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Body ImageĀ 

Learning to Love the Skin You’re InĀ 

You wake up, glance in the mirror, scroll through your feed, and suddenly — everyone looks ā€œperfect.ā€ Smooth skin, flat tummy, glowing everything. It’s easy to start picking yourself apart. 
But here’s the truth: your body is not a mistake to fix — it’s a masterpiece that’s still evolving. 

Body image is the way you see, feel, and think about your body. It’s shaped by your experiences, culture, and the constant noise around beauty standards. In a world that profits from insecurity, learning to love your body is an act of rebellion and self-care.Ā 

What Shapes Body Image? 

From childhood, we’re told what’s ā€œbeautiful.ā€ Slim waists. Fair skin. Six-packs. Curves in just the ā€œrightā€ places. The media sells one type of body as the goal — but real life doesn’t fit into that filter. 

Everyone’s body tells a different story: scars, stretch marks, acne, weight changes — they’re all part of being alive. Still, social media can make you forget that. Filters blur imperfections, influencers promote ā€œidealā€ bodies, and comparison creeps in quietly. 

Your body doesn’t need to fit a certain trend to be worthy.Ā 

Positive Body Image Means… 

  • Respecting your body for what it can do, not just how it looks.Ā 
  • Being kind to yourself when you catch negative thoughts.Ā 
  • Setting boundaries with people or media that make you feel less.Ā 
  • Accepting changes — your body will continue to evolve throughout puberty, stress, age, and life.Ā 
  • Understanding that everyone struggles sometimes. Loving your body doesn’t mean never having bad days — it means showing up for yourself anyway.Ā 

Common Struggles (and Real Talk on Them) 

Weight & Shape: 
Bodies come in every size. Some gain weight during puberty, others lose it. Some build muscle easily; others don’t. None of it determines your worth. Health is not defined by numbers on a scale. 

Skin & Hair: 
Acne, hyperpigmentation, body hair — they’re all normal. No cream or influencer trick makes you less human. Take care of your skin because you love it, not because you hate it. 

Disability or Chronic Illness: 
Your body deserves love, even when it’s in pain, healing, or different. Inclusion isn’t a favor — it’s a right. 

Comparison:Ā 
It’s okay to unfollow accounts that trigger insecurity. Protect your peace. The world already benefits from your uniqueness — don’t dim it by trying to fit a mould.Ā 

How to Build a Healthier Relationship with Your Body 

  • Say kind things to yourself daily — even if you don’t fully believe them yet.Ā 
  • Wear clothes that prioritise your comfort over trends.Ā 
  • Move your body in ways that feel good — dance, walk, stretch, breathe.Ā 
  • Surround yourself with people who uplift you, not those who make fun of your looks.Ā 
  • Celebrate function over form: your legs help you move, your hands create, your skin protects you.Ā 
  • Feed your body because it deserves nourishment, not punishment.Ā 

Every act of care is a love letter to yourself. 

When You’re Struggling 

It’s okay if self-love feels far away. Many people, especially young people, battle body image issues — sometimes leading to anxiety, depression, or disordered eating.Ā 
If you ever feel trapped in negative thoughts about your body, please reach out to a counsellor, trusted adult, or mental health line. You deserve support.Ā 

Healing body image takes time. It’s not about reaching perfection; it’s about reaching peace.Ā 

Final Note 

Your body is your home — not a project. 
It holds your laughter, your heartbeat, your memories, your power. 

There’s no ā€œrightā€ way to look. No single standard of beauty. You are already complete, already deserving, already enough. 

So next time you look in the mirror, try saying this out loud: 
ā€œI am not a before or after. I am a whole story — still being written.ā€