YES to this #WCW to #JenniferAniston, & her frank, smart, vulnerable article on body shaming for HuffPo (link in bio) It rings incredibly true for me after this past Sunday. I posted a happy image of myself -- an image I liked -- and quite a few people started hastily tagging friends "she's pregnant." "She looks pregnant." "You're pregnant! It's obvious from 1,000 yards. Or you've just gained weight." "Is she preggo or fat??" Incredibly stung, I clarified that no, I am not with child, I just ate a burrito for lunch. And someone had the shocking lack of sensitivity to say "meant no harm by my comment!" Newsflash. Being told you look so heavy you must have another person inside of you IS harmful. Judging another person's body, assuming you are allowed to weigh in on their worth, their "beauty," or that you deserve to determine a lack of their beauty IS harmful. Not just to me, to all of us ・・・ Jen's words: "Sometimes cultural standards just need a different perspective so we can see them for what they really are- a collective acceptance… a subconscious agreement. We are in charge of our agreement. Little girls everywhere are absorbing our agreement, passive or otherwise. And it begins early. The message that girls are not pretty unless they're incredibly thin, that they're not worthy of our attention unless they look like a supermodel or an actress on the cover of a magazine is something we are all willingly buying into. This conditioning is something girls then carry into womanhood. We use celebrity "news" to perpetuate this dehumanizing view of females, focused solely on one's physical appearance, which tabloids turn into a sporting event of speculation. Is she pregnant? Is she eating too much? Has she let herself go? Is her marriage on the rocks because the camera detects some physical "imperfection"? I used to tell myself that tabloids were like comic books, not to be taken seriously, just like a soap opera for people to follow when they need a distraction. But I really can't tell myself that anymore because the reality is the stocking and objectification I've experienced first-hand, going on decades now, reflects the warped way we calculate a woman's worth."

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ソフィア・ブッシュのインスタグラム(sophiabush) - 7月14日 01時34分


YES to this #WCW to #JenniferAniston, & her frank, smart, vulnerable article on body shaming for HuffPo (link in bio) It rings incredibly true for me after this past Sunday. I posted a happy image of myself -- an image I liked -- and quite a few people started hastily tagging friends "she's pregnant." "She looks pregnant." "You're pregnant! It's obvious from 1,000 yards. Or you've just gained weight." "Is she preggo or fat??" Incredibly stung, I clarified that no, I am not with child, I just ate a burrito for lunch. And someone had the shocking lack of sensitivity to say "meant no harm by my comment!" Newsflash. Being told you look so heavy you must have another person inside of you IS harmful. Judging another person's body, assuming you are allowed to weigh in on their worth, their "beauty," or that you deserve to determine a lack of their beauty IS harmful. Not just to me, to all of us ・・・
Jen's words: "Sometimes cultural standards just need a different perspective so we can see them for what they really are- a collective acceptance… a subconscious agreement. We are in charge of our agreement. Little girls everywhere are absorbing our agreement, passive or otherwise. And it begins early. The message that girls are not pretty unless they're incredibly thin, that they're not worthy of our attention unless they look like a supermodel or an actress on the cover of a magazine is something we are all willingly buying into. This conditioning is something girls then carry into womanhood. We use celebrity "news" to perpetuate this dehumanizing view of females, focused solely on one's physical appearance, which tabloids turn into a sporting event of speculation. Is she pregnant? Is she eating too much? Has she let herself go? Is her marriage on the rocks because the camera detects some physical "imperfection"? I used to tell myself that tabloids were like comic books, not to be taken seriously, just like a soap opera for people to follow when they need a distraction. But I really can't tell myself that anymore because the reality is the stocking and objectification I've experienced first-hand, going on decades now, reflects the warped way we calculate a woman's worth."


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