Wednesday, 19 October 2016

Changing Your Perspective: A Look at Body Image


As a person who has struggled with her weight her entire life, I know the stigma that goes with being overweight.  You get called “whale, blubber butt, fat cow” the list goes on and on.  It is now almost cliché to point out those endemic images of fashion and celebrities are unattainable expectations, so why then do so many of us strive to reach a lower weight and feel ashamed when we cannot? We tend to think there is obviously something wrong with us when we fail or that we haven’t worked hard enough.  We assume that when someone is not at a “healthy” BMI it is a lack of personal willpower and poor life choices.  Constant images of the “perfect” body cause them to internalize the negatives stereotypes of their current body weight/size. 
This “fat” stigma doesn’t merely exist as an undesirable social trait; it also is linked to the idea that these overweight individuals are also extremely unhealthy.  In modern society thin equals healthy and beautiful.  “Fat” equates to unhealthy, lazy, ugly, etc.  If you are overweight you are encouraged to seek treatments for your illness.  Now I am by no means saying that 510lbs should be considered healthy by any means, but the ridicule and stigma of being overweight has escalated body shaming and an individual’s ability to have any sort of positive body image.

What is body image? As you can probably guess body image is how you see yourself when you look in the mirror. Body image encompasses many things.  What you believe about your own appearance (including your memories, assumptions, and generalizations).  How you feel about your body, including your height, shape, and weight.  How you sense and control your body as you move.  How you feel in your body, not just about your body.[1] What a person perceives when they look in the mirror can be completely inaccurate in comparison to how they actually look to someone else.  Take for example a 120lb 5’6” woman, she may look in the mirror and see only imperfections. “Her legs are too skinny, her hips stick out” Or she may look in the mirror and see a “fat” woman staring back at her.  The same can be said for an over weight person, they may even avoid mirrors because of how they think they look.
“For obese adults, research has documented that individuals who experience weight stigmatization have higher rates of depression, anxiety, social isolation, and poorer psychological adjustment. Some obese adults may react to weight stigma by internalizing and accepting negative attitudes against them, which may in turn increase their vulnerability to low self-esteem. Because societal messages often perpetuate beliefs that weight is under personal control, obese persons may be less likely to challenge stereotypes because they can attempt to escape stigma by losing weight. Stigma may also have negative consequences for eating behaviors by interfering with weight loss attempts and leading some adults to eat more food in response to stigmatizing encounters. Stigma also has implications for physical health in the context of avoidance of health care services due to bias in medical settings. It is not known whether, or to what degree, stigma exacerbates poor self-care behaviors or contributes to additional complications and co-morbidities of obesity.”[2]  I’ve never liked going to the doctor and I don’t know who does really.  However, when I go to the doctor I get butterflies in my stomach, not because I think he or she is going to find something wrong, but because I know they are going to bring up my weight again and how I’m not at “a healthy BMI”.  I want to yell at them that I’m trying, I’ve lost 85lbs and I’m working hard everyday to lose more.  They don’t see the progress I’ve made and so I don’t either. I only see my failure to become perfect and healthy between doctor visits. 

In order for an obese individual to begin the change to a healthier lifestyle if they aren’t already progressing towards one starts with changing the stigma.  If an overweight person won’t go to the gym because of how they will be looked at, laughed at (even if it is self perceived and doesn’t come to light) how can they take those first few steps?   The fundamental message out there is fat people need to be shamed for their own good.  If they aren’t told they are “ugly, disgusting, [insert whatever derogatory word you would like], how will they know they should change?

Numerous studies have documented harmful weight-based stereotypes that overweight and obese individuals are lazy, weak-willed, unsuccessful, un-intelligent, lack self-discipline, have poor willpower, and are noncompliant with weight-loss treatment. These stereotypes give way to stigma, prejudice, and discrimination against obese persons in multiple domains of living, including the workplace, health care facilities, educational institutions, the mass media, and even in close interpersonal relationships.  Perhaps because weight stigma remains a socially acceptable form of bias, negative attitudes and stereotypes toward obese persons have been frequently reported by employers, coworkers, teachers, physicians, nurses, medical students, dietitians, psychologists, peers, friends, family members, and even among children aged as young as 3 years[3].  Instead of shaming why isn’t there a way to encourage the obese to become healthier? Don’t tell the obese they are unhealthy, doctors already do that and clearly it doesn’t work.  I recall every time I went to the doctors office they would mention that I needed to lose weight. I wasn’t given any suggestions on how to do it, but I was told I needed to lose weight.  Just telling someone they need to lose weight isn’t enough.  We need to find a way to help change our unhealthy habits into healthy ones.  A self-conscious obese person isn’t going to want to go to a gym where he or she feels she will be ridiculed.

I’m going to use myself as an example. I am by no means at a healthy weight, but I’m working towards it.  I’ve lost 85lbs and have another 60lbs to lose before I am considered within a healthy BMI range. What do I see when I look in the mirror? Am I shocked at the progress I have made, do I see muscles beginning to make an appearance?  Nope I see myself as the exact same size as when I started this journey.  I still go to the plus size section of stores and look for the biggest size.  In my mind I don’t see any change in my appearance. Yes I see that my face has gotten a bit thinner and I only have two chins instead of three. But when I look in the mirror all I see is everything society tells me I should be embarrassed of, the rolls of fat around my middle, my flabby arms, my “thunder thighs”, the list goes on.  I think of all the images I see in magazines and on the television of these perfectly fit models and all I think about is how I must not be working hard enough to get a body like that.  I mean I only jog 12 miles a week, lift weights three times, go to Les Mills RPM twice a week, and Les Mills Body Pump twice a week, I count every calorie that goes into my mouth, but obviously that is not enough.  When people look at me they see a “fat, lazy person, who doesn’t exercise”.  I’ve heard people yell “stop eating cheeseburgers, and try going to a gym” as I’m walking back from a run.  I’ve had others “moo” at me out of a car window as they have driven past.  Everyday I am shamed because of my body, not always by others specifically but by society in general.

The stigmatization of obesity is persistent and damaging.  It affects not only the individual struggling with her/her weight but limits the ability of the public health organizations to assist individuals with weight problems.  Ignoring the problem, ridiculing those that are obese, will not create a change.  We have to challenge societal assumptions about weight and its stigma if we are ever going to change the way people look at obesity and how the individual looks at him/herself.





[1] https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/what-body-image
[2] http://www.obesity.org/obesity/resources/facts-about-obesity/bias-stigmatization
[3] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2866597/

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