Key points:
I learned years ago “the dead person’s rule” from ACT co-founder Kelly Wilson. It goes like this: If a dead person can do it better than you, it’s not a value. A dead person can be thinner than you, have fewer wrinkles than you, and thighs that don’t jiggle. So, what is a value? Values are qualities of action that demonstrate what you care about.
When clients tell me that they “value” being thin. I ask them, “What would you be doing that you aren’t doing now, if you were thin? Who would you talk to and where would you go? What life would you build?”
It’s not your fault if you are stuck in a cycle of negative body image. You are doing everything that society has told you to do to be happy. We are inundated with messages that we will feel better when we have a flatter stomach, unblemished skin, or straighter hair. Many of these messages come from white European standards of beauty (and oppression) and lead us into cycles of “fixing” our bodies, only to feel worse about them when we don’t measure up to these ideal standards.
There is a term in economics called Goodhart’s Law, which is often stated as, when a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure. When walking 10K steps a day becomes your target, it ceases to be a good measure if it results in you walking in circles in your living room at 10:00 at night. (Yes, this happened to my husband.) When having thighs that don’t touch becomes your target, it can lead you to fixate on your legs, instead of using them to enjoy a hike with your friends.
We get stuck in negative body image cycles because we have come to believe that our bodies are problems to be solved, and that if we solve the problem of our bodies, we will feel better. Much like a bird flying against a window, we keep hitting our heads on what we think is the way out, only to do it again. Trying to fix and control your body can keep you in a cycle of dissatisfaction.
If you want to shift your body image paradigm, you need to do something differently. Emily Sandoz and colleagues define body image flexibility as: The ability to embrace a present-moment experience of potentially distressing emotions and cognitions related to the body, particularly when doing so allows for pursuit of life values. (Sandoz, Webb, Rogers, & Squires, 2019).
Instead of trying to fix your body, what would it be like to be present with your body and accept the thoughts, sensations, and memories that come with it? Acceptance does not mean you have to approve of your body, or even like it. It means that you open up to your experience in your body, as it is now, and stop resisting what is. (I explore what this means in an episode of the Your Life in Process podcast.)
Many folks have body image shame that dates back to early memories of being teased, not fitting in, or praised for their looks. With body image flexibility, you…:
If you are unclear about what it means to live your values in relationship to body image, there are a few questions I find helpful to discuss with clients. In the service of being flexible, turn toward the uncomfortable questions with curiosity.