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WHAT I WISH I KNEW WHEN I WAS 14!



Back when I was just 14 years old, gearing up to start high school, I remember reading a tabloid magazine flooded with pictures of celebrities.


In typical tabloid fashion, they were not discussing the actress’s accolades, accomplishments, or intelligence. Who would care to read about that, right? That doesn’t sell magazines.


They were talking about their cellulite.


You know…, those naturally occurring body dimples that grace the legs of most women on planet earth?


But my young porous sponge-like, teenage brain did not know this. I assumed that cellulite made you a bad, disgusting person who would be the laughing stock of anyone who was aware you had cellulite.


I learned a lesson that day that many girls learn: to be valuable you must look a certain way.


That message was continually reinforced by the world around me so I internalized it and made it my truth.


I went straight to the bathroom where I had a full-length mirror and stripped my bell-bottom jeans off; I was wearing a navy blue pair of undies with light blue paisley flowers on them from the Gap. I loved this specific pair.


I turned around, butt-towards-mirror, and began to investigate.


I poked, I pinched, and I jiggled to see if I jiggled in the “right way.”


Did I have any of that god-awful cottage cheese on my thighs that US Weekly was making fun of?


I think I saw a little under my butt.


My heart sank.


Oh fuck. Oh fuck. Oh fuck. I better get rid of this.


This triggered a chain reaction of micromanaging my body, known as Body Monitoring by researchers.


I slowly began walking down the road of self-objectification; seeing myself not as a whole person, but as an object that is on constant display for others to judge and critique.


And as a result, pieces of my awareness were now always dedicated to making sure I was sucking in enough, that my hair was looking good, and that the pimples on my face weren’t showing.


It eventually snowballed into a big hairy, people-pleasing problem known as an eating disorder and it took over my life.


Like it does the lives of so many.


Almost by definition, if you are born a girl you will be judged based on your level of “nice-to-look-at-ness.”


Sadly, it makes women feel like they are held hostage by other people’s opinion of the way they look. Never to be fully acknowledged for everything you can offer if you can’t first offer up thinness and beauty.


And it is a HUGE distraction and absolute bullshit.


Countless women dedicate a large portion of their cognitive resources to body monitoring, pursuing thinness, and obsessing over what they eat.


But here is the thing ladies…


The world needs you to snap out of it.


It needs your intelligence, your compassion, your bravery, your creativity, your ingenuity, your gifts.


It does not need a tight ass, firm thighs, a flat stomach or perky tits.


You were not given a body to be looked at. You are not an ornament for the male gaze or here to appease your mom who won’t shut up about your “weight problem.”


You were given a body to create change, to lean into life, and make the world a better place.


When we are stuck in the mirror of our minds, scanning our body for imperfections, we are not out in the world making a difference.


And you know and I know, our minds have way more important places to be.


But we’ve been lied to.


If you take anything away from this today, let it be this:


Your worth and capacity for a fulfilling life as a human is not based on the appearance of the earth suit your soul inhabits.


You have inherent worthiness, god-given enough-ness, and all the love inside of you that you could ever need.


The world needs you to embrace yourself with a crapload of compassion and a shit ton of love.


The world needs you to come alive, to set your soul on fire and do what it is you want to do when you are no longer trying to be thin and pretty.


The sooner we learn to accept and respect our body, the sooner we can yes-up and love-up what wants to be yessed-up and loved-up in our lives.


Be a rebel. Stop hating your body.


From my heart to yours.


Xo Cara


Binge Eating Recovery Resources

To learn more about the non-diet approach to healing your relationship with food, check out my free video training series HERE.


You can also check out my podcast, Love Your Bod Pod, on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.


Lastly, you can also check out my books, or online course.

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