health

"Please stop telling us that we can be healthy at any size. It’s a lie."

As a young woman in an image-obsessed world, I feel the thin-pressure every day.

Last week, writer Jane Caro wrote an article entitled ‘The simplest act of defiance to encourage in your daughter’.

“I watch with sadness the tendency for so many young women to do what I used to do: allow themselves tiny amounts of food to stay thin,” she wrote.

She goes on to talk about how her personal obsession with food made her boring and neurotic, concluding, “it may even become an act of defiance for a young woman to simply eat whatever she wants”.

Well, Jane, I watch with sadness as more than fifty-five percent of Aussie women eat themselves to death.

As a young woman in an image-obsessed world, I feel the thin-pressure every day.

(Post continues after gallery…)

Women's bodies make magazines.

But it’s articles like this one, rather than airbrushed models or #fitspo, that pushed me to a borderline eating disorder.

I spent much of my 19th year reading so-called ‘positive body image’ articles and devouring Ben and Jerry’s. I had moments of ‘beauty at every size’ triumph, but most days were guilt-ridden, stricken with body image anxiety. The thing is, when I read stories like Jane’s telling me I should “eat whatever I want”, it gave me an excuse to gorge on a block of chocolate as I binge-watched Girls. When I listened to the media telling me to reject the unrealistic expectations set by magazines, it made it easy to skip the gym in favour of a bag of natural confectionery.

I don’t remember having a lightbulb moment, but I eventually got fed up with feeling tired all the time. I was sick of breakouts, weight gain, depression, and mood swings.

When I started listening to my body, I realised that sugar gave me acne and gluten hurt my gut. I realised that on the days I exercised, I could concentrate and focus. I stopped feeling guilty about eating, because food nourished me, and I got my sparkle back.

It wasn’t until I rejected these well-intentioned, but ultimately unhelpful articles, that I got healthy – physically and mentally.

When I taught myself about nutrition and exercise, ditching the ‘fat and (un)happy’ philosophy for a more positive outlook, my appearance became just a bonus. The focus switched to health, that happy medium between fat and anorexic that body-love advocates continue to forget.

So if we’re talking daughters, here’s a memo from a daughter herself.

Please stop telling us that fat equals happy and skinny equals boring. Stop telling us that food and exercise don’t have an impact on how we work. And stop telling us that we can be healthy at any size.

It’s a lie, and the research proves it.

Studies show that being overweight or obese is linked to both depression and anxiety. What we eat has significant impacts on our concentration, energy and focus.

And, the Australian Department of Health says, “There are several new large, well conducted studies that have shown a clear relationship between excessive body weight and increased mortality and morbidity”. In other words, being fat can kill you.

It’s killing us already. Lifestyle related diseases are the biggest cause of death in Australia, killing far, far more people than smoking, homicide or domestic violence.

Mothers, brothers, daughters, grandfathers, wives… senselessly stolen as a result of poor diet and lack of exercise.

If we’re encouraging acts of defiance in our daughters, let them be towards the ones who manipulate our body image insecurities for capital gains.

And if we’re teaching our daughters something, let it be to listen to our bodies, because feeding them the things they need has the potential to change the way you look, feel, think, sleep, act and react.

And it might just save your life.

Bella Westaway is a journalist, writer & adventurer. She is the co-founder and editor-in-chief of Artemis Adventure Magazine. 

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I quit sugar is shaming us, and I’m sick of it.

“I am thin. I have always been thin. And it is not okay to shame me for it.”

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Top Comments

Fiona and Shalimar 9 years ago

I have had eating disorders for 32 years. Wanting to be thin had nothing to do with it at it's core.

I think the author is missing the point - health at every size is NOT about gorging on anything you want. It's about NOT focusing on SIZE. It's about eating appropriately, nourishing your body, listening to it, moving in a way that feels good. It's about stopping trying to change what your body looks like and just trying to treat yourself well and with care and respect.

The author has instead gone off to the other extreme which just like starvation isn't healthy either.


guest 9 years ago

watch someone you love with anorexia destroy their life and lives of everyone around them and then ask yourself why some of us prefer to focus on health and not weight. someone being fat doesn't affect your life, but our societies' obsession with being skinny has killed thousands.

Zepgirl 9 years ago

Uh, someone being super morbidly obese does very definitely affect the lives of others!

choc4kids 9 years ago

I hate to disappoint you but millions of people die from obesity every year only problem is that on the death certificate it says heart attack, stroke, cancer, kidney failure, liver failure, diabetes and a whole lot more. Someone being fat affects my life every day and it is children, I fight every day to ensure that I can change the world to protect the children now getting chronic diseases and dying. Yes kids as young as 10 years of age have died from complications of being obese. More people die from being obese each day than those that die from Anorexia. How does it feel for a child to see their overweight parent die of a heart attack, how does it feel for a 14 year old child to push there parent around with no legs from diabetes? Please look up your stats before you post. Obesity is one of the leading causes of death in the world.

Guest 9 years ago

I am a recovered anorexic and at 49 years of age still suffer disordered eating to some extent. That is why I am passionately against the people who spout bulldust like "gluten hurt my gut" despite the fact that there is zero real evidence to support gluten intolerance in anyone other than people with celiacs. These modern day fad diets are so close to eating disorders that they are very worrying. At the height of my anorexia, certain foods were "good" and others were "bad". Exercise had to be done every day or I thought something terrible would happen.

It has been said that the modern day food intolerance epidemic amongst adults is "wealthy white people syndrome". We are so spoiled for choice of food that we can afford to invent all manner of fake illnesses (not dissimilar to Munchausens syndrome really) when others in third world countries can barely get enough to eat.

Obesity and anorexia are both terrible. We have good guidelines for eating and exercise. Unfortunately, we also have a lot of social media "experts" who have no training and basically no idea who are getting far too much coverage spouting dangerous nonsense.