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Follow Up to “Slave to Image?”

September 25, 2017 by Lauren Leave a Comment



Well, I had quite the response to the last blog commentary on our image-driven society; confirming that I’m not the only one who struggles with it.  And I’m not the only one trying to comply with it (yes, I realize the dichotomy).  If you missed that post, you can find it here.  Image is such a huge part of who we are as a society that it has seeped into the practice of medicine.  I recently read about a 2009 study in The Journal of the American Medical Association that found people with a BMI (Body Mass Index) in the overweight range (25-30), had a 6 percent lower risk of death in any given period than people whose BMI fit in what is considered the “normal” range (18.5-25).  And this was no small study!  97 separate studies and 2.88 million people around the world were analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control.  In addition, the researchers found that the risk of death only increased once a person’s BMI was above 35 – putting them quite firmly in the obese category.  In light of this information, we can only conclude that the BMI scale is really a gauge of what we consider most attractive, not most healthy.  And yet many doctors still use this chart in dealing with patients.  

Image is so important to our culture that it inhabits our nomenclature.  In English, when referring to someone who is overweight, we say, “He is fat.”  or “I am fat.”  In Spanish, Hebrew and many other languages, the same sentiment is expressed as “He has fat.”  or “I have fat.”  It’s not defining.  Extra pounds are something that you have.  It’s not who you are.  See the difference?

While reading Kimberly Rae Miller’s second memoir Beautiful Bodies (which largely spurred my interest in writing on this topic and where lots of these ideas and facts come from), she admits that “For years I’d treated my body like a project on my to-do list.  I simply needed to research and put in the work, and then it would be fixed, and I could move on to the next thing.”  This resonated with me more than I’d like to admit.  

In last week’s polemic I mentioned my fear that battling image would only be worse for our children.  Miller states research in her book showing that 80 percent of 10 year old girls have dieted.  10 year old girls!  If this doesn’t signify a desperate need for change, I don’t know what will!  And Miller says of herself, “I hadn’t had any connection to my body since I was seven years old.  I’d made it the villain of my life story – I blamed everything on it.  If I didn’t get the part, I blamed my body.  If I didn’t get the guy, I blamed my body.  If I didn’t like who I was, I blamed my body.”  Sigh.  I can relate.  But I don’t want my daughter to.  

Last week my 12 year old was given a Creative Writing assignment to pen a slam poem.  This is what she wrote:

SLAM POETRY PROJECT – TRAPPED

I’m trapped
I’m trapped inside walls built by words, a perfect picture frame, peculiarly placing me somewhere I don’t want to be
I’m trapped
I’m trapped inside societies rules and regulations, why can’t I be my own creation 
I’m trapped
I’m trapped inside some suburban bubble only to be popped by the ones who put me there, why do I have to struggle here
I’m trapped
I’m trapped where I have to grow up long before 18, where I have to look like the screen on tv
I’m trapped
I’m trapped in some community where to be pretty is to look like that magazine, why can’t they see that inner beauty is key
I’m trapped
I’m trapped behind bars of makeup and hair, where I have to act like I don’t care 
well I do
I care for those of you whose fathers broke their hearts long before any boy could chose too
I care
I care for you who hurt themselves only to feel worse, it feels like a curse, a trance their stuck under only to feel, worse
I care
I really do, for those of you who are scared to come to school, who’s bullies and hardships make them feel like a fool, you don’t have to be stuck in this wild whirlpool
I swear
I will keep you out of there
taken to a place with no worry, no care, no people who say. sticks and stones break my bones but words will never hurt, well their wrong
words do hurt
and to act like they don’t  should be considered a crime
leaving young kids alone just to cry
some even thinking they would rather go die
I will take you there 
somewhere you don’t have to be 
trapped

–Allie Sparks–

Wow!  She already feels the pressure to conform to what celebrity, and society and the media tells her she should be.  But I see so much hope in the last few lines.  She wants to help others who are hurting and struggling with the boxes they have been put into.  I want to help her, so she can help others.  I’ve been racking my brain with the “how”.  It seems like a gargantuan task.  The messages encouraging all of us to look a certain way and be a certain way are constant and prolific.  I may not be able to change the whole world, but maybe I can change the world for my child – and maybe you can too.  The first step is simple.  Pray.  Pray against the pressures our youth face amidst peer pressure, social media and celebrity sermons.  Pray that they would thrive in the skin God gave them and love who He created them to be.  Second, love them lavishly for who they are, not what they look like or what they can accomplish.  When someone knows they are loved, no matter what, they are more comfortable in their authentic self.  

The last step may be the toughest of all.  I don’t believe we can teach our children to love and accept themselves until we stop hating ourselves.  The word “hate” may sound harsh, but before you discredit its place in your life, ask yourself how many things about your appearance you are trying to change.  Ask yourself if you are constantly wishing God had given you someone else’s talent instead of your own.  Your child looks up to you.  If you currently have teenagers, you may doubt this, but its true.  If you never walk confidently in who God created you to be, your children will find nothing in themselves to be confident in.  We need to analyze the language we use to speak about ourselves.  Are you thankful for how God made you?  Or are you constantly complaining?  Are you using the talents God has given you for the benefit of His kingdom?  Our children need to see this.  It may not be easy, but its important.  

If you struggle with negative self-talk, find a friend to hold you accountable to changing your narrative.  Ask that friend what he/she thinks are the best things about you (it will be uncomfortable, but do it) and write them down.  Refer to it often and ask the friend to call you out when you tear yourself down.  Study scripture to hide in your heart what God says about you – and ask Him to help you believe it!  And last, let me know if this struck a cord with you.  We can pray for each other.  

“Do not lie to one another, since you laid aside the old self with its evil practices, and have put on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him – ”  Colossians 3:9-10 NASB

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Slave to Image?

September 18, 2017 by Lauren 2 Comments

Joan Jacobs Brumberg birthed The Body Project from years of collecting the journals of adolescent girls.  In it, she compares New Year’s resolutions of two girls who were about the same age.  The first, written in 1892 records the young lady’s desires to “…not talk about myself or feelings.  To think before speaking.  To work seriously.  To be self-restrained in conversation and actions.  Not to let my thoughts wander.  To be dignified.  Interest myself more in others.”  The later, from a teenager in 1982 said, “I will try to make myself better in any way I possibly can with the help of my budget and babysitting money.  I will lose weight, get new lenses, already got haircut, good makeup, new clothes, and accessories.”  From this we see a stark contrast in culture’s changing values.  In 90 years time, a teenage girls’s primary goals morphed from improvements in character to changes in appearance.  It’s not hard to see why I have the issues that I do.

With the ever-advancing flood of technology, we have allowed ourselves to be sold a bill of goods on the “image” we should portray.  We let society at large dictate to us what is beautiful and acceptable.  And I do mean the collective “we”.  All of us buy in to some degree.  Lest you believe you are some highly evolved hold out, ask yourself why you permed your hair and teased your bangs to the rafters in the 90’s.  Or why you spend money on jeans with holes in them today?  I’m not saying there is anything inherently wrong with enjoying fashion or keeping up with the trends.  But when the quest for the right “image” becomes so important that we dislike who God made us to be – as my friend Terri says, “We have more issues than Time magazine.”

Because we are constantly confronted with pictures and video of what other people think is beautiful, we tend to develop a set of insecurities around what we perceive as our differences.  And I fear it will only be much, much worse for our children.  The amount of time spent on social media and streaming videos is certain to fill them with hundreds and thousands more negative messages than just the network television shows and Young Miss magazines of my day.  Even with the limited screen time of the 80’s and 90’s, it was easy for us to decide that our hair was too thin or our lips were too full, our eyes the wrong color, our butt too big or our boobs not big enough.  For me, it was always my weight.

I developed early.  I had breasts and hips and curves long before most of my girlfriends.  By the time I was in the 6th grade, I was catching the attention of high school and college boys.  That didn’t seem like a problem to me, until 7th grade athletics.  When we started changing out in the locker room for sports I noticed just how different I was from the stick figures that most of the girls were.  To add insult to injury, there were only 2 jerseys for the basketball team that were large enough to accommodate the blossoming figures of myself, my twin sister and one other friend who was our size.  That meant the 3 of us had to share those two jerseys.  Are you getting the mental picture?  Every game one of us had to sport a jersey that was mortifyingly too tight.  In this jersey I looked and felt “fat”.  I no longer saw my curves as mature beauty.  They became and forever more would be the enemy.

Through my teenage and college years, my mind waged a war against my body.  I wanted to eat and I wanted to be thin.  So I vacillated between indulging in “fun” foods and fad dieting – a sense of guilt and shame underlying it all.  I drank Slim-Fast and ate Snackwells, took pills and swilled cabbage soup in an effort to gain the shape I thought I was supposed to have.

As a young mom I joined an exercise program to try to loose the baby weight and a new obsession (that fed into my old obsession) was hatched.  I got certified to teach group fitness and spent the next several years adding certification upon certification and teaching as many exercise classes as I could.  I found my identity and self-worth in being a trim and muscular example to others.  But my battle with food raged on until it, among other things, landed me on a counselor’s couch a few years ago.  This wise woman of God diagnosed me with 2 sub-clinical eating disorders.  I was a compulsive overeater and an exercise anorexic.  I ate to dull the pain of self-loathing and the things I couldn’t control in my life (like a child with a seizure disorder) and then I exercised to make sure that no one ever knew it.  More than almost anything, I feared gaining weight and shattering what I thought was a perfectly portrayed image.

My counselor encouraged me to stop obsessively tracking caloric intake and expenditure and – instead – look at the real issues.  After throwing out my scale and Body Bugg (a pre-Fitbit activity tracker) I hurt my back, broke my foot, tore my ACL and got diagnosed with breast cancer.  These happened over several years time but each lead to changes in the intensity of the exercise I could do and some pity eating.  What I feared the most, has come true.  I gained more weight than even my distorted mind thought I could.  So much, that I have to admit I am still embarrassed to publish.  But do you know what?  Nothing in my life has really changed.  Being the size I am now was my greatest fear.  It is realized.  But my husband still loves me and is attracted to me.  I still have a great group of friends – many of the same ones.  I have maintained my job teaching fitness and students still want to come to my classes, and I am able to take care of my family and serve my God.

Our culture tries to sell us a bill of goods that says we are somehow a lesser person if we don’t have the right “image”.  I’m here to tell you from personal experience that it’s just not true.  I have found an incredible amount of freedom in realizing that my life is no worse for the extra pounds I carry.  So much freedom, in fact, that I feel confident now in taking steps toward a stronger, healthier me without all the baggage I carried before.  I no longer seek the “perfect body”.  Habakkuk 2:18 says “What profit is the idol when its maker has carved it, or an image, a teacher of falsehood?”  The WORLD has decided what constitutes a perfect body, and the WORLD has changed its mind on that many times over.  So what good does this current image do us?  It’s not from God, and as a believer, I am striving to care more that others see Him, not me.  “But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.”  2 Corinthians 3:18

It’s a daily battle for me to put aside the messages I’m bombarded with.  The world still gets my attention with its diatribes on being fit and looking young and dressing a certain way to be relevant; and I do believe God made us to enjoy beautiful things, but 1 Peter 3:3 says, “Your adornment must not be merely external – braiding the hair, and wearing gold jewelry, or putting on dresses; but let it be the hidden person of the heart, with the imperishable quality of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is precious in the sight of God.”  I constantly pray now that I would be pleasing to God’s eyes and care less about the watchful eye of man – that more and more when I look in a mirror, it will be His face looking back at me.

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About Me

I love Jesus, my husband and caffeine. The order of these can change depending on how tired I am. When my two daughters, stepson, and 4 grandchildren get to be too much, I practice yoga. God graciously allows me to share our adventures, victories and flub-ups from my laptop. May He be glorified here.
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