Showing posts with label self-image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-image. Show all posts

Posts-I've-stolen-from-other-people

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

I'm figuring out different strength training routines and writing up stuff on different strength training moves (yes, I'm actually working on it - I finished a post yesterday, and considering how long my missives tend to be, that made me happy) complete with photo examples. In the interim, my goal of regular posting remains and so I figured that I'd pop up a post from a SparkPeople blog that resonates nicely with a fitness & self-image goals that I need to keep reminding myself about: being fit and healthy doesn't mean having a perfectly toned, cut, and lithe body like the girls in the fitness magazines.

Confession: I May Not be Perfect, but I'm Still Fit & Healthy

Nicole is fit and healthy. She has a lovely, strong and feminine body. Her physical capabilities more than prove she is a physically fit person. There is nothing revolutionary in her blog entry, yet most of us need reminding that fit does not equal perfect. I am quite lithe, yet I long for the sort of intense, glistening muscle definition that you see in the women's fitness magazines. This is despite having pretty darn defined muscles to begin with. Focussing on health is a much better goal, but it is hard to remember that we are looking to achieve what is healthy for our own bodies when leafing through publications that advocate a diet of processed protein shakes and absurd amounts of exercise every day.

Exercise is a joy, if not before or during, than after. Obsessing for perfection strips that joy away from it. Worrying about that stubborn little rope of genetically pre-destined fat immediately under my navel can strip the joy right out of a good dance session. Nicole admitted to being obsessed about perfection for a while, and she prefers her current outlook. And so do I.

No more skinny wraith!

Friday, January 9, 2009

I have been incommunicado for a while, and the resultant guilt is quite strong. I may only beg forgiveness and offer the following excuse: my husband and I took possession of our first condo at the beginning of December. Since that date, every spare minute was being spent painting every inch of the 1100 square foot space. The walls needed primer and two coats as the previous owners were clearly colour blind, and the ceiling also needed a thorough going-over. As neither of us took time off work to complete this project, it took a few weeks. Then came the moving-of-the-crap part, and while the vast majority of our stuff is out of the boxes and put away, the condo is still a dreadful mess. Happily, however, we are now officially living/sleeping there full time. I’m planning on spending all of Saturday cleaning, tidying, putting away, and organizing.

During this hectic December period, an interesting body change occurred: I lost approximately eight pounds of weight in about one month. Normally, people expect this sort of change to be heralded; in this instance it isn’t exactly welcome. I was nice and lean before, with 137 pounds on my 5'8.5" frame. I dropped as low as 128 lbs and am now at 129.5 lbs, and look skinny and emaciated. Glen challenged me to put on 5 lbs by the end of Christmas holidays – a feat he knew would be next to impossible but would be a good smack-up-the-head to get me to eat more. My mother has been fretting about my weight, and during a class warm-up one of my very dear dance friends blurted out "what happened to your arms?" when she noticed how twiggy they currently appear.

My mother in law took a picture of my on my 27th birthday in late December. I was dressed up for the theatre and had a big smile on, but the feature that struck me most was how grimly drawn I appeared. My grin seemed strained, and my skin looked like it was stretched tight over my neck and cheeks. It was weird. While my western-body-image-issues, thin-is-better trained irrational brain cheers the low numbers on the scale, my rational brain knows that this ain’t good. My fitness loving, powerhouse brain wants to put back on some poundage, and my goal is to get back up to my high-school weight average of 135 lbs.

Now dear reader, don't go thinking "good lord, she’s developed disordered eating habits!" This weight loss has been unintentional and (when my rational brain is in gear, which is most of the time), unwanted. I believe that this is a result of my thyroid management. My current dose of thyroid hormone supplement has returned my physical and mental energy levels back to normal, which feels fantastic - I remember when my brain used to chat to itself like this, and I’m ecstatic that it’s back to it’s old self. I remember when my body wanted to be randomly active, flailing about for the sheer joy of movement and I worked out because I loved feeling my muscles flex and burn. I’ve always been clumsy, but for a while I was clumsy due to fatigue and slowed reflexes. Now I’m clumsy because my body just wants to move but doesn’t always think about how. This is how I remember being before the hypothyroidism, and this is how I feel now.

What isn't quite back to normal is my overall metabolism. It’s back to high-school level, when I had to work at putting on weight (unless I completely ditched physical activity), or even very slightly higher. This does not mean that I don’t have to watch my diet and my calories. Actually, it means I have to watch them more closely than I was before. Now, I need to watch them to make sure that I’m getting enough. My body is now burning calories faster than it was, so feeding it enough has become very important. For someone who is both inclined to be a moderate-to-light eater, this could be a challenge. Huge portions aren’t my style; I get really uncomfortable and kind of nauseous if I eat too much. If I ignore the “man, I’m hungry” stomach growling phase and let myself get too hungry…I get nauseous, lose my appetite, and my energy levels crash quite alarmingly. But I don’t want to eat because I don’t feel good, which doesn’t help the situation.

I’ve decided that I will take advantage of one of the more interesting employee benefits my workplace offers: up to two hours free access to a nutritionist. I need to get more calories, but I want to know how many calories a day are right for me, and how to get the most nutritional benefit from those calories. I could just start slugging back twelve packs of cola, but empty calories don’t do a body good. I’ve got a pretty good handle on nutrition, but a trained professional will be able to give me more focused direction. This can only benefit Glen, who has the metabolism of a blast furnace and at 6'2" weighs 150 lbs soaking wet. When his lung collapsed, he actually dropped down to 140 lbs. Now that was alarming!

I want to optimize my diet so that I can put on five to eight pounds primarily of muscle as well as a little fat. I know what’s sexy: jutting hips and poky spines are not! Time to get back those toned biceps and shoulders, time to fill out that bra!*

My current weight-related goal does not mean that any further diet, nurtition, or weight related posts will focus solely on weight gain. This topic is of interest on all levels, and I've worked with it at all levels. I plan on continuing to address all aspects of dealing with our weight in a healthy way, and that includes weight loss, weight gain, and weight maintenance. There will be info suitable for all, so stay tuned!


*One of the unfortunate side effects of the weight loss is that my boobs have also shrunk. According to the measuring tape, I’ve lost at least an inch, and my girls aren’t that big to begin with!

Rebellyon

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

This topic came to my attention via other dance forums and blogs, so I can't take any credit for it. British cab-punk singer Amanda Palmer was recently told by her record label to edit a fantastic music video because they felt she looked too fat and needed to expose less of her belly.

No one in their right mind would call Amanda Palmer fat. The costume wasn't lewd or overly exposing (actually, it may have well adhered to near-Victorian prudishness, considering what most pop tartlets are wearing in their music videos), her belly looked nice and toned...the idiocy of their comment has to be witnessed to be believed. It is a class A example of the media perpetuating ridiculously unhealthy stereotypes about women, as well as the pressure that women are under to appear impossibly thin and perfect.

We need to be proud of our bellies and proud of the fact that we are trying to keep them healthy. This is a difficult thing for most women to do (I certainly struggle with my belly self-image), and this incident between Amanda Palmer and Roadrunner Records highlights what we are faced with.

Absurdabsurd over at the Drestin Doll's website The Shadowbox has written up a fantastic release concerning this whole incident. She says it much better than I could and has requested the people spread the word about this. Click on the links. Watch the videos. Investigate this issue.

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AMANDA PALMER AND THE REBELLYON

Earlier this year, Amanda Palmer of Brechtian punk cabaret duo 'the Dresden Dolls' released her first solo album, 'Who Killed Amanda Palmer' through label Roadrunner Records.

Recent relations with her label may be called 'strained' at best, but the conflict has just taken on a new dimension:

In October, Amanda filmed a video for the first single "Leeds United" , directed by Alex De Campi.
( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYSULkXcVYw ) .

Upon seeing the final product, Roadrunner Records responded by telling her she was fat, and to re-cut the video to show less of her belly.

Amanda refused to make the changes demanded. Instead, she sent out a mailer about the issue and later blogged about it here:

http://blog.amandapalmer.net/post/61263444/home-the-leeds-video-more-belly-solidarity

Since the release, Amanda Palmer fans have been flooding the online Dresden Dolls/Amanda Palmer forum with responses here:

http://www.theshadowbox.net/forum/index.php?topic=6054.0

They have begun posting pictures of their bellies in support of Amanda and in protest against Roadrunner Records' actions and policies, as well as sending their pictures and personal stories to one of the forum members who has volunteered to collate, print and send all received bellies to the Roadrunner Records HQ. At the time of writing this, over 100 photos have been collected in less than 48 hours. Roadrunner Records attempted to appease fans by initiating a contest for the 'best belly photo', a move that provoked a cascade of angry replies from fans. The contest has since been removed from the Roadrunner website.

This issue is not just about Amanda Palmer's belly. This issue is about all the bellies of the world: big, small, hairy, stretch-marked, scarred, pregnant; every single belly. The aim is to reclaim the belly, to promote a healthy body image for everyone (not just females) and to protest against the "barbie dolling" of artists by record companies and the media.

For more information on Amanda Palmer:
http://www.myspace.com/whokilledamandapalmer
http://www.amandapalmer.net/
http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/artists/AmandaPalmer/

So JOIN THE REBELLYON. Take a picture of your beautiful belly, send it to Jordan (doritojoe89 [at] gmail [dot] com), make it your default myspace/facebook picture, do anything to promote the cause. Help spread a healthy body image for everyone. Just do it.


(retrieved from http://www.theshadowbox.net/forum/index.php?PHPSESSID=9b497066b8edde1e6ae46c15d23b274a&topic=6054.525 )

 
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