Opinion

Body positivity: why I don’t want to happily embrace every scar, every kilo and every dimple

Janina Lebiszczak
26.12.2023
Translation: Elicia Payne

Today, women are just as reviled for their curves as they are for their six-pack or narrow hips. Fun. So how can we navigate this? Body Neutrality.

I feel like I’m surrounded by naked people. Not just in the swimming pool or sauna, but in the digital world, especially from women (of any age) who proudly show me their ample bellies, buttocks and hips – because of body positivity. Now prevalent on social media, its roots are often forgotten. The original movement was about the political response to extreme weight discrimination in our society.

A reality check on body positivity

And in the analogue world? It’s what enters my ears that’s alarming. In addition to the derogatory comments about other people’s body shapes, I also hear some that are actually meant nicely but need to be questioned. Congratulating someone on their weight loss is still something like the most superior of all compliments – along with the dubious «You look great for your age.». But losing weight? That seems even more desirable than not ageing.

Body shaming: now we can all feel bad about ourselves

There’s nothing wrong with loving ourselves when we confront ourselves with what this «love» means. I just resist the idea that we should be able to feel a constant stream of happiness – or that we need to joyfully embrace every dimple, every jiggle, every inch.

Neutral freedom: stifle the comments

So what now? Are we in a predicament? People (and when I say people, I tend to mean women) are not only vilified when they show off their ample bellies, they’re also vilified when they show off six-pack abs or narrow hips. Yeah. We did a really great job! At last, every woman can feel marginalised and judged – «shaming equality» and body positivity are all the rage. The only antidote? Body Neutrality.

To better explain: body positivity encourages you to always feel beautiful and love your body at any size. Body neutrality, on the other hand, focuses more on how you feel than how you look. Body neutrality encourages us to understand ourselves and others as whole people first and to develop a concept of values based on a person’s inner self.

So it helps to strip away the many layers of complex social conditioning that instil in you what different body shapes mean in order to finally see the truth. That is, beauty, thinness and attractiveness can be pleasing, but say nothing about a person’s character, personality, lifestyle and happiness.

The price you pay

So how can we put this into practice? Ignore the comments. Whether in the digital or real world. I know that’s easier said than done. Judging bodies is an everyday occurrence – but is it a natural instinct or just something we’ve learned from society? Have we been conditioned to weaken each other by constantly criticising each other? Or is it simply the primal human in us, for whom health – and therefore fertility – is paramount?

Either way, I find it unpleasant when people give me such «compliments»: 'that the pounds look good on me anyway', 'that there’s more to me and that’s soooo sexy'. It makes me feel a bit like the prize-winning pig at the village fair. ‘Look, how delicious, there’s more to it'.

Recently, however, I witnessed a far more unpleasant situation. Woman A to woman B in the swimming pool, obviously a distant acquaintance: «Wow, so great, you’ve really slimmed down. How did you do that?» Woman B: «I have bowel cancer.» Horrible, isn’t it? But that’s the price you pay for letting yourself go. Not physically. But humanly.

Header image: Shutterstock

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