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No Body Is Perfect MAG
I walked down the aisles looking for a pattern in my favorite clothing store. Just my luck, they had the cutest shorts – but only in sizes 0, 1, 3, 7, and 9. I wear a 13. Annoyed and devastated I walked out thinking, I’m just too fat.
The next week, at my grandmother’s house for the traditional spaghetti dinner, my cousin and his girlfriend, Ivy, joined us. We had a delicious dinner. Afterward, the women sat around talking about dieting and their weight and whatnot. My aunt complimented Ivy on how skinny she looked for weighing 120 pounds. My aunt said that she needed to go on a diet because she weighed almost 140 pounds. This comment kind of hurt me because I weigh almost 160 pounds. So I said, “I probably need to go on a diet too,” but I said this softly so, hopefully, they wouldn’t hear me.
Ivy, however, was sitting right next to me and heard what I said. She took me into the other room with her, and we sat on the bed. “When I was in my senior year of high school, I weighed 140 pounds,” she said. “I felt so insecure. I couldn’t imagine any guys would want to be with me because of how fat I was. I tried eating less, dieting, exercise, but nothing seemed to work. That was when I realized that no body is perfect. No anorexically skinny girl will ever be skinny enough for society to say that her body is ‘perfect,’ because then she would be considered ‘unhealthy.’”
I thought a lot about this for the next few days and realized that no one had ever called me fat, except when my mom was joking with me. So why was I so caught up with how much I weighed? Why was I so consumed by a number that does nothing but mock you? This number labels and classifies you and tells you “You can’t fit into those jeans because you’re 160 pounds. You can’t go out with him because you’re 160 pounds. No one will want to hang out with you because you’re 160 pounds” over and over.
I decided that I wasn’t going to let my weight rule my life. I wasn’t going to let it decide what I should and should not wear. At that point I realized that I, too, believe that no body is perfect, that no girl can be skinny enough, and that all those people who tell you the “anorexic look” is in are probably so uncomfortable with their own weight that they have to make other people self-conscious just to make themselves feel better.
So, anytime I start to feel self-conscious about my weight, I think to myself, Anorexia? I think not.
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This article has 119 comments.
I understand! I was THE chubbiest kid in my grade school classes. I thought I'd never be "normal".
(of course, my sister is the tallest, slimmest creature on the earth and this doesn't help)
Dieting or disliking yourself need not be a solution. Find a physical activity that you love. Lose yourself in it and learn to love yourself for who you are and what your body is. It carries you everywhere you go.
Good luck with whatever you do!
Veg
Okay After reading most of these comments
i feel super skinny
and imma happy
id rather be that than Fat
The writing in this article isn't amazing, but the meaning shows through. Though I do want to offer a little . . . sensitivity training, perhaps:
A lot of your readers here would be girls or boys who have dealt with weight issues, but perhaps a bit harsher than you have. Maybe they've actually struggled with anorexia, bulimia, self-harm, or things of the sort. Because this is a large part of your audience, you may want to refrain from using 'anorexic' as an adjective. It is not a body type, it is a disease. And it is not to be taken lightly; it takes lives.
As someone who's struggled with this, you know, anorexia, I can personally say that using the label to describe a malnourished body is sometimes offensive and always sounds uneducated.
Just some friendly advice c:
Keep writing!
every girl IS beautiful
maybe ur not the skinniest or the tallest
maybe ur eys shine lke crystal pools of blue from aruba
or maybe ur hair shines like a thousand suns (if ur a brunette) ur eyes are so dark it is addictive to look at and ur hair looks like beautiful shiny copper
EMBRACE UR BODY
shape isnt everything and those derrogatory "yo momma" jokes are rude and made for insecure people to feel good about themselves cuz they know they r messed up too
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"Age does not diminish the extreme disappointment of having a scoop of ice cream fall from the cone." <br /> -Jim Fiebig