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Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Body Talk: Use The Power Of Your Words To Feel Great

Body talk: use the power of your words to feel great

Talking about your weight might seem like a great way to bond with your daughter and female friends but it’s worth considering what effect that this could have. Use our action checklist to stop the ‘fat talk’ and start a new kind of positive conversation with your daughter and gal pals – and you’ll really notice how much better it makes you feel.

Talking about our bodies is like an unwritten rule in female friendship – we do it constantly and automatically. You know how it goes: "I feel fat in these jeans," "I’ve put on so much weight," or "Gosh, my skin looks awful today." We asked body expert Jess Weiner to put together an action checklist to help challenge the negative ‘body talk’ conversations that many of us get caught up in when we’re talking to other women.

Teach your daughter to talk positively about her body

If you're not guilty of these kinds of put-me-downs, then you're in the minority. A recent study published by the Psychology of Women Quarterly of college women found that 93% engaged in this type of talk – dubbed ‘fat talk’ – and a third did so regularly. And this study found that those who complained about their weight more often – irrespective of their actual size – were more likely to have lower satisfaction with their bodies. To help build your self-esteem and that of your daughter, rather avoid negative conversations like this. When we talk in this way our daughters pick up on the type of language that we use and the topics of conversation in which we engage. Eventually, to their ears it may start to sound like our physical appearance is how we judge and value ourselves. Is this how we want our daughters to evaluate themselves?
"Words can have a huge impact on our self-esteem and constantly talking negatively about our bodies can reinforce the idea that there is only one type of body shape that is beautiful," explains Weiner. "It’s a pattern we have to break if we want our daughters to grow up to be confident about the bodies they’ve got." More importantly we need to teach our girls that beauty is a state of mind. If you love yourself, it doesn’t matter what the world says, you can walk with confidence.

Aren’t you bored of all the body talk?

Body talk doesn’t just refer to body-bashing. Talking about your appearance, even in a positive way, can contribute to low self-esteem by placing undue attention on certain physical features. It’s really all about beauty psychology - by telling a friend that they look great and following up with, "Have you lost weight?" you’re reinforcing the stereotypical view that skinny equals beautiful.
By spending hours discussing gruelling exercise or diet regimes and your fluctuating weight, you’re implying that weight is the primary factor in what it means to be fit and healthy.

Less fat talk, more fun talk

A mere 3 minutes of fat talk can lead to women feeling bad about their appearance and increase in their body dissatisfaction, according to Adverse Effects of Social Pressure to be Thin on Young Women: An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of "Fat Talk". This is a study in the International Journal of Eating Disorders. So making the effort to cut it out should have a significant impact on how you feel. In turn, your daughter will pick up on the more positive language and be less likely to put herself down.
The words we choose to use when talking about our bodies can damage our self-esteem, but they can also improve it. By focusing less on weight and body shape in your conversations, greetings and compliments, you can break the habit of reinforcing beauty stereotypes.
Why not try out Jess Weiner’s action checklist and see how much better you and your daughter will feel about yourselves?

Action checklist:
How to have a different kind of conversation

Here are some tips from body image expert, Jess Weiner, to get you started:
Your words have power: use your words to show your daughter that you believe that there’s more to life than appearances. By making the change yourself, you’ll help her to do the same and show her there’s more than one way to be beautiful.
Take the one-week challenge: challenge yourself to a week of no fat talk, inspired by Fat Talk Free Week – it might be hard at first, but if you tell your friends and family what you’re up to, they can support you and even try it for themselves.
Tell your friends that you’re bored of the body talk: be on red alert next time you meet up with a friend. If she starts any fat talk, tackle the issue head on by reassuring her but also alerting her to the negative impact of her words, for example: "I adore you and it hurts me to hear you talk about yourself that way."
Focus on the fun talk: avoid the fat talk pitfall when discussing diet and exercise and rather highlight the positive emotional and health benefits of changing your lifestyle. For example, regular exercise requires real commitment and dedication, and eating a balanced diet can give you more energy. So if your friend has started a new exercise regime try asking her how it’s making her feel, whether she feels stronger or whether she is even sleeping better. This will ensure that the conversation is broadened into a wider discussion about health and wellness.
Replace the negative with the positive: if you start to fall into the ‘body talk trap’, try turning a negative into a positive. Take a body inventory and think of a replacement statement that is positive for every negative word that you usually speak.
Love your body – it’s the only one you’ve got: appreciate your body for what it can do. The first step to building your self-esteem and confidence is to love your body. Use it to feel energised – go for a walk and enjoy the fresh air, do some gardening or take the kids out for a bike ride.
Tackle your own harsh words about others: remember that how you talk about others counts too. That means no more criticisms of how other people look, like "Hasn’t Jo gained weight recently." Not only will your daughter subconsciously pick up this negative behaviour, she’ll also interpret it to mean that bigger can’t be beautiful.

What next: action steps to help

  • Share these self-esteem boosting activities with your daughter. It might be just what she needs if she’s feeling negative about how she looks and could boost her confidence levels.
  • Use the action checklist as a starting point for changing the conversations that you have with your daughter.
  • Steer conversations away from ‘fat talk’ by changing the subject and turning negatives into positives. Instead of "I’m chubby," try positive compliments like "I’m curvy."
  • Talk to her about the fact that you’re going to avoid body talk in future because there are so many more interesting things for you both to share with each other.
  • Encourage her to do the same with her own female friends.

Monday, 29 June 2015

BodyTalk: Could A New Therapy Be The Answer To All Your Aches And Pains?


Tap stance: Britt Jorgensen practises BodyTalk on Tessa Boase
Tap stance: Britt Jorgensen practises BodyTalk on Tessa Boase Photo: JEFF GILBERT
Have you ever wondered how the superhuman among us – the Barack Obamas, the Oprah Winfreys – manage to appear so gleaming, so lucid, so centred apparently all the time? Don't they ever have an off day?
ADVERTISING
Obama, who this week celebrated his first year in office, shares a little secret with Oprah. They are reportedly both fans of "BodyTalk", the alternative healthcare system of the moment, now finding converts in Britain.
BodyTalk is based on the belief that the body knows how to heal itself but, like a computer, can get overloaded, leading to malfunction. A BodyTalk practitioner offers no diagnosis or prescription, just a "rewiring" session using muscle testing and light tapping on the head and sternum to re?establish channels of communication within the body. Then the body will start functioning optimally again.
Words like "innate", "healing" and "wisdom" set off alarm bells for me, especially when used together. But look past the jargon – and past the fact that this is a booming Florida business whose founder, Dr John Veltheim, resembles an outsize elf with bushy beard and evangelical smile – and there is sense in recognising the body as a "whole" with interconnecting systems. After all, we know that when one thing goes wrong, diverse other symptoms can crop up.
Veltheim, an Australian, once ran a busy clinic for Chinese medicine, acupuncture, chiropractic and naturopathy. He became exhausted, got ill and couldn't recover. The long search for a cure led him to experiment with blending these and other alternative therapies, creating "acupuncture without needles".
His eureka moment came in 1995 with the discovery that you can literally tap into the body's energy circuits by using simple muscle testing to discover areas of sluggish communication. Tapping on the head then tells the brain to "fix" the faulty circuit, followed by tapping on the heart to "store" the fix, just like a computer downloading a programme.
Confused? Cynical? London-based practitioner Britt Jorgensen was when she first encountered BodyTalk on a yoga retreat in the United States four years ago. "People were talking about this miracle cure," she says. But no one could come up with a description that made sense to her.
Three weeks later, Jorgensen booked onto a BodyTalk course in New York and was captivated. She started practising on her husband, on friends and children, and says the results were demonstrable. Backache disappeared. Depression lifted. Skin complaints cleared up. Hyperactive children sat still. She continued training, gave up her high-powered job and qualified as a practitioner, treating people for complaints as varied as phobias, slipped discs and digestive problems.
I put Jorgensen to the test with a clutch of minor ailments: stiff back, aching wrist, sore throat – plus an unhealthy surfeit of anger. I lie on the treatment table and she wiggles my hand and arm, then lightly taps my head and chest bone. She also holds my feet briefly and lays a hand over my middle (she picks up straight away on the anger: the liver meridian apparently needs "balancing").
Does she have healing hands? No. BodyTalk is an "energy medicine", based on scientific principles. Veltheim has used neuroscience to back his findings, including a recent experiment in which the brain's responses to BodyTalk were monitored. I leave the treatment room still unconvinced. The tapping feels too much like knocking on wood – vague optimism rather than hard science.
But, one month later, the results of three sessions have shaken my scepticism. All physical complaints disappeared within hours of treatment. More surprising has been my change in mood: I feel increasingly clear-headed, light-chested, optimistic and energetic, as if the white noise of 21st-century urban life has been switched off in my head.
I still don't know how it works, but then I don't understand what my computer repair man does either.
  • Britt Jorgensen works in central London. Sessions cost £60, less for mothers and babies (0772 660 4020; www.thetaptapcompany.co.uk)
source:- http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/alternative-medicine/7044474/BodyTalk-Could-a-new-therapy-be-the-answer-to-all-your-aches-and-pains.html

Sunday, 28 June 2015

Getting Back Your Spark When Every Day Feels Hard

DepressedWoman
“When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on.” ~Thomas Jefferson
Did you ever wake up one morning and not know who you were anymore?
Waking up for the past four years of my life, I felt like I was in the movie Groundhogs Day. The same things happened every day, and I felt the same horrible feelings all the time. Anxiety, depression, and hopelessness ran my life.
I had it all figured out at some point. I was furthering my career and moving toward my dream of becoming a psychologist. I had great co-workers, tons of friends, and a supportive family.
There was this continuous, sun-shiny, flowing feeling of “everything works out for the best.” Any struggles I went through would make me stronger, a better psychologist and friend. A better person. And so, I enjoyed the ups and downs of life with no regrets and little struggle.
It seems that I woke up one day and everything was gone.
I had lost my job, which paid for my education. All of my friends had drug abuse issues, and I removed myself from their lives or vice versa. My puppy, best friend since age five, died four days before my birthday. I was plagued with pain from Lyme disease and an undiagnosed tick-borne illness. I felt like every piece of my life was falling apart.
My dreams were not coming true anymore. I still have no idea how I slid down this far without knowing it.
The best parts of my life had left me, and it seems like it all hit me at once. There were no more happy, “let it go, it’ll all turn out for the best” thoughts. It was all darkness. I had lost myself and my joy for life.
The worst part was that I knew I could get back to that place if I tried. But I didn’t know how. I longed for that spark, that fulfillment with my life for years. I just couldn’t put my finger on what I was missing. I hadn’t even realized that it was gone until it seemed light years away.
I realize now that there were quite a few things I could actively do every day to pull myself out of this dark place. If you’re going through a rough time, these may help you, as well.

1. Acknowledge and appreciate everything that happens, even the seemingly bad.

During my “golden age,” I had acknowledged everything that worked out well for me. I recognized the random strokes of luck that life handed me and appreciated them, and it seemed like more of these things happened as a result.
When I lost my way, I was so focused on the negative, overwhelming feelings that I thought good things just didn’t happen for me anymore. I had to learn that the only difference between a good thing and a bad thing is how you look at it.
I could sit and think about how much I disliked my boyfriend’s mother all day. From the first thought in the morning, all the way until bedtime I could obsess over how horribly she treated me. Why couldn’t she just accept me as I am? I love her son more than anything, after all!
After struggling with this for close to a year, I finally realized why she had grown to be such a focal point in my life. She was here to teach me compassion. True, loving compassion for someone you thought you couldn’t stand, until you open your eyes and think what it may be like to be them.
It is a good thing that she is in my life, and though she often presents challenges to me, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. She helped me to see that people are not black and white, good or bad.
Nothing is inherently bad; it just is. As your mind processes information, it applies your filters, your beliefs, and your preconceptions to the information. This is the reason we are angered, or feel sad, or disappointed. It’s not actually the thing she said, or what he did that angered you; it’s all what you think about it.

2. Challenge limiting, irrational thoughts.

When things go haywire, we tend to cling to our irrational thoughts like a life preserver, when what we really need to hold onto is our inner calm.
I really believed that I could just think my way out of the hopelessness-box I had placed myself in. I obsessed and ran and re-ran the same thoughts all day, trying to make sense or pull what I wanted out of every conversation.
My mind was a mess of tangled thoughts that I used to keep me in a bad place. Nothing was ever good enough; nothing was ever good at all. And there seemed nothing I could do about it but obsess even more.
I would obsess that my boyfriend and I weren’t getting along. Did he still love me? Why wasn’t that spark there anymore? He was cheating on me, he had to be. Why couldn’t things be the way they used to be? Why had he said that thing this morning, the one that made me feel so unloved?
I realized that all these thoughts did was give me something external to obsess over, to keep me from thinking about the real problem.
The real reason why I was uncomfortable and stuck in this thought loop was because of my own insecurities. I did not feel like I was good enough for him, hence my sneaking suspicion he would cheat on me. Focusing on what he may do kept me from addressing my own issues.
I was insecure. I had deep rooted self-worth issues, and what I kept looking past was the fact that all this started and ended with me. It was my insecurities making me think this way. It was my thoughts that would one day enable these things to happen—if I wanted to keep believing that I wasn’t good enough.
Often, when you think defeating and self-limiting thoughts all day, you actually start to believe they are true.
If you start from a place of love and acceptance for yourself, it greatly affects the way you think about important things in your life. My panicked mind just took the root cause and expanded upon it, made it grow, made it bigger and meaner until I just couldn’t overlook the real problem staring me in the face anymore.
When you accept and love yourself as you are, and when you feel the inner peacefulness and calm inside yourself, you are able to see straight through your own tricks.

3. Do something just for you. Every day.

I am a responsible person and I always did everything I was supposed to do. I was a good girl. I went to work. I did my job. I did the dishes and laundry and was exhausted by the end of every day. But I couldn’t sleep through the night.
I felt like nothing was ever truly done. There was always more to do. I remember looking at a dirty bottle once and breaking down crying. Being everything for everyone doesn’t mean anything if you can’t enjoy a few moments with yourself. No one can appreciate you the way you can.
I slowly started substituting tasks with things I wanted to do. Instead of coming home and picking up the living room, I would come home and exercise. I felt better, relaxed, and energized when I was done, and the picking up got done quickly and without the bitterness accompanied by never having any time to do anything for me.
Its funny—all these people are relying on you, but all these people really need is you. Not the things you do. They love and appreciate you for you, not for the clean house. I had built up this idea that being a mother and responsible adult meant that I couldn’t have fun anymore. That I couldn’t do things I enjoy.
Make time to do something you love, and to just be you. Make you your number one priority today. Everything else will fall into place

4. Let the fun in.

Dance to your favorite song in the car, go dig your hands in the dirt in the garden, tickle your husband, make a mess; however you like to have fun, do it!
It seems like as we grow into adults, we are expected to act like grown-ups and slowly filter out all the fun in our lives. Piece by piece you realize everything that you used to enjoy, you no longer do!
Reclaim your life.
You need to take whatever time you have and use it to the fullest. It’s okay to go a little crazy. Get a little dirty doing something you enjoy. Remember what it was like to be a kid and totally immerse yourself in something, just because you loved to do it.
Forget your to-do list and do you instead. Love completely, open your heart, act like a kid, and who knows; you may just feel like one again.

source:- http://tinybuddha.com/blog/getting-back-spark-every-day-feels-hard/

Friday, 26 June 2015

How To Get Through A Day Of Low Self-Esteem In 23 Easy Steps

ginarossi


1. Avoid the internet. Just… pretend it isn’t real.
2. …Don’t even scroll through Instagram while you’re pooping.
3. Read [2-3 pages of] a book. You’ll feel smarter.
4. But don’t start out any conversations with “I recently read…” or people will hate you.
5. If today was the day you were going to go bathing suit shopping, reschedule.
6. Figure out a way to universally dismantle the hashtag “#thinspiration.”
7. Bacon.
8. Stay away from all health food stores and/or any places where people seem generally happy and like they don’t hate themselves.
9. Make a temporary exception for the “avoiding the internet” rule by googling a list of Lifetime movie titles from the past 5-10 years. And then bask in this moment and allow yourself to LOL.
10. Refrain from looking up super young celebrities, entrepreneurs, and other famous people on Wikipedia and figuring out how old they were when they got their shit together.
11. Cheese.
12. Take a hot shower that lasts for 5 hours.
13. Watch videos that will make you giggle, like this one:

14. Go to the mall but only buy Auntie Anne’s.
15. Become a certified minister online.
16. Ask one of your friends to go to happy hour with you. If they don’t feel like it, force them.
17. If you honestly have to force them, consider leaving them forever and getting a new friend.
18. Walk down the street and pretend to be Miranda Priestly. Turn to someone you don’t know and say, “That’s all.”
19. Buy a body pillow and force it to love you.
20. Listen to a Beyonce song. Just, don’t watch the video to go along with it. Or it’ll have the opposite effect and will just make you feel more #lost.
21. Buy Rosetta Stone and tell yourself you’re going to learn a new language. You’ll never do it, but at least for this day, you’ll feel like you’re better than everyone else.
22. Watch an episode of The Real Housewives to remind yourself that, hey, at least your life isn’t… that.
23. Go through a drive-thru. They’re scientifically proven to boost morale by 82% for up to 10 minutes. 

source:- http://thoughtcatalog.com/kim-quindlen/2015/05/how-to-get-through-a-day-of-low-self-esteem-in-23-easy-steps/

Thursday, 25 June 2015

586 THOUGHTS ON “THE FANTASY OF BEING THIN”


  1. The thin person inside me finally got out — it just turned out she was actually a fat person.
    HOLY SHIT YES. This is awesome.
    And I completely agree that “I’m too fat right now ” or “I will when I’m thin” are just excuses. And understandably so, because it’s terrifying to face up to your REAL abilities and limitations — it’s much more comforting to believe that you don’t have to try anything until you figure out how to get by on 1000 calories. Thinness (or thinnerness) is the imaginary magical talisman that will allow you to have everything, but until you have it, not having everything isn’t your fault.
    When of course the truth is, not everyone can do everything, and the things you’re good at or the things you value aren’t necessarily the things that everyone considers valuable. When you have that checklist mentality, you end up focusing on things you think other people would want, not things that would make you happy. I’m notoriously bad at thinking of anything I’m good at, so let’s take my boyfriend as an example — he’s really good at building antennas. Is that something everyone wants in their obituary? Is it on anyone’s 43 Things? Maybe not, but it’s what he values.
    When I was in like fourth grade, we did an exercise about imagining what name we would want besides our own. I wrote about how if I were named Ashley I would be skinny and pretty and be good at gymnastics. (The teacher wrote a gentle note about how changing your name probably won’t do those things.) I don’t know if I really wanted to be good at gymnastics — I hate being upside down — but I perceived that as being something that other people valued that I couldn’t live up to. Meanwhile, the things I was good at, like memorizing poems and spelling, were fundamentally worthless because a) they weren’t generically perceived as valuable in a “checklist of things an 8-year-old should be able to do” sense and b) I was good at them already.
    Mind you, I still do this, I just haven’t got any decent excuses anymore. Sometimes I blame ADD, but mostly I say “you know me, I can’t do anything I think I might succeed at or also anything I think I might fail at.” And I beat myself up for, say, not immediately knowing how to do things, or not being great at things I admire in other people. There’s no reason for this; I do it because I’m neurotic. It is, indeed, much harder when I can’t blame that stuff on my fat. But it’s more honest, too.
  2. This is awesome, awesome, awesome, and spot-on. The “change your body, change your life” idea is really the only thing powerful enough to keep a person willingly semi-starved and weak for months (or years) at a time.
    Thank you for writing this. It’s precisely the thing I still struggle with, and what you said about the difference between “you can’t be anything else” and “you don’t have to be anything else,” well, damn. That belongs on a throw pillow on my bed where I can see it every day.
  3. Damn. I want to print this out and frame it. I’m one of those people who’s been in single-digit sizes several times only to find it unsustainable. I have a tiny, tiny wardrobe because I’ve only just given up the idea of wearing those really nice clothes I bought when I was a size 6. My larger sized clothes are mostly crap because they were intended to be temporary. Sigh. My thin-person fantasies usually revolve around clothes and exercise… and I can buy clothes and exercise no matter what size I am, right. Silly person.
  4. "…smart money says I am never going to chuck city life to buy an alpaca farm … And my chances of marrying George Clooney are very, very slim."
    Oh, my god. Those are two of my dreams, right there! Albeit the former is more attainable than the latter.
    I was somewhat surprised when I finally reached the mythical land of skinnydom. I thought I’d finally get a boyfriend, friends, and a good job. Okay, so I was taken more seriously professionally than when I was fat, but the first two never materialized. And, I was more miserable thin than I ever was when I was overweight and didn’t obsess about what I ate and didn’t spend all my free time exercising or thinking about food or both.
    At my highest weight, I was fearless. I would debate and argue with people, confront people who gave bad service, etc… After losing the weight, I turned into a wimp. I no longer had my fatness to blame for what I perceived to be wrongs directed at me.
  5. I love this post. I love this post. I love this post. I’m having to duck my head under my desk so my co-workers aren’t seeing me get all teary-eyed, but I love this post.
  6. Wow. I… Just WOW. Your blog always makes me think, but this post speaks to me more than anything else you’ve blogged about. I’ve finally begun to accept my body, but I never admitted I cling to the FoBT mindset. This is going to be an ugly, but very necessary, period of introspection. Thank you, Kate.
  7. Yes! Yes yes yes yes yes!!!!
    I do this all the time, with almost the exact same fantasies: I’ll get a better job, I’ll have tons of friends, I’ll be confident enough to start taking dance lessons, etc. etc. Fillyjonk is spot-on with the responsibility avoidance thing… I’ve been doing it for so long I’m really not sure how to *stop*.
    So instead I swing back and forth between thinking I have this glamorous skinny person inside me and hoping the “skinny person” (where “skinny person” is defined as “person I’d love to be”) inside me is Nikki Blonski. It still distracts me from contemplating what precisely I am, but hey.
  8. Hmm, I never had the fantasy of being thin. I think because at the time in my life (childhood and the teen years) when I was the shy, sad, lonely girl daydreaming of all the things she wanted to be, I was thin. And the time in my life when I started becoming more outgoing and made friends and got a boyfriend and started actually being happy (college) is when I started getting fat. So I never bought into the “if I get thin again my life will change for the better” because in my experience, it was rather the opposite.
    The post still resonates though. The idea of: “you don’t have to be anything other than what you are right now”… that’s really just… huge.
  9. You asked, so here it is:
    When I’m thin, I will finally be a valuable human being.
    And yes, I realize how fucked up that is. YEARS of therapy, people.
  10. You know, “The Fantasy of Being Thin” would make (1) an awesome title for a book and (2) an awesome premise for a book.
    Thanks for really digging into what the Fantasy is and what it means to so many people (myself still included, many days), and why it hurts so much to part with it.
  11. I think you’re absolutely right.
    But I wanted to add one thing.
    Sometimes, people don’t use The Fantasy of Being Thin as an excuse so much as they honestly don’t think they’re allowed to do the things/be the person in their fantasy, just because they’re fat.
    I couldn’t have been popular at school – I was fat. Fat girls are never popular.
    I couldn’t be outgoing – I was fat, and nobody likes the fat girl.
    I couldn’t play sports, because fat girls weren’t allowed on the team (thank you very fucking much, Gym Teacher!!).
    Etc., etc., etc.
    It wasn’t so much that I was allowing my fat to control me, it was that I really, truly, 100% believed those things. Imagine my absolute shock when I moved to another area and people actually wanted to be my friends? But… but… I was fat!!! Couldn’t they SEE that I was FAT? I honestly didn’t GET it. It took me a LOOOONG time to wrap my head around the fact that these people didn’t just see a fat girl… they saw ME. The PERSON who just happened to BE fat. And they thought that ME was OKAY!!! Wow! I couldn’t believe it! And then even when I moved back to my hometown and would see the bullies and the fat-haters around town (I never went back to the same school) and they would inevitably say some nasty shit… it still hurt, but it didn’t affect me like it did before. I’d already learned that some people thought I was okay, so fuck ’em.
    The one thing that was hard to let go in my Fantasy of Being Thin, though, was the thought of going back there and surprising the hell out of them. I wanted them to look at me and not recognize me, because I wasn’t The Fat Girl anymore. I wanted them to gasp in shock as they looked at me and saw the person that they had belittled simply because I was different. That particular fantasy was hard to let go, because it would have been the sweetest revenge.
There is soooooo much more to read here:- http://kateharding.net/2007/11/27/the-fantasy-of-being-thin/