How what you say to me affects my self-worth
I never considered how what another person said about my appearance or my body affected me. But when I think about it, the positive body comments fueled me and made me proud, while the negative ones made me want to slink away and hide. This book made me think about how I internalize comments other people gave me that were solely related to my body and appearance. They say, "Sticks and stones may break your bones, but words will never hurt you," if only that were the case.
How words matter
Words matter; how we see ourselves and what others say they see affects who we are and how we behave. It's funny; I would let other people tell me what they thought of my body or my appearance, but I can't recall ever telling someone what I thought about their body or appearance. I guess I always felt like that stuff was superficial and wanted to talk to people about how I saw them in relation to their personalities, their intellect, their desires, and their passions. I generally looked past the outer shell to what was on the inside, and that always mattered so much more to me. But I also let what others said about me affect my actions.
Living as a strong and fit person and living as a fat person
So I was living this weird life of letting people talk about my body, but I didn't talk about theirs. So I think I was getting half of what this book discusses right.
The thing is—what people said about me hurt or fueled me. I have been very healthy—good body, strong and fit—and I have been very fat, unhealthy, tired, and lonely. When I was strong and fit, the body talk was constant. When I was very fat, the body talk was non-existent except for, "You need to think about losing weight."
Body Neutrality
Living in both worlds gave me insight into why taking a more body-neutral look at my own body can help me get over the guilt of not living up to what and who others think I should look like. I literally stayed away from people when I was very fat because I felt like I was a disappointment. That's what words about how you look do to a person. And I am a pretty confident person.
Changing the Narrative
The things we let into our heads and allow to affect our actions can be changed, and this book is a gateway for that change.
I urge you if you have ever said to someone, "You look great," to consider what you are implying. If they looked different, would they not look great? If their hair, body, or face changed, would they look how? Not great??
A New Way of Thinking
And then think about how that comment can get a person thinking, "This is how I have to look in order for people to accept me. If I look different from this, then I am not as acceptable."
It's a crazy cycle and one I would urge you to explore.
We have spent enough time beating ourselves up and spending all kinds of money and time trying to change who we are because of comments from others. Be yourself and become body-neutral. You will find great freedom in doing so, and you will learn all about it from reading this book. It is a great start to a new way of thinking.