Hoekom ek Donovan Tooth se ‘tooth’ wil uitskop

annette de wet rooi rose fashion editor

So jy weet al teen die tyd dat Donovan Tooth die drol is wat dames se natuurlike mooi liggaamstipes sleg sê en hoe vrouens soos ek (en tien ten een jy) basies afskuwelike wesens is wat nie welkom is op Planeet Donovan nie.

Donovan is ook die baas van ‘n oefenklere maatskappy wat nou skielik gaan ‘broader sizes’ aanhou om te probeer opmaak vir die fiasko. Um, te laat boetie, te laat.

Die probleem wat ek met die hele fiasko het, is dat hy iemand soos ek, wat daagliks sukkel met liggaamsdysmorfie (bodysmorphia) van vooraf in ‘n paniek het.

Sien, ek trek weer langmoue aan as ek gym en gaan staan eenkant in die studio, want hoeveel Donovans is daar nie in die gym wat dink ek is nie welkom nie?

Ek maak weer my baadjie oor my boude vas as ek gaan stap op Seepunt se promenade, want hoeveel Donovans dink nie ek lyk soos ‘n vet koei nie?

Ek eet meer, nie omdat ek honger is nie, maar omdat ek ontsteld is.

Kyk, ek was al maerder en moes myself uithonger om so te lyk. As ek nou terug kyk na foto’s kan mens duidelik sien ek was ondergewig al het ek vas geglo ek is so groot soos ‘n walvis. Ek was ook al oorgewig. Maar weet jy wat, nou is ek net oor dit. Oor hierdie ‘jy moet so en so lyk om so en so behandel te word’ stront.

Vandag kry ek hulp en dit gaan al beter. Ek weeg nie meer myself nie, ek weier. Ek weeg ook nie meer my kos nie, ek weier.

En al weet ek diep binne dat ek seker nie so groot is soos wat my brein my soms laat glo nie, maak mense, ek bedoel drolle, soos Donovan soveel meer skade as wat hy ooit sal besef.

Jy mors nie net met vrouens se lywe nie, maar ook met ons selfbeeld en ons gemoed.

Ek is so dankbaar dat vrouens stadig maar seker sosiale media begin gebruik om te wys rekmerke, selluliet en ‘n rolletjie is so normaal soos kan kom. Ons moet ophou skaam wees vir ‘normaal.’

Op die ou end van die dag weet ek dat ek en my liggaam gesond is. Ons eet en oefen mooi 80% van die tyd en dis buite my beheer hoe my gene en hormone die boodskap mag oordra. Ek voel goed, ek voel sterk en weet jy wat … ek voel mooi!

Onthou, al volg elke vrou in Suid Afrika presies dieselfde eetplan, gaan ons nog steeds anders lyk. As my metabolisme stadiger is as joune, wie gee om! As ek vet dra om my boude en jy om jou maag, wie gee om.

Als is dit nie altyd so maklik gesê soos gedaan nie – wees net elke dag die beste jy en skroef mense soos Donovan. Sy dag het gekom. Ons is nog nie klaar met hom of al die ander Donovans daar buite nie.

Onthou wat doen mens met ‘n drol? Jy spoel hom WEG!

#NormalizeNormalBodies

Always, Anne

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6 fat shaming myths that should stop

I am not skinny, but I am definitely not fat. And if I was, so what?

My mom and dad blessed me with gorgeous curves, which is also my biggest curse.

In primary school everyone made fun of my booty, but now all those bullies are squatting in the gym to grow one.

I’ve been told that I should get married in a flowy wedding dress, because of my little big hip situation, but then I went and ordered the most figure hugging designer gown and guess what, I looked beautiful AF.

Women with a genetic curvy body have issues that ‘normal size’ or skinny women just never will understand. Or want to understand.

Here’s the 5 biggest fat shaming myths women with curves have to deal with.

1. “But you don’t look like a runner!”

I’ve ran two half marathons and try to get in one 10 kilometre per week. Sometimes I feel depressed and then I don’t exercise for two weeks – sue me.

The amount of people that have questioned my running because of my body shape is shamelessly high. Most people picture a slender athlete with calves for days when they think about a runner, not someone’s whose calve muscle when straight to their thighs.

2. “Don’t worry, we can do it at your pace.”

There’s a lot of hiking trails in Cape Town and people will always tell me that we can do it at my pace. My pace? What do you mean my pace? Just because I have more fat than muscle, does not mean that I am not stronger than you.

Same thing at the gym. You get ‘cute’ girls who does the same ‘cute’ exercises in the gym daily and rarely build muscle, but they never get questioned. I sweat twice as hard in a spinning class, but when  my hips don’t shrink people will give me motivational speeches that I should push harder and harder next time. Bitch, please.

3. “You probably want a bigger size?”

Shopping with someone is the worst. The ‘no booty-army’ will always ask if you would like a size bigger than them. Just because my hip-to-butt-to-hip-to-another-butt ratio is above average, doesn’t mean the rest of my body is as well.

The looks I get when I tell people that I wear a size small top, the disbelief OMG, it’s just too much to handle.

Dear person X, I am a professional stylist, are you? Um, okurrr.

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4. “You are going to fall pregnant so easily.”

I think this is the most offensive one. When you ask them why, they will tell you that skinny girls have more struggles to conceive. Okay, if I don’t count as skinny do you just think that I am fat?

Unless you are a medical professional, please don’t tell me about my future birth journey when so many people of all sizes have issues to conceive. Giving birth is a blessing and my pants size is not going to be the deal breaker, trust me.

5. “Are you on a diet?”

This is now the part where I want to get physical. Curvy ladies, have you ever ordered a salad and then your friends will ask if you if you are on a diet? People always consume when bootyful women order something healthy, they are trying to lose weight.

Okay, so here’s a surprise fact: we actually eat healthy most of the time. I hate greasy foods and alcohol. I avoid white carbs and always snack on carrots and yes, chocolate. Sue me, again.

But I’m not on a diet. Diets are for the birds!

My body is not my only testimony of my healthy lifestyle. I have glowing skin, perfect hair, 100% visual sight, no cholesterol warnings, zero dark circles under my eyes and I’ve never ever had a teeth filling in my life. Why? Because I’m healthy.

6. “How much?”

When a slender woman walks down the street in a skinny jean, little reaction.

When a curvy woman walks down the street in a skinny jean, chaos!

Society still see curvy women in short or tight clothing as ‘easy’ or ‘cheap’ and that annoys the living demons out of me. I rarely wear a bikini to the beach, but in January I felt brave and threw over a second skin dress to cover my lovely lady humps.

A group of men approached me and made sexual comments, which you get used to and learn to ignore over the years, but this time I’ve had enough. I told them my basic human rights and walked straight to the police station. They chose the wrong girl!

Stop judging people based on how God created them. We are all beautiful in our own way. Skinny, curvy, athletic -it doesn’t matter. It’s what is happening on the inside, that is.

Always, Anne

xoxo