TW: dermatillomania
So, I felt like doing my make-up and taking pictures of myself (you know the feeling)… and I had my own little photo shoot and then I started freaking out because I don’t have photoshop on this computer and I can’t erase my derma scars. And I’ve just come so far with loving my big fat body, my uneven boobs, my shaved head, but I can’t accept my scars. I feel the need to hide them from the world, erase them, pretend they aren’t there.
But I can be myself here. On this tumblr. Fully show you all what I look like. So, ya know, thanks. <3
I hope this is okay to reblog from our-skin (because of your last line) - I think you’re beautiful and it’s excellent to see someone being okay with themselves as-is, and that’s important for other people to see too :)
Don’t delete because I look Young!. Many kids call me fatass, but I’m one fatass that loves herself, and is determined to move on.
United states : Size 20/22 and proud ♥
Good for you!
Charley size 26 UK
Loving my body more than I ever have before.
Come and follow me guys. :)
trigger warning for body image fears/obsessions and discussion of disordered eating via “weightloss tips”. I think this is a beautiful, extremely worthy piece, but there are moments in it that got me a bit anxious, so just putting that beforehand.
My Fat, Beautiful Body, published at RoleReboot
Without fail at noon on every Friday, 30 minutes before my beginning ballet class starts, a mixture of fear and dread ooze into my mind. It starts when I think of getting dressed for class. Despite a well-stocked closet, I am never content with my choices. I spend 20 minutes scouring my closet for a garment that doesn’t exist—I am looking for something that will make me invincible. Exasperated, I leave wearing the same men’s gym shorts and oversized t-shirt. My nerves don’t get any better once I get to class. I am scared to look at my body in a mirror; I am scared to compare my body to my peers. I try to stand in the back rows as far away from the mirrors as possible, and I still occasionally catch a glimpse of my double chin. Or my belly escaping the drapery of my shirt. I am scared that even after working at accepting my body and fighting tooth and nail to get those around me to change their actions and opinions, I will see something repulsive. I can’t get through a weekly dance class without having to give myself pep talks. It takes all that I can muster to remind myself that I am beautiful and, more importantly, worthy of being in that class. It takes all that I have to remind myself that I love my body and that I can take pleasure in moving it. I can take pleasure and find beauty in my body.
I loathe classifying these problems (yes, I acknowledge that they’re problems) as “body image” problems. “Body image” isn’t really about the image of bodies. It’s about the holistic relationships we have with our bodies. It’s about how bodies look, how they move, what they feel like, and how we treat them. Even if we ignore semantics, conversations about body image almost always come down to health. Most conversations I’ve had about body image blame the media and advertising for exposing young girls to impossible standards in order to sell products. But more than selling products, these images drive people to unhealthy habits—crash diets, disordered eating, and sometimes even more dramatic actions like diet pills and self-harm.
And yet many of these behaviors have been recommended to me by health professionals. You see, I’m fat. Not “does this dress make me look fat?” fat, but eligible-for-weight-loss-surgery
morbidly obesedeathfat. I’ve been fat for as long as I can remember, but the first time I remember my size being an issue was at a check-up. I was 8 years old, and after plotting my height and weight in one of those grids, my pediatrician had one of those “talks” with my parents and me. I was too heavy for my height and age, so he presented me with a Xeroxed list of 10 “helpful tips” for eating.It was meant to be innocuous, but I became obsessed with that sheet of paper. It was the first time I saw my body as a personal failing, and that list was the way to redeem myself. I followed the rules to a tee, and yet I didn’t get any smaller. That simple piece of paper was only the beginning. My adolescence was filled with appointments with doctors and nutritionists, medically facilitated crash diets, and crying fits in dressing rooms. My doctors pathologized my body, and I believed them. I believed that my fat body meant that I was overeating, even when I would leave the dinner table hungry. I believed that I was lazy, unkempt, untrustworthy. I couldn’t trust myself.
I can’t rely on a conventional understanding of health to fix my body image issues because my body image issues stem from those conventional understandings of health. To find peace with my body I’ve had to reject mainstream medical wisdom. I screen my health care professionals, and I set firm boundaries. I am not interested in weight loss, and I will not step on a scale. I don’t care about a new diet regimen; I care about eating. I’ve learned to love my body—I love the look of my body; I love the way my squishy, soft flesh feels. I have embraced my fat. I do this because I care about my body. I care less about the image of my body, and I care more about my relationship to my body.
When I stand at the barre to begin my weekly ballet class, I am reminded that loving my body is both difficult and important. As we go through the usual warm-up routine I feel my muscles stretch and flex. I am present in my body, and I appreciate the grace and flow of movements. As we transition into leaps and jumps, I am reminded of that power in my body. My hearty legs can push my body in the air again and again in rapid succession. I land easily each time.
I am still scared that even after working to accept my body I will catch a glimpse of myself in the mirror and find something ugly. So far, I’ve only seen my body. My fat, beautiful body.
Photos by Liz Naiden
I’ve got nothing to hide. I choose love.
The smile …
[Also posted on No Shame. Just Love]
A new friend of mine has been helping me get through some pretty heavy stuff recently, so when I felt good after reading her emails again, I took a photo of this and I thought I might share my smile … size 16-18 Aus, 5”3’, chubby and beginning to love myself :) [submitted by thevampyone]
:)
So.. I find myself in a position where perhaps I don’t feel I am being completely honest with myself. I’ve grown a lot. And I thought that I really loved my body… and then I sat down with my camera today, completely naked, without makeup, fresh out of the shower and was actually a little bothered by the things showing up in pictures.
Stretch marks, fat rolls, blemishes, dark marks… they are all a part of me so why am I so bothered by them?
So I’ll post them and share them. And continue to come to terms with the fact that I am still growing and learning to love my body as it is and not just how I can make it appear.
<333
Bodies are awesome. Learning to live with the fact that your body is not an airbrushed magazine cover is super awesome.
Look at this fucking body warrior. She is beautiful, honest and inspiring. This is what women (identified folks) need to see- other women (identified folks), outside the pages of magazines, naked in a non-sexual way. Every body is different, every body is lovely.
What beauty.
Beautiful.
I need to do this. I’m a little shy of nude just because — the internet! — which is not to say anything bad about those who do, actually more that you all are braver than I am, haha. But the reasons I haven’t taken pictures of myself just chillin in my underwear is because of things like the things that were holding you back — that there still are minute details of my body that bother me; things like dark marks or hair or what have you even more so than asymmetry or fat. This reminds me that I should love all of me and that all of me is beautiful. If I can see it in someone else I can see it in me.
So thank you for this, because you are beautiful and so am I and so is everyone else. Even if it’s not in a picture I definitely encourage other people to examine their bodies and admire them, come to terms with what they are afraid of.
(Source: fat-and-naked)
(Source: radicalmasturbators)
This was taken during a photo shoot with a dear friend of mine. She snapped me in mid-thought, fixing my hearing aid.
2 1/2 years ago, I herniated my lower back and went from my absolute lowest weight to now my absolute highest. It has been an ongoing struggle to love myself but I’m getting close.
This is one more step towards that goal of loving myself fully.
submitted by brokenpinky
OOTD: Bird’s the word on Flickr.
Worn for Thanksgiving festivities. Bird dress for eating a bird… it wasn’t intentional, but amusing nonetheless.
awellroundedventure.com
Dress – eShakti, custom sized.
Belt – Torrid, 4
Tights – WeLoveColors, Black, EE
Shoes – Lassen via 6pm.com last year
Lipstick – MAC in Lady BugOh how I long for eShakti dresses.
Fact: I am at my heaviest.
I don’t weigh myself, but I know my body. It’s a body I’ve spent a lot of time examining. From years of dieting and eating disorders, to my journey of self love and acceptance — yes, I’ve spent a LOT of time with my body. I know what it looks and feels like when I’ve gained only 5lbs. My body is handy in that my weight always goes straight for my belly, so it’s easily noticeable. I am at my heaviest. And my body is showing it.
Being a prominent face in the Fat Acceptance community means that sometimes you feel like you can’t feel weird about your body. But, the fact is, right now, I feel weird about my body. I certainly don’t hate my body. I very much love it as much as I possibly could. But it’s weird right now. It’s weird to look at a photo of your body and have it not be the body you’re used to having. Which is what I’m dealing with recently. It’s weird to look at a photo and think, “what a beautiful body !”, without the connection that it is my own.
My body has changed. And with that change, comes a new stage of acceptance. This is the way my body looks now. It’s the not way it looked in January. It’s not the way it looked in June. It’s the way it looks right now. And right now is what I’m living. And right now, this angle of my body is a part of me, and it’s beginning to sink in. And the more I look at it, the more I fall in love with it.
<3 Kyla
Kyla always says things the best way I can think of. There’s always that period of “huh?” and weird dissociation. And hopefully, there’s that new beginning of love too. This is, in my experience just as true for weight loss as it is for gain. You may be really weirded out, grieve your old body, feel like you’re an entirely different person (for good or bad) or not relate at all - but you also learn to love it and attach to it as YOU. This isn’t true for everyone, but I think the body acceptance movement is a very very important part of it being possible for anyone. I wish I’d had more support when I was in high school and struggling with weight fluctuations (both normal and abnormal).
Regardless of angle, clothes or time of day, I am trying harder every day to appreciate my body for what it allows me to do, not for how other people perceive it and me.
submitted by julietburgess
Never let your belly be the reason why you don’t feel or act sexy. Remember that there’s sensuality and sexiness to every type of body; fat included. Embrace the curves you were given. We’ve only got one body and one chance to love and cherish it. So, instead of waiting for the “perfect body” to accomplish or act how you feel on the inside, take this moment right now and be it. This is your chance.
<3