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Finding this article already begins with labeling yourself as "fat". What does that label conjure up for you? Does it come with all the weighted baggage of social disapproval for anyone whose body isn't as slim as a model's? Maybe friends or family have been nagging you to change? If you're finding it hard to love yourself properly because you feel that you're not fitting a socially preferred image, it's time for self-relief. Learning to love your body regardless of how you look to others requires self-compassion and a realization that other people's opinions do not define you.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Dressing and Accessorizing for Confidence

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  1. As much as it isn't fair, people do judge by appearance. It's how human beings assess one another to begin with, before getting to know one another better. However, this aspect is one that you can use to your advantage, by dressing in a style that says: "I look good and I feel good." Good clothing does help you to feel better.
    • Wear what you like to wear, it doesn't matter what just, as long as you like how you look, and as long as it's quality. Whether it's vintage, hipster, girl punk, gal or bright colors, it is just fine. Your body is your home, feel free to decorate it.
  2. Accessories are fun and they can help you to show off your individuality. Whether you love delicate necklaces, animal brooches, studded wrist bands or dangling earrings, the accessories can make your outfit and boost your confidence. They're a unique part of defining your own style and can be a great talking point.
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  3. Whether you do your makeup with little or no eyeliner, or with a cat's eye or a lot of eyeliner, it's up to you. Choose a lipstick in the colors that look best for your skin type and that you actually like. Experiment with blush, foundation and eyeshadow to see what works well for you.
    • If you don't like makeup, wear cute hairstyles to enhance your style. Or, if you like messy buns and a crazy load of lipstick, do that instead. Again, it's your choice and it's perfectly fine.
    • Guys can wear makeup too. There are many excellent tutorials available online to assist you with choosing the types of makeup and looks that might be suitable for you.
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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Staying Healthy

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  1. Only you get to choose to love your body, not someone else. It's up to you but you must reach that decision based on your personal preferences, not because of social disapproval or someone pushing you. If you have health challenges owing to your weight (and this is never a given, as many skinny people are unhealthy and many fat people are perfectly healthy), you may want to make the change for that reason. However, if you're fit and healthy, and happy with your weight, that's who you are and it's not for others to make you change your mind or feel bad about yourself.
    • If you're afraid of change, be aware that you won't change because of your shape, you're still going to have the same soul.
    • Ways of reducing weight can include: Working out, drinking lots of water, eating small portions of nutritionally dense foods. But always have those little cheat days that allow you to eat some favorites, such as fries, pizza etc., just in small portions. Depriving yourself only leads to feeling worse and often to giving up.
  2. Find a form of physical exercise that you enjoy . Do it regularly. This will help you to keep fit. Avoid seeing it as being about weight loss unless that is something you're striving for; fitness is about being able to walk with ease, have high levels of energy and participate in daily life with ease. It's also about ensuring that your body stays in a good condition for all of your life. Some fun ways to keep fit include:
    • Walking everywhere possible. Go for walks in beautiful places as often as possible, to restore your spirit as much as helping your fitness––try the beach, a local park or woods, the local hiking trails, a waterfront, local wetlands, and so forth.
    • Cycling. This can be done for recreation or even semi competitively. Try mountain biking if you're keen on hills, mud and nature.
    • Swimming. Swimming is a way to build strength and stamina while being buoyed with ease by the water. It's a great way to cool down on a hot day, but find a heated, indoor pool for the cooler weather. Finish it off with an aqua-aerobics class if you're feeling adventurous.
    • Rowing, kayaking or canoeing. These sports take a bit more dedication as you may need to either own the boat or hire one, but it's a great sport for getting out on the water and building strength. It can also be good for being part of a team. Fit in an hour over lunchtime if you work near a waterfront or book out a half day on your weekend.
  3. Every person needs to have their health assessed on a regular basis. Knowing whether you have potential health challenges or not is important, for if they're caught early, many medical problems can be managed or even fixed.
    • A doctor who makes you cry is a bad doctor. Don't tolerate a mean doctor. Look for someone else.
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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Realizing Your Self-Worth

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  1. Weight does not define the temperament, personality and nature of the person. Who you are is determined by the way you think, the ability to improve yourself through enhancing your better character traits and the (kind) way that you deal with others. There are very thin models who have very mean-spirited personalities, while there are very large people who think of nothing more than helping others; and vice versa. Boxing people into stereotypes due to their appearance and/or weight is narrow-minded and untrue; if you come across someone fixated on defining you by your looks, do not take anything that person says seriously.
    • It can help to understand that many of the people invested in the "skinny myth" equate being thin or a size 0 with being happy and lovable. If you were feeling particularly unkind, you could ask them how that's working out for them. But seriously, any attempt to link appearance with happiness is a fleeting and shallow linkage that is bound to end in tears. After all, even the thinnest person ages and if they spend their life valuing their worth by appearance alone, they'll find aging a terrible shock.
    Ashley Graham, Model & Activist

    Inner beauty is what matters most. "The true beauty we all possess is found on the inside. That should be our focus and the measure by which we are judged. How do we move through life? What other lives have we touched? Who have we confronted with love? How have we changed the world for the better?"

  2. If you spend your life afraid of what others think of you, it is a life half lived, a life spent hanging back in the shadows. Begin by not rejecting yourself and should others seek to reject you, you will know that you are not in need of their validation. They can fall by the by, you don't need them. Embrace yourself with a daily hug, a smile in the mirror every time you see yourself and a thumbs up for the great thoughts you have about yourself and others.
    • Try to participate in sports or activities with others that move your body. This way, you'll improve your body image and really start to appreciate what your body is doing for you. The more you appreciate your body, the more comfortable you will be with it.
    • Embrace not only yourself, but diversity too. Diversity is a celebration that humanity is made up of all sorts of people, even the grumpy and scolding ones; diversity is essential for humanity to thrive and keep on being a creative species.
    • Embrace complexity. Life is rather more complex than the size of a person's dress or the numbers that pop up on the scales. In fact, people who chuck the scales are often much happier because measuring your life in this way can easily take on a limiting and obsessive inward-looking focus. What about improving your character or making real achievements that benefit others? A far more complex, and far more satisfying approach to life!
  3. The people you spend most of your time with shouldn't judge you or call you mean names. If they do, they're not the people for you. Find friends who love you for you and look beyond the artificiality of appearance. If someone calls you fat, your friends should be the ones sticking up for you, it's what friends are supposed to do.
  4. Get out a paper and crayons, markers, sharpies for make a letter to yourself.
    • Write all the things you wish you could change about yourself.
    • On another piece of paper, write down all of the things you do like about yourself.
    • If you like, have a friend or a family member participate and write something they would never want to change about you.
    • Read both of the letters. Keep them for future reference or get rid of the negative one. One option is to burn it. Get a lighter and burn the paper, watch it burn, because you're taking away those negative things. Just how fire makes things be forgotten, so will those things you wrote on the paper. On the other hand, frame the positives. Be proud of them; you become what you focus on most.
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      Tips

      • Look at yourself and say "Wow I'm beautiful". Look at your eyes and how they glow.
      • Spread the word that it's unkind to make assumptions about any person. For example, to presume that a fat person is not exercising is akin to assuming that a skinny person is doing nothing but. Both are patently stupid, uninformed assumptions that lack a basis in fact.
      • Feeling ugly in a social context is often dependent on what is valued within any particular era. It is a form of social control to make one group of people feel less than others and often represents the fears and insecurities of the age. That doesn't make it right but it is important to seek to understand the forces prevailing against you whenever you find yourself socially alienated.
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      Warnings

      • Understand that some skinnier folk lead such a struggle to keep the size 0 state that they wish to visit their anger and pain onto everyone else who isn't taking the same pains to go without food and practice what they mistakenly believe to be virtuous self-control. Such a person deserves compassion, not anger or compliance to their point of view. It is their skewed vision talking, not a healthy view of reality.
      • Feeling judged? Then you probably are being. Look for signs of self-righteousness, a scolding tone and a disdainful approach towards you. In particular, avoid those awful social media pictures with words such as "your love handles are a result of your irresponsible couch-ridden self and your lack of self respect". How on Earth would such a mean-spirited poster know what you do with your life? And why does he or she take it upon themselves to judge every person this way? It's a dash of arrogance coupled with a large dose of ignorance.
      • Fat phobia and fat hate are an unfortunate reality in some social circles. If you aren't the sort of person to respond wittily or who even wishes to enter the argumentative fray, that is just fine. Do not feel compelled to have to defend yourself every which way. Sometimes simply ignoring remarks, turning away or raising an eyebrow will be sufficient responses.
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      Things You'll Need

      • Paper and pencil for the letter writing exercise, and perhaps some matches or a lighter



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