I agree with everything that your saying as part of a broader approach, but I do also think there is space to have deeper conversations about issues people have. I do feel like those deeper conversations shouldn’t be pitting one thing against another. Yes women and men have grown up in a world that tells them what they should look like, …
I agree with everything that your saying as part of a broader approach, but I do also think there is space to have deeper conversations about issues people have. I do feel like those deeper conversations shouldn’t be pitting one thing against another. Yes women and men have grown up in a world that tells them what they should look like, but these feel like two separate issues. To do one vs another isn’t right and there is space to discuss both these issues.
Also - it maybe the bubble I have created around myself but it does feel like there is more of a movement across the world about acceptance of body image as it is, no matter your gender.
I agree with everything that your saying as part of a broader approach, but I do also think there is space to have deeper conversations about issues people have. I do feel like those deeper conversations shouldn’t be pitting one thing against another. Yes women and men have grown up in a world that tells them what they should look like, but these feel like two separate issues. To do one vs another isn’t right and there is space to discuss both these issues.
Yes, I believe the comparison prevents us from going deep on one issue or one conversation because we are diverted by 'what about?'
Also - it maybe the bubble I have created around myself but it does feel like there is more of a movement across the world about acceptance of body image as it is, no matter your gender.