Beauty editor talks body image, weight and size in a series of brilliant tweets
There’s a reason many people aren’t especially eager to reveal their weight. It’s because with that number, comes a lot of assumptions and negative judgments. But the fact is, weight is just that — a number. And as a beauty editor recently pointed out, it doesn’t mean nearly as much as we think.
Sam Escobar, who identifies as nonbinary, they/them, is the beauty editor for Good Housekeeping online. They list their weight of 172 pounds in their Twitter bio for a reason, saying they think it’s “weird” how people have no idea what different weights look like. In an effort to demonstrate their point, they wrote a brief essay on Twitter to explain.
I sometimes get asked why my weight is in my bio and FYI it’s bc I think it’s weird how people have no idea what different weights look like
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
Because of vanity sizing and people feelings obligated to lie about weight, there’s this weird obscuring of how fat/weight manifests itself.
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
its nice to b honest about my size/weight bc ppl are often surprised I shop plus size which proves they dont know what plus size looks like
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
Hey I’m 5’7″, 172 lbs, approx a size 12/14 with 34E boobs & I see nothing to hide about that. These are just facts, measurements and ratios.
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
Part of the reason this is important to me is bc I’ve struggled w/ bulimia for 14 years and a lot of that obsession was w/ numbers.
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
A lot of those “goal weight” numbers were so arbitrary but I absorbed them from people who said certain weights = good and other weights=bad
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
I love (LOVE) being a beauty editor but I understand the fashion/beauty industry puts a lot of negative pressure on weight and size
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
1 thing I hope to eventually influence as a beauty editor (along w/all the +size bloggers who blazed the trail) is less focus on weight+size
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
It’s not like I don’t dislike my body sometimes, but I do think it’s important to think “hey why don’t I feel good enough the way i am?”
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
Anyway like I said I’m 172 lbs/size 12-14 and this is what I look like so WAZZAAAP & show me ur beautiful selfies!! pic.twitter.com/KQGPy9nw8J
— Sam Escobar (@myhairisblue) August 17, 2016
As Escobar explains, the motivation behind sharing their weight, clothing and bra size is to show that it’s nothing to hide, as people blurring those stats only contributes to the false notions behind the numbers. As they point out, “these are just facts, measurements and ratios,” and when they put it that way, it feels a little less stigmatizing, doesn’t it?
After a years-long struggle with arbitrary “goal weight” numbers and an eating disorder, Escobar is hoping to use their position as a beauty editor to put less focus on size and weight. They acknowledge that while they still don’t always like their body, it’s important to think, “hey, why don’t I feel good enough the way I am?”
They bring up an excellent point. Why do we care so much what the number on the scale says? Why do we let it inform our feelings about our bodies? Over my adult life, I’ve had so many conversations with friends about our weights and sizes with many of us providing disclaimers when revealing those numbers. Mentioning that we’re bloated, that we lift a lot of weights, that our breasts make up a lot of those pounds, and on it goes. We disregard how great we might feel and let those numbers dictate our self-worth. Which is obviously ridiculous, but a difficult mind-frame to shed.
Happily, many responded to Escobar’s request for selfies and included their own height, weight and clothing size. Because we might know that one person’s 150 can look entirely different from another, it’s a whole other thing to see it in photos.
@myhairisblue @rachsyme tbh I stay away from knowing my exact weight but last I checked it was in the ~170 range pic.twitter.com/r7KXeDrHXj
— Alanna Bennett (@AlannaBennett) August 17, 2016
@myhairisblue I’m 5ft, about 110 lbs but it fluctuates between 100-120. I struggle every day with my body. pic.twitter.com/nXFprsoABe
— Angela Lashbrook (@lemonsand) August 17, 2016
@myhairisblue also I’m 5’2″ and 125 and those numbers have ruled my life more than they needed to ever pic.twitter.com/WCdq1aXLjQ
— #rachelsyme (@rachsyme) August 17, 2016
The thread has garnered so many responses thanking Escobar for starting this body-positive conversation. After reading it, we may not be ready to shout our weight and size from the rooftops, but it certainly gives us something to think about the next time we chastise ourselves for not “measuring up.” Weight is nothing but a number — literally — and we thank Sam for so eloquently reminding us of that fact.
The post Beauty Editor’s Series Of Tweets Remind Us Weight Is Just A Number appeared first on Scary Mommy.
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