For the first time
ever, I was a mom for spring break. My man and I took the kids to an indoor
water park for a long weekend and had an incredible time. Because I am female,
I spend as much or more time as the men looking at other women’s bodies when
we’re all on display in our swimsuits. My reasons differ, of course: I compare
myself to them, see where I fit in the array of physical femininity, and try to
decide how happy (or unhappy) my man is with my body, based not on what he
tells me but on how I appraise it compared to all the others.
That’s totally sick,
isn’t it?
But I spent upwards of
24 hours engaged in exactly that, and it was maddening. Usually those thoughts
happen on such a subconscious level that I continue about my business barely
registering them, but this time was different. I had my daughter with me, and
the thought of her thinking those things
broke my heart. She’s dazzlingly lovely, and I want her to know it. I want her
to know that she’s perfect the way she is. She so beautifully reflects her
dad’s gorgeous Italian traits set on the smooth, olive-toned Native American
skin she got from her mother’s side. She can choose to treat her body kindly or
not, but it’s a perfect snowflake of a body that should never be disrespected
by anyone, including her. Which is precisely what I was doing to mine.
And the thing is,
every body I saw was “imperfect” compared to the cinematic, airbrushed ideal.
Flabbiness was everywhere. Cellulite passed me every few seconds. Moles and discolorations
marked almost everyone. My body is no better or worse than the others I saw. In
fact, underneath our skin we all house the same snowflake perfection I identify
so easily in my daughter. Some women treat their bodies more kindly than others
– I have to work on this too – but God-designed perfection is our common trait.
Besides, my body does so many wonderful things: it walks, dances, swims, makes
love, stretches, hugs, laughs, twirls, and bends. How could I be anything other
than deeply thankful for a body like that?
I hope, down in my
core, that my daughter never forgets she’s beautiful. Jealous girls and lonely
boys might try to convince her otherwise, whether they use words or not. Her
dad’s voice, mom’s voice, and stepmom’s voice will be drowned out on occasion.
So for my own part, I’m going to be preemptive. I’m trying to remind myself that I am perfect and beautiful, and
I’m trying to listen to my man and my dad tell me the same thing. Maybe if I
can remember it for myself, I can role model it and help my daughter remember too.
She’s worth it, and so am I.
All I can say is you are one of the most beautiful women I have ever known, both, inside and out. Thank you Amie for these profound words.
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