Ever since I can remember, I have been obsessed with the beauty of underwear and swimsuit models. How do they get such a flat tummy? Why are their boobs contained to just the front of their bodies, and not the sides, too? Why don’t their thighs rub together? Why wasn’t my butt ever as cute and pert as theirs? Granted, I was about five years old when I first remember thinking that, but that thought has always dominated my brain space. Why can’t I look like the models in the magazines? And if I did, would I be as happy as they are? The thought of obtaining that same body type both delighted and terrified me. After all, those bodies are what men want to touch, right? Those are the women who have sex for fun because they want to. Not because someone else told them at seven years old that they had to. Right?
I
learned early on from listening to my male cousins, my stepdad, and his drunken
friends that “fat chicks” were not what men wanted to touch. Did that
mean that if I got really fat, men would stop touching me without my consent? I’ve
spent over 30 years testing that theory, and I can tell you honestly that it
doesn’t work that way. Some men are just absolute pigs and they will touch
anything that breathes, whether he/she/they can give consent or not. I sure wish
I had learned this lesson sooner. Being fat is physically and mentally painful.
Throughout
my school years, I was teased mercilessly for my weight. When I went home, I
was abused simply because I was there. I escaped a lot into fantasy worlds –
namely Hollywood drama. Who was dating who? Which popstar was at the top of the
charts this week? Who had the biggest house, fastest car, and deepest secrets?
I ate it up almost as fast as the rag mags hit the newsstands. MTV was my best
friend, and don’t even get me started on the amazing teenage rom-coms that the
90s had to offer us. I was convinced that if Lance Bass wouldn’t marry me,
Freddie Prinze Jr surely would. After all, he killed it as Zack Siler in She’s
All That.
So many
of my peers were also insecure about their weight, height, and looks. I see it
now, as I look back over many interactions in the hallway, classrooms, and the girls’
locker room. I wasn’t the only girl who changed for Phys Ed in the bathroom
stall. I wasn’t the only girl convinced that the newest shade of blue eye
shadow and a sparkly scrunchy would solve all my problems and get “that guy” to
notice me in between classes. We were all in an awkward stage of uncertainty.
Some of us had deeper traumas behind it all, and some of us were merely coming
into our own at the absolute strangest point in our lives. Puberty.
Magazines
geared towards the female gender have always had a way of making us feel more
insecure about ourselves three pages in. Right there, past the table of
contents is always this gorgeous-looking woman with zero flaws (because photoshop
exists) and she has the biggest, loveliest, most uninhibited smile on her face.
This woman has it made. At least, that’s what we’re meant to believe. If we buy
whatever product she is representing, we too will have it made. As we peruse the
magazine, we read about women and girls who have found the secret to remaining
beautiful and confident all day long. Usually, it involves an expensive brand
of mascara, a colorful brand of shoes, or a Wonderbra that perks up our tits enough
to grab and hold the attention of the opposite sex. There it is again. Sexualizing
our bodies to garner attention. It starts so early, doesn’t it? I was twelve
years old when my Mom brought me my first issue of Seventeen magazine. She said
that she hoped it would help me to figure some things out. Yep, it sure did. I
spent the next twenty-seven years chasing unobtainable beauty standards and
beating myself up whenever it didn’t work out for me.
Sex is
not the end-all-be-all I thought it would be. Sure, it is wonderful. With my
husband. It’s traumatizing when I’m under the tender age of ten and being told
to just be quiet because it will all be over soon. No amount of makeup will
ever make a man love me more – or less. No amount of fat will ever protect me
from sexual predators. No magazine geared towards women ever features even one
woman who has her life all together all the time. That kind of woman doesn’t
exist.
We are all human, we all have our
flaws, and we’re all balancing life as it comes at us each day. Some days, we
look like we have it all together, and we may even fool ourselves into thinking
we do. But then…a bad day happens and we feel down on ourselves. We feel like
failures. That couldn’t be further from the truth! We are amazing simply because
we are. Those who seek to hurt us in any way do so because they are
hurting inside and aren’t strong enough to ask for help. They’re the weak ones.
They’re the problem. Maybe we should start putting them in charge of paying for
our therapy as we work through all our issues and come to terms with the fact
that we are amazing just as we are and no one has the right to touch
us or hurt us. EVER.
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A portion of my poetry from June 2005. Read it as many times as you need to until it sinks in. YOU ARE LOVED! |
Stay tuned for another episode. I
aim to crank out the blog posts three times a week on Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday. See you next time! And remember, if you or a loved one is in danger,
get help right away, and don't stop talking until someone acts on what you're
saying.
National Domestic Abuse Hotline: 800-799-7233 Hours: 24/7. Languages: English,
Spanish, and 200+ through interpretation service. SMS: Text START to 88788
National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-4673 Hours: Available 24 hours. https://www.rainn.org/
In Christ alone our hope is found
Run, don't walk for help! You're worth it.
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