Look! It's Lizzie! |
Some of my earliest memories are
of my mother being on a diet. We would have our dinner; she would sit at the
end of the table with a bland-looking baked potato with cottage cheese. It
wasn’t just her; one day when I was no more than about 5, I walked into our
living room to find her and two of her friends sitting on the floor, trying to
walk on their bottoms like they’d seen on some exercise show. I remember them
being very impressed that I could do it. It was the 80s, the era when Lizzie
Webb encouraged us to exercise each morning on Good Morning Britain
with that maniacal Jokeresque grin. The era when the workout video really
began. The entire nation was on a diet.
When I was in first school, our
PE classes were mainly playing with hula hoops in the playground, or kicking a
ball back and forth. When I moved up to middle school, all of a sudden they
wanted us to do cross country running through the woods. And so began my hatred
of all things exercise. I spent secondary school coming up with elaborate
excuses to get out of PE class, and was relieved when I went to college and
found nobody cared whether I could play netball or not. I spent the next few
years studiously avoiding all exercise. When I got a bit too chubby and needed
to lose weight, I would go on a diet, as per years of examples in my life and
the media. I never liked the way my body looked, and would usually just wear
baggy clothes to cover my belly. At best, the shape of my body was something I
tolerated.
A few years ago I joined a gym,
and got really into it. I saw a personal trainer a couple of times a month,
went to tons of classes, and at one point was in the gym every morning at
6:30am. I loved it. Then I had a breakdown, and it all stopped. Ironically, I
also stopped eating for a time, and so finally my stomach was flat. I had
something of an epiphany in a La Senza changing room where I realised my belly
was flat, and yet I was completely miserable. I’d always thought if I could
just take another couple of inches off my waist, I’d be happy.
Oddly, I think becoming pregnant
and having a baby has done a lot for my body image. As soon as I had a bit of a
bump, and I was supposed to be fat, I
wore tight, figure-hugging clothes to show it off. Because I exercised
throughout my pregnancy, and had some rather ridiculous amounts of stress to
deal with, the weight I put on stayed on the bump. Once S was born, I was lucky
in that the excess weight seemed to shift fairly quickly, and of its own
accord. Because I was keen to ensure I stayed mentally fit, I went for lots of
walks with S, which helped.
S's growth chart. Go us! |
When S was born, she weighed 5
pounds. Relatively large for a baby born 5 weeks early, but still tiny. She was
very skinny; I have photos of her sleeping where you can clearly see her ribs,
and her legs were so small I couldn’t see how they would ever support her
weight. As she’s grown, I’ve enjoyed the way she’s become podgy, like a baby is
supposed to be. She has the most adorable little rolls of chub on her thighs
and when she puts her head down she has a double chin. It feels strange to be
celebrating fatness, when my whole life I’ve strived for exactly the opposite.
She weighs 16 pounds now, and a friend commented to me that she looks really
good for a premature baby who’s been fed only breast milk up until fairly
recently. If I’m honest, the fact she is now on the 50th centile on
the growth chart in her little red book is probably the biggest achievement of
my life to date.
Having a child, and thinking
about the hang-ups I still have about my body, I am very mindful that I don’t
want to pass that attitude onto my daughter. I remember a friend commenting a
while back that her 5-year-old daughter had come home from school one day
worried because someone had called her fat. I am very aware of the fact that
although S is only 6 months old and cannot speak, she is very alert and takes
everything in. She sees me inspecting myself in the mirror, changing my top if
the one I first put on doesn’t look right. She sees what I eat, sees the crisps
I grab when I can’t be bothered to put a proper meal together. Nothing
motivates you to make an effort with your self image like knowing you could
cause the same issues in your child. I love S with all my heart; she is the
most perfect thing I have ever seen. To think that she could ever look in the
mirror and not think the same would break my heart.
These days there is such an
emphasis on image, and children seem to be sexualised earlier and earlier. Not
so long ago a 4-year-old girl told me she had a new boyfriend at school. Makeup
and bikinis are marketed to increasingly younger age groups, and the majority
of toys for girls these days are based around appearance. It terrifies me to
think my daughter will be growing up in this environment, where everyone looks
up to Kim Kardashian as a role model because she… has flawless makeup? How do
you make sure your child is happy in her own skin when society increasingly
dictates what the dimensions of that skin must be in order to be accepted?
Thirty years on, the media is
even more saturated with diets and exercise dvds. Magazines aimed at women are
filled with photos of celebrities looking too fat or too thin or telling the
secret of how they shed their excess pounds. In a recent issue of Closer Magazine
there were 13 articles about celebrities’ weight or appearance; this made up
38% of all of the articles in the magazine. We are bombarded with it, and we
are bombarding our children with it. How do I teach my daughter that the media
and most of the women and girls she knows are wrong?
This post was inspired by this post on Hybrid Rasta Mama.
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This post was inspired by this post on Hybrid Rasta Mama.
Thanks for reading! If you've enjoyed this post, please share it with your friends using the buttons below.
Excellent post, Vicky! S is adorable and it's obvious she takes after you :)
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