A funny thing happens when you visit a website featuring a positive message, a well-branded campaign, and watch a thoughtful video to help solidify the message. It gets in your brain, and then when you’re out and about in your daily activities, you see the world just a little bit differently.
At the checkout this week with my four-year-old, I was acutely aware of the magazines at her height level when standing beside me and when sitting in the cart. Retailers aren’t going to move magazines out of our eyesight, of course, but it’s important to realize while mom is putting items on the conveyer belt, our daughters are watching other things. True, my four year old can’t read just yet so the verbage is lost on her but the images of sexy, sultry, women is not.
My eight-year-old, however, is reading and we had a conversation this week about magazines. It turns out she can read the covers but isn’t entirely sure on what “sexy cool” means, for example. “It’s just cool, mom.” The message is clear though – lose fat, get abs and ahem, a nice bum, and of course – be sexy. I asked my eight year old if it’s important to be skinny (since she doesn’t really know what abs are either) and she said that yes it is, but “it’s good to exercise too!” so I guess part of the messaging at school and home (healthy eating and exercise) can somewhat get mixed in with the messages we see in the media “eat less, work out, have a nice bum”.
It gave me pause and made me think about my own childhood. I grew up in the era of workout videos, cabbage soup diets, and of course the latest weight-loss mega-company opening its doors and inviting in clients. My mother embraced all of it and dieted most of her adult life. As a teenager in the 90’s I existed in the time of the anorexic-thin super-model. There was no message about healthy eating, at least not in the magazines I was reading, but rather eating to be thin was the end game.
So, this week left me actually feeling positive about the direction we’re going. Companies like Faze Media and Divine.ca have supported the pledge to stop dietainment. While the majority of magazines and mainstream media have not officially announced that they will stop the practice, they have certainly changed their messaging from the 80’s and 90’s. They have to. Women (and men!) are making them accountable, and this is a beautiful and encouraging thing.
I am teaching my girls that healthy eating and exercise are important, but we’re allowed to eat delicious desserts and watch Netflix on the couch. Wearing an outfit that makes you feel good (mom included) makes us smile, but having a flat tummy isn’t at all important in our household (three kids later, thank goodness it isn’t!) Being kind is important. Getting good grades is important. Being a good role model is important.
And, I’m acutely aware it starts with me. My girls see me the same way I see them – they’re perfect. I love that when I dress up and wear more makeup than usual, they notice and compliment me. I love when they wear something cute and look like little mini-mes full of sass and spunk. I won’t point out my flaws (how the makeup covers the bags under my eyes) and when my daughters outgrow their jeans, I compliment their hearty eating and how they’ve grown rather than how “your jeans are too tight”. It’s the messaging and the messenger both in our household and on TV.
The goal is for my voice (and my husband’s) to always be the loudest.
Learn more about the #StopDietainment campaign and sign the petition to ask Canadian media to stop dietainment.
Having a daughter who’s recovered from Bulimia, I’m all for stopping this nonsense! #StopDietainment
I signed the petition a bit ago! I have two young daughters. and no way do i want them growing up in a world of media driven lies
I am all for stopping dietainment! It’s so bad what it does to young teenagers!
I agree we need to continue to be positive role models to counter this type of advertising.
My niece died in May due to complications from an eating disorder. It’s time to stop dietainment.
dietainment needs to stop, and the society needs to accept everyone for the way they are, but sadly it will never stop
Great read! Completely agree with you! It needs to stop!
Its gotten so bad over the past few years, it need to go! Im signing the petition.
With 2 girls this means a lot to me.
It’s tough enough growing up without having these sites around. Please stop it and allow us to love ourselves and others for who we are.
These is too much stress on girls/boys today to be perfect…..book,tv,society it really needs to stop …
Great post and I agree it is time we need to stop this. And you are right it starts with us, we need to be role models and love our bodies!
I also am aware of magazines right at my daughter’s eye level when we are checking out at stores. Healthy bodies should be celebrated, not this insane drive towards thinness at all costs.
Such a good reminder… I know that my head and my heart don’t always align. I know what is right, I know what is fake, I know what is pressure and yet I can’t help but succumb at times. It’s a battle to remember that I’m good enough but it’s a worthwhile battle too as it affects the next generation.
Our bodies are incredible and do so much for us that it is so disappointing that they’ve been trivialized to such an extent.
it’s so important to instill in our youth a posisitive self image that doesn’t involve being skinny.
This needs to stop. There is already too much pressure on us all, what type of example are we setting for the younger generation? You shouldn’t hear 10 year olds say they need to go on a diet.
Great article! With 2 daughters this subject is very near and dear to my heart!
I have a daughter and I try to shield her from these things but dietainment is EVERYWHERE. Great post, this needs to stop.
agreed , i needs to stop , so sad , we all need to love who we are no matter what
🙂
My sister has an eating disorder and sometimes wonder if the media is responsible.
I agree that we need to teach our girls to embrace their beauty and bodies. We need more role models like Kate Winslet .
http://petapixel.com/2015/10/24/kate-winslets-modeling-contract-with-loreal-has-a-no-photoshop-clause/
I so agree that we should stop this advertisement that influence our girls!
I am tired of seeing perfect bodies. I know that they often are photoshopped, I find this practive deceiving.
A great initiative! These ads are sending so many negative messages to girls and they need to stop.
It’s sad that the media won’t just let kids be kids. If only they’d stop photoshopping everything, we’d all feel better about ourselves.
completely agree – we need to stop this madness
This is a great campaign and I’m happy to say I signed the petition
I signed the petition and love this campaign and detainment definitely needs to be a thing of the past!
Magazines and tv shows and the net go on and on about weight issues, praising skinniness one day then making being too thin a travesty the next day. The messages being sent are so confusing and harmful. Enough is enough.
We all grew up feeling we had something wrong with us. Wouldn’t it be great if girls looked in the mirror and said “I perfect just the way I am”
I hope this campaign gets some great results!
great campaign ! i certainly do not want it affecting my daughter or any one!
Great read… #StopDietainment is a great initiative! I am trying to raise my daughter to be confident with herself and that shes perfect any way!!
It’s on every magazine, right?! Tired of it.
Cheers.
This is a great initiative, and I sure hope that it just grows.
I will be signing, This is not what I want my daughters to see.
I agree with you. Its a sad world we live in when people think they need to be super skinny to be sexy! This is a great campaign!
I’ve had a few eating disorders during my 52 years and attribute some of the blame to media/advertising.
Yes, this need to stop!
ugh! it drives me nuts for sure. I have a 12 year old girl and I can see how much this bothers her. It’s terrible.
I have always kept my girls busy at the checkout, helping unload the cart and such but they still notice the magazines and we talk about them sometimes. I want my daughters to grow up loving themselves and being healthy. We talk about people all being made unique and that who we are is more important than our shape of our body.