Showing posts with label women body image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women body image. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

Putting Your Best Face Forward

The latest Skinpact by Dr. Kathy Fields has some great advice on looking your best:

Social media is making it easier to be found and harder to hide from connections and social commitments. When connecting with Facebook online brings you “face to face” with old friends offline, don’t shy away from being seen. It can be intimidating to reunite with someone you haven’t seen in a few years, but instead of stressing, remember that you have control over your skin’s future.

First, give your skin a healthy head start by selecting a regimen designed to target your top skin concerns such as aging or acne, and then use it daily and as directed. It’s incredible what a noticeable difference over-the-counter daily skincare can make in your skin’s appearance.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Its Your Image

There is so much rhetoric on the image of women and the impact is has on our physical and mental health. The topic bounces in and out of the media. An ongoing issue that we all give lip service to, but rarely actually do anything about it. In fact, women (yes, almost all of us) perpetuate the image of women in our everyday interactions, purchases, and thoughts about ourselves. Personally, I’m a bit sick and tired of all our hypocritical whining!
Who controls how women are portrayed and how we think of ourselves and each other? We do!! Think about it. We are 143 million strong in the United States alone. We have the power to shape perceptions, including the image of women in the home, in the workplace, in social settings, in educational institutions, and in the media. While we have won many battles on many fronts, our girls are still growing up with self-esteem issues. In the United States, as many as 10 in 100 young women suffer from an eating disorder. We still value Twiggy as the ideal American body.
In the media, women are still being portrayed as sex icons; often in subordinate, seductive, and violent situations. We all know that the average woman does not look like the cover girl model. In fact, the average American woman is 5’4” and 140 pounds while the average model is 5”11 and 117 pounds. Big difference!
Almost all of society, including women, equates the thin body and glamorous look as the ideal of beauty. This is not what who we are. Why do we want to be something we aren’t? Why do we put so much value on thinness? Why do we feel less like a woman when we don’t look like the picture in the Victoria’s Secret catalogue? And more so, why do we buy these magazines? Why do we feel better about ourselves when we are with someone heavier than us? Why do we cringe at curves and thighs? We have the power to say what is beautiful.
Heather Rose is an independent consultant with The Ageless Rose, providing dermatologist grade products for women in partnership with Rodan + Fields Dermatogolists.