Note: The religious
references in this are based on my understanding, which may be incorrect, and
if so, my apologies. This is not intended to offend anyone’s religion or
beliefs.
What if you
woke up every morning simply knowing
that you no matter what size or shape, you were beautiful? What if, when you
looked in the mirror, you did not see flaws but only the good, and your
thoughts were not about how you looked but how you could make your inner self
as beautiful as the outer self? What would that feel like?
This is essentially
unheard of among most women I know, but when I talked to Sara Schwartz at the Portland branch of the organization Slim Peace, she said that for the Muslim women
she had met, this is the norm.
She said
that Muslim women believed that God had made them beautiful, and that they did
not have the same body image issues as the other women. This made me curious,
so I looked up more information about Islam, I found an article about the hijab,
which included this thought by Saba M. Baig: “How beautiful I think of myself
and knowing that Allah finds me beautiful makes me feel beautiful.”
For most
women I know, this concept of considering ourselves beautiful because we were
made that way is likely hard to grasp. So many instead instantly think of the
negative aspects of their body, how much weight they believe they should lose,
how unsightly certain parts are, etc.
I thought
it would be wonderful to start thinking this way myself. The only problem is
that I don’t believe in god, or any deity. Then I remembered an entry in my
journal from the summer of 2010:
I once tried to shun the physical world, live only in my head, but no longer. My
body ties me to this world, its atoms composed of stardust and the molecules of
my ancestors, and this is all to be celebrated, not ignored.
And I realized that I don’t have to subscribe
to a particular religion in order to believe that I have been made beautiful. I
understand that for some, the belief in a deity creating them this way is very
meaningful and powerful, but this approach does not have to be restricted to
them. We can all find our own way of coming to that idea.
For me, thinking of evolution, of
the sheer wonder of my body, and knowing that we are all comprised of stardust
is enough for me to know that I am made beautiful.
I’m now going to try keeping that in
mind when I think of myself, and I invite you to join me, in whatever way works
for you. Let’s see what it feels like to consider that we are lovely by design.
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