Slipping Into Neutral
Women's Health South Africa|October 2018

The body-positive movement is growing bigger than ever, but theres a term weve heard bubbling up in the sphere ofselfconfidence. Step up, body neutrality.

Emily Reynolds
Slipping Into Neutral

The language of loving your body is changing. Amid the roar of positivity – the activists, the panel talks, the memes – a more subdued but no-less powerful phenomenon is pushing forward. It’s the understanding that not everyone can easily achieve out and proud, shout-it-from-the-rooftops love for their body; that sometimes even tolerance is a battle. “Every step, no matter how slow, is progress”, “I want to feel at ease and accept how I look.” These are reasonable, achievable, sensible statements. And that’s precisely the point. This is the premise of body neutrality, a credo that prioritises baseline acceptance.

To understand how we got here, it’s helpful to know where we’ve come from. The term “body positivity” is thought to have been coined in the 1990s by feminist activists Connie Sobczak and Deb Burgard. It gained traction online, where a vocal community began to use digital platforms to share thoughts, feelings, hopes and anxieties about their bodies. Only, for some, the idea of loving, hell, even liking your body, was setting the bar a little too high.

In recent years, body neutrality has emerged as an alternative for those who needed it the most – those whose self-confidence was at its lowest ebb. Its proponents argue that the emphasis the body-positive movement placed on feeling good all the time and the continued focus on the body was actually breeding negative thoughts and poor body image – the opposite of its intended outcome. Now, the notion of neutral is gaining ground fast.

CASTING DOUBTS

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2018-Ausgabe von Women's Health South Africa.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2018-Ausgabe von Women's Health South Africa.

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