Growing up, we went to the YWCA several times a week in the middle of a diverse city, so I was able to see so many different kinds of bodies, with so much diversity, all the time. If you don't have that or much of it -- if most of your friends look the same, most people in media you look at look the same, if you don't see real bodies a lot with some real diversity, like you can see on a public bus, for example -- it can make it so much easier to internalize and believe the lie of these ideals, you know?
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead
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