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Helping people develop a healthy relationship
with food is my primary goal.
No Body is Perfect:
Body Image and Shame
Body Image and self esteem
Author: Brené Brown, Ph.d., L.m.s.w.
We often want to believe that shame is reserved for the
unfortunate few who have survived terrible traumas, but this is not true.
Shame is something we all experience. And, while it feels like shame hides
in our darkest corners, it actually tends to lurk in all of the familiar
places.
After interviewing over 400 women across the US,
I learned that there are twelve areas that are particularly vulnerable
for women: appearance and body image, motherhood, family, parenting, money
and work, mental and physical health (including addiction), aging, sex,
religion, surviving trauma, speaking out and being labeled or stereotyped.
Interestingly, there are no absolutely universal shame
triggers. The issues and situations that I find shaming may not even come
up on another woman’s radar. This is because the messages and expectations
that drive shame come from a unique combination of places including our
families of origin, our own beliefs, the media and our culture.
One place where women find themselves surrounded by unattainable
and conflicting expectations is body image. While some of us might have
quieted the tapes about “not being smart enough” or “not being good enough”
-- it seems that almost all women continue to wage battle with looking
“beautiful, cool, sexy, stylish, young and thin enough.” With more than
90% of the participants experiencing shame about their bodies, body image
is the one issue that comes closest to being a “universal trigger.”
In fact, body shame is so powerful and often so deeply
rooted in our psyches that it actually affects why and how we feel shame
in many of the other categories, including sexuality, motherhood, parenting,
health, aging and a woman’s ability to speak out with confidence. Our
body image is how we think and feel about our bodies. It is the mental
picture we have of our physical bodies. Unfortunately, our pictures, thoughts
and feelings may have little to do with our actual appearance. It is our
image of what our bodies are, often held up to our image of what they
should be.
While we normally talk about body image as a general reflection
of what we look like, we can’t ignore the specifics -- the body parts
that come together to create this image. If we work from the understanding
that women most often experience shame when we become trapped in a web
of layered, conflicting and competing expectations of who, what and how
we should be, we can’t ignore that there are social-community expectations
for every single, tiny part of us -- literally from our heads to our
toes.
I’m going to list our body parts because I think they
are important: head, hair, neck, face, ears, skin, nose, eyes, lips, chin,
teeth, shoulders, back, breasts, waist, hips, stomach, abdomen, buttocks,
vulva, anus, arms, wrists, hands, fingers, fingernails, thighs, knees,
calves, ankles, feet, toes, body hair, body fluids, pimples, scars, freckles,
stretch marks and moles.
I bet if you look at each of these areas, you have specific
body part images for each one -- not to mention a mental list of what
you’d like it to look like and what you’d hate to have a specific part
look like. When our very own bodies fill us with shame and feelings of
worthlessness, we jeopardize the connection we have with ourselves (our
authenticity) and the connection we have with the important people in
our lives.
Consider the woman who stays quiet in public out of
the fear that her stained and crooked teeth will make people question
the value of her contributions. Or the women who told me that “the one
thing she hates about being fat” is the constant pressure to be nice to
people. She explained, “If you’re bitchy, they might make a cruel remark
about your weight.” The research participants also spoke often about how
body shame either kept them from enjoying sex or pushed them into having
it when they didn’t really want to but were desperate for some type of
physical validation of worthiness.
There were also many women who talked about the shame
of having their bodies betray them. These were women who spoke about
physical illness, mental illness and infertility. We often conceptualize
“body image” too narrowly -- it’s about more than wanting to be thin and
attractive. When we begin to blame and hate our bodies for failing to
live up to our expectations, we start splitting ourselves in parts and
move away from our wholeness. We can’t talk about shame and body image
without talking about the pregnant body. Has any body image been more
exploited in the past few years?
Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for exploring the wonders of
the pregnant body and removing the stigma and shame of the pregnant belly.
But let’s not replace that with one more airbrushed, computer-generated,
shame-inducing image for women to not be able to live up to. Movie stars
who gain fifteen pounds and have their stretch marks airbrushed for their
“Look! I’m human too!” portraits do not represent the realities that most
of us face while pregnant.
Parenting is also a shame category affected by body
image. As an admittedly vulnerable, imperfect parent, I’m not one to jump
on the “blame parents for everything -- especially the mothers” bandwagon.
Having said that, I will tell you what I found in my research. Shame creates
shame. Parents have a tremendous amount of influence on their children’s
body image development, and girls are still being shamed by their parents
-- primarily their mothers -- about their weight. When it comes to parenting
and body image, I find that parents fall along a continuum.
On one side of the continuum, there are parents who are
keenly aware that they are the most influential role models in their children’s
lives. They work diligently to model positive body image behaviors (self-acceptance,
acceptance of others, no emphasis placed on the unattainable or ideal,
focusing on health rather than weight, deconstructing media messages,
etc.). On the other side of the continuum are parents who love their children
just as much as their counterparts, but are so determined to spare their
daughters the pain of being overweight or unattractive (and their sons
the pain of being weak) that they will do anything to steer their children
toward achievement of the ideal -- including belittling and shaming them.
Many of these parents struggle with their own body images
and process their shame by shaming. Last, there are the folks in the middle,
who really do nothing to counter the negative body-image issues but also
don’t shame their children. Unfortunately, due to societal pressures and
the media, most of these kids do not appear to develop strong shame resilience
skills around body image. There just doesn’t appear to be any room for
neutrality on this issue -- you are either actively working to help your
children develop a positive self-concept or, by default, you are sacrificing
them to the media- and society-driven expectations.
Power, Courage and Resilience As you can see, what
we think, hate, loathe and question about our bodies reaches much further
and affects far more than our appearance alone. The long reach of body
shame can impact how we live and love. If we are willing to examine the
messages and practice empathy around body image and appearance, we can
start to develop shame resilience. We can never become completely resistant
to shame; however, we can develop the resilience we need to recognize
shame, move through it constructively and grow from our experiences.
Across the interviews, women with high levels of shame resilience
shared four things in common. I refer to these factors as the four elements
of shame resilience. The four elements of shame resilience are the heart
of my work. If we are going to confront the shame we feel about our bodies,
it is imperative that we start by exploring our vulnerabilities.
What is important to us?
We must look at each body part and explore our expectations and the sources
of these expectations. While it often painful to acknowledge our secret
goals and expectations, it is the first step to building shame resilience.
We have to know and explicitly identify what’s important and why. I believe
there is even power in writing it down. Next, we need to develop critical
awareness about these expectations and their importance to us. One way
to develop critical awareness is to run our expectations through a reality-check.
I use this list of questions in my work:
- Where do the expectations about my body come from?
- How realistic are my expectations?
- Can I be all these things all of the time?
- Can all of these characteristics exist in one person?
- Do the expectations conflict with each other?
- Am I describing who I want to be or who others want me to be?
- What are my fears?
We must also find the courage to share our stories and experiences.
We must reach out to others and speak our shame. If we feed shame
the secrecy and silence it craves -- if we keep the struggles with our
bodies buried inside -- the shame will fester and grow. We must learn
to reach out to one another with empathy and understanding.
If, in a diverse sample of women ages 18 - 80, over 90% of the women
struggled with body image, it is clear not one of us is alone. There is
a tremendous amount of freedom that comes with identifying and naming
common experiences and fears -- this is the foundation of shame resilience.
Copyright © 2007 Brené Brown Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/women's-issues-articles/no-body-is-perfect-body-image-and-shame-117233.html
About the Author: Brené Brown, Ph.D., L.M.S.W., is an educator, writer,
and nationally renowned lecturer, as well as a member of the research
faculty at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work,
where she recently completed a six-year study of shame and its impact
on women. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband and two children.
She is the author of I Thought It Was Just Me: Women Reclaiming Power
and Courage in a Culture of Shame. Published by Gotham Books. February
2007;$26.00US/$32.50CAN; 978-1-592-40263-2. For more information, please
visit www.brenebrown.com.
Listen to your Body, it is Wiser than you Think. Respect
your own unique traits and Diet sensibly.
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