Sunday, February 14, 2016

What do you see ?

Self-concept will always effect self-esteem. It’s not what you are; it’s what you see. Like the person who is anorexic, we see, bones and they still see fat and as long as that’s what they see, then they will continue to destroy themselves until they cannot see it anymore. What we see, has a lot to do with what we feel. If you don’t feel like you’re beautiful then you’re not and it really is as simple as that. What we look like is a reflection of ourselves. What we attract, how we react and what we think is acceptable. For instance, when I was 120lbs; I was confident. When my hair was long; I was confident. When I looked the way I felt I should have looked, I could put on anything and look good because I felt good. When I was free to explore my body and wear my hair the way I wanted and paint my nails whatever color that defined me at the moment; I was beautiful. I felt it and I looked it. The moment, I gained all that weight, even though I was pregnant, the moment I couldn’t walk into any store and pick out clothes, the moment I cut my hair and the moment I could see my tummy over my pants, I started to see dark circles around my eyes that I have never seen before. I went from glowing at 29 to feeling 10yrs older at 30 and looking like it too; just like that. At least this is how I feel. I only bring other people down when they complement me and I am respond with, “yea right.” Because essentially, it doesn’t matter what they think. It matters what I think about myself. You know, people say media plays a major role in how a woman thinks she should look, the attention she should get and how she is supposed to carry herself but I don’t think it’s true. I think media helps us identify but if you think about it, even the girl with the perfect body could have low self-esteem. She hears everyone but she only listens to herself. It’s just like your voice, when a person listens to you speak, they hear you one way and then when you hear yourself, you are like, do I really sound that way. We are our worst critics. We must get into the habit of believing in ourselves and being in tuned with ourselves; inside and transferring that energy to the outside. Adolescents are in more difficult circumstances because they are finding out who they are, what they like about themselves and what they dislike and ect. If he/she doesn’t see who they really are and the beauty they really behold then what they see affects self-concept and self-esteem in a very negative way.  I think a way to alleviate some of that is advocating for people to be themselves; that it is way cooler to just be you, no matter what you think you look like or even what others think; it’s all about how YOU feel. It truly is.